The National Alliance of Black Feminists

A History
Author: Ileana Nachescu
The story of the organization and its belief in feminism as a dimension of humanism
Cloth – $110
978-0-252-04656-8
Paper – $24.95
978-0-252-08867-4
eBook – $14.95
978-0-252-04787-9
Publication Date
Paperback: 06/24/2025
Cloth: 06/24/2025
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About the Book

Founded in 1975, the non-partisan National Alliance of Black Feminists (NABF) played a critical role in the Black women’s liberation movement and the fight for the Equal Rights Amendment. The Chicago-based organization’s Black humanist feminism powered a singular dedication to building coalitions while influencing its historic set of comprehensive political, economic, and cultural demands.

Ileana Nachescu places the NABF’s history as the bridge between Black women’s social activism in the 1970s and the intellectual activism of the 1980s. Her account details the NABF’s work and how it reflected the group’s strong humanist belief in the transformation of all human beings. Nachescu also shows that the NABF’s post-Eighties erasure from movement histories is consistent with how many white feminists marginalized women of color and rejected their leadership. From there, Nachescu examines Black lesbians’ vibrant support of the NABF and shows how respectability politics pressured the group to support its lesbian membership in private but maintain a public silence on the issue.

A rare in-depth look at an overlooked organization, The National Alliance of Black Feminists tells an untold story of Black women’s liberation in the Midwest.

About the Author

Ileana Nachescu is an assistant teaching professor in the Department of Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies at Rutgers University.