The Power We Need Right Now
The Power We Need Right Now
Black Sororities and Black Radical Movements of the 1970s (Pre-order, June 12 2026)
Aisha A. Upton AzzamCouldn't load pickup availability
There is a long history of sororities such as Alpha Kappa Alpha (AKA) and Delta Sigma Theta (Delta) participating in activism and social justice efforts--from the Civil Rights Movement in the 1960s to Kamala Harris's recent political campaigns. But radical movements like Black Lives Matter have posed more challenging questions for these organizations.
In The Power We Need Right Now, Aisha Upton Azzam investigates the legacies of AKA and Delta to understand the considerations that weigh on their engagement with present day Black movements. These organizations wield a significant amount of political power to mobilize in support of their causes. The response each sorority has had to movements fifty years apart is strikingly similar--even if their approaches are quite different.
Using a Black feminist theoretical framework, Upton Azzam brings context and meaning to the interactions of these sororities with Black radical movements. She highlights the costs communities bear from sororities' adherence to respectability and racial uplift ideologies by tracing each sorority's history and response to emerging Black feminist and Black Power movements during the tumultuous 1970s.
The Power We Need Right Now emphasizes that Black communities still have the ability to wield their political power and influence to further the struggle for Black liberation.
Aisha A. Upton Azzam is an Assistant Professor of Sociology at St. Catherine University.
- Publisher: Temple University Press
- Publish Date: June 12, 2026
- Pages: 190
- Language: English
- Type: Paperback
- EAN/UPC: 9781439925393
- Dimensions: 9 in H | 6 in W | 1 lb Wt
- BISAC Categories: Politics, History
