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A Brief History of the Women's KKK

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Plus: Bombs and the Bikini Atoll [The Paintings That Tried to Codify Race] | daily@jstor.org | | Â?

Plus: Bombs and the Bikini Atoll [] To ensure delivery of your JSTOR Daily please add daily@jstor.org to your address book. [] Weekly Digest [Web Version](3598c/ct0_0/1?sid=TV2%3Arncipk5sH) [] 3598c/ct1_0/1?sid=TV2%3Arncipk5sH [] [A Brief History of the Women's KKK](3598c/ct1_1/1?sid=TV2%3Arncipk5sH) [] By Emily Cataneo [] In American society, white women are often understood as victims, but we—for I am a white woman—also can be perpetrators. This peculiar dichotomy has exploded into the national consciousness during this summer's long-overdue reckoning over race. Some white women, while teetering on the ladder of privilege, wield their anger as a weapon against those with less power than them. But this dynamic is not new. One of the most shocking and extreme examples of white female complicity in American racism is an organization called the Women's Ku Klux Klan. [] [Read More](3598c/ct1_2/1?sid=TV2%3Arncipk5sH) [] [] 3598c/ct2_0/1?sid=TV2%3Arncipk5sH [] [Bombs and the Bikini Atoll](3598c/ct2_1/1?sid=TV2%3Arncipk5sH) [] By Lina Zeldovich [] The haute beachwear known as the bikini was named after a string of islands turned into a nuclear wasteland by atomic bomb testing. [Read more...](3598c/ct2_2/1?sid=TV2%3Arncipk5sH) [] [] 3598c/ct3_0/1?sid=TV2%3Arncipk5sH [] [Polish Posters in the RISD Library Collection](3598c/ct3_1/1?sid=TV2%3Arncipk5sH) [] By The Editors [] Posters are part of a tradition of object-based learning at the Rhode Island School of Design. [Read more...](3598c/ct3_2/1?sid=TV2%3Arncipk5sH) [] [] 3598c/ct4_0/1?sid=TV2%3Arncipk5sH [] [The Paintings That Tried (and Failed) to Codify Race](3598c/ct4_1/1?sid=TV2%3Arncipk5sH) [] By Carly Silver [] Casta paintings of the eighteenth century tried to show who was who in New Spain. But reality was much more complicated. [Read more...](3598c/ct4_2/1?sid=TV2%3Arncipk5sH) [] ADVERTISEMENT [] Whether you're a new or longtime JSTOR Daily reader, we invite you to be a part of our future. Join our membership today—even $3 a month would mean so much. [Become a member.](3598c/ct5_0/1?sid=TV2%3Arncipk5sH) [] 3598c/ct6_0/1?sid=TV2%3Arncipk5sH [] [The Rise of Disability Stigma](3598c/ct6_1/1?sid=TV2%3Arncipk5sH) [] By Livia Gershon [] Religion once held sway over how people thought about disability. How did that change with the rise of secularism? [Read more...](3598c/ct6_2/1?sid=TV2%3Arncipk5sH) [] [] 3598c/ct7_0/1?sid=TV2%3Arncipk5sH [] [The Taínos Refused to Grow Food. The Spanish Starved.](3598c/ct7_1/1?sid=TV2%3Arncipk5sH) [] By Jess Romeo [] Rebellion against invasion triggered a series of events that would take a “swift and violent toll” on a Caribbean island's native biodiversity. [Read more...](3598c/ct7_2/1?sid=TV2%3Arncipk5sH) [] [] 3598c/ct8_0/1?sid=TV2%3Arncipk5sH [] [The Creepy Backstory to Horatio Alger's Bootstrap Capitalism](3598c/ct8_1/1?sid=TV2%3Arncipk5sH) [] By Matthew Wills [] In a famous essay, a scholar uncovered difficult truths about Alger, whose name has been associated with the “rags to riches” myth. [Read more...](3598c/ct8_2/1?sid=TV2%3Arncipk5sH) [] [] [] Contact Us 101 Greenwich Street, New York, NY 10006, USA [daily.jstor.org](3598c/ct9_0/1?sid=TV2%3Arncipk5sH) | daily@jstor.org | [@JSTOR_Daily](3598c/ct10_0/1?sid=TV2%3Arncipk5sH) | [Facebook](3598c/ct11_0/1?sid=TV2%3Arncipk5sH) ©2004-2020 ITHAKA. All Rights Reserved. JSTOR®, the JSTOR logo, and ITHAKA® are registered trademarks of ITHAKA. Interested in advertising with JSTOR Daily? [Contact us](3598c/ct12_0/1?sid=TV2%3Arncipk5sH). If you prefer not to receive email messages from JSTOR Daily in the future, you may [unsubscribe here](3598c/ct13_0/1?sid=TV2%3Arncipk5sH).

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