Quote:
Originally Posted by Senusret I
But NPHC sororities focused on both (macro and micro)....so they did more. Nothing is wrong with that.
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LOL.
We weren't even trying to say we did more, though. I asked the Theta a question and provided the Delta Founders involvement as an illustration of what I was talking about. But it is important to note that macro and micro involvement from a group of black women who experienced racial and gender structural and interaction-level constraints is definitely discussion-worthy. So I assumed that women who didn't have to deal with the same types of constraints would've been even MORE adamently involved. I guess I was wrong.
I wanted to celebrate what all sororities did to demand equal rights. This thread is about the first well publicized case (I guess?) but there was stuff going on before this that folks may know of--or not but we could share info. Afterall, the first NPC sororities were founded in the mid to late 1800s and the first NPHC sororities were founded in the early 1900s, right?