Grace Lee Boggs
Grace Lee Boggs (June 27, 1915 – October 5, 2015) was an American author, social activist, philosopher, and feminist. She is known for her years of political collaboration with C. L. R. James and Raya Dunayevskaya in the 1940s and 1950s. In the 1960s, she and James Boggs, her husband of some forty years, took their own political direction. By 1998, she had written four books, including an autobiography. In 2011, still active at the age of 95, she wrote a fifth book, The Next American Revolution: Sustainable Activism for the Twenty-First Century, with Scott Kurashige and published by the University of California Press. She is regarded as a key figure in the Asian American, Black Power, and Civil Rights movements.
Grace Lee Boggs | |||||||||||
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Boggs at her home in Detroit in 2012 | |||||||||||
Born | Grace Chin Lee June 27, 1915 Providence, Rhode Island, U.S. | ||||||||||
Died | October 5, 2015 100) (aged Detroit, Michigan, U.S. | ||||||||||
Education | Columbia University (BA) Bryn Mawr College (MA, PhD) | ||||||||||
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Movement | Johnson–Forest Tendency (1941–1951) | ||||||||||
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Simplified Chinese | 陈玉平 | ||||||||||
Traditional Chinese | 陳玉平 | ||||||||||
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