"In this riveting multilayered analysis, Wendy Sarvasy deciphers the vision of American social democracy that feminists in the 1920s envisioned and implemented.... Sarvasy argues that the social democratic roots of American politics can be found through a feminist genealogy of citizenship.... It is an inspiring work based on thorough research, with a dense and multilayered theoretical argument that uses historical and textual analysis."—Socialism and Democracy
"The author’s presentation of intersectional feminism in the early twentieth-century is impressive in its reach and depth.... [and] inspiring examples of feminism in action."—Affillia
"Refounding Democracy through Intersectional Activism takes readers on a genealogical exploration of the Progressive Era in the United States. The book lays a strong theoretical foundation for recasting the activism and theory building of Progressive Era, social democratic feminists as a moment of democratic refounding…. Sarvasy is at her most convincing when we recognize how much we scholars have missed about the social-democratic potential of these feminists."—Mobilization