User:Laurencv/DaySources

Bibliography and Notes

Roberts, Nancy L. Dorothy Day and the Catholic Worker. SUNY Press, Albany, 1984,

Dick, Bailey G… (2018) “Is It Not Possible to Be a Radical and a Christian?” Dorothy Day Navigates the Patriarchal Worlds of Journalism and Catholicism.

Krupa, S. J. (2001). Celebrating Dorothy Day. America, 185(5), 7.

Nepstad, Sharon Erickson (2019-08-27), "Equality for Women and Catholic Feminism", Catholic Social Activism, NYU Press, pp. 74–94, ISBN 978-1-4798-8548-0, retrieved 2020-11-01

Johnson, K. C. P. D. (2009). Radical social activism, lay Catholic women and American feminism, 1920-1960.

Britt-Smith, Laurie A. (2019-05-23), "Not So Easily Dismissed:", Remembering Women Differently, University of South Carolina Press, pp. 206–221, ISBN 978-1-61117-980-4, retrieved 2020-11-01

Scott, D. (1992). More than a feminist. Commonweal, 119(5), 34.

O'Connor, June E. (1991). The Moral Vision of Dorothy Day: A Feminist Perspective. New York: Crossroad Publishing Company. ISBN 978-0824510800.

Parker, J. (2017, March 1). A Saint for Difficult people: From Bohemian to Radical to Catholic activist, Dorothy Day Devoted Her Life to the Poor, However Unlovable. The Atlantic, 319(2), 32.

Boorstein, Michelle (January 26, 2020). "Dorothy Day was a radical. Now many want the Vatican to make her a saint". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved November 1, 2020.

Parrish, Marilyn Mckinley (2002). Creating a Place for Learning: Dorothy Day and the Catholic Worker Movement.