cover image Intimate Politics: How I Grew Up Red, Fought for Free Speech, and Became a Feminist Rebel

Intimate Politics: How I Grew Up Red, Fought for Free Speech, and Became a Feminist Rebel

Bettina Aptheker, . . Seal, $15.95 (549pp) ISBN 978-1-58005-160-6

Now professor of feminist studies at UC–Santa Cruz, Aptheker was an activist participant in some of the major events of the '60s and '70s—the Free Speech Movement in Berkeley, the antiwar movement and the Angela Davis trial. As the daughter of U.S. Communist Party leader Herbert Aptheker, she was virtually a red-diaper princess, only to "fall from grace" with the party in her late 20s. Her highly politicized New York City upbringing was one of middle class comfort, although sorely affected by McCarthyist persecution—as well as sexual abuse by her father, deeply repressed memories of which she uncovered in adulthood. The author, who taught her first women's studies course in 1977, describes herself as a latecomer to the women's movement (the Communist Party considered it "petit bourgeois "). A personal transformation paralleled the political, as her repressed lesbianism also surfaced and gradually culminated in a fulfilling long-term relationship. Though pedestrian prose and prolix detail obscure what ought to be a compelling account of events with powerful social as well as personal meaning, Aptheker's memoir (after Tapestries of Life ) is a significant document for students and historians of feminism, communism and the '60s. (Nov.)