Citations:red diaper baby


 * 1984 — Robin Endres, "Introduction", in Gold Earrings (by Sharon Stevenson), Pulp Press (1984), ISBN 9780889781474, page 17:
 * As a red diaper baby, growing up in Canada in the cold war, Sharon's childhood was bound by a sense of superiority and at the same time, deep fear.
 * 1985 — Marny Hall, The Lavender Couch: A Consumer's Guide to Psychotherapy for Lesbians and Gay Men, Alyson Publications (1985), ISBN 9780932870414, page 122:
 * One woman who grew up as a red diaper baby in a working-class Jewish family felt she would be most comfortable with a counselor of similar background.
 * 1987 — Mary Wings, She Came Too Late, Crossing Press (1987), ISBN 9780895942432, page 3:
 * Monica was a small, wiry woman, a red diaper baby, with a revolution in her chromosomes that seemed to guide her as she worked tirelessly at one and then another political project.
 * 1992 — Clancy Sigal, The Secret Defector, HaperCollins Publishers (1992), ISBN 9780060190118, page 15:
 * Arnie was a red diaper baby whose parents had been founders of the British CP.
 * 1993 — Jan Stuart, "From Idealist to Sellout: A Journey", Newsday, 7 April 1993:
 * Born Marcus Hershkovitz, the red diaper baby of a Russian-Jewish-American communist, Hoyle has ditched both his ethnicity and his inherited idealism in a calculated climb to the top floor.
 * 1994 — Robert Lipsyte, "Happy Hanukkah? A Guide for the Perplexed", The New York Times, 27 November 1994:
 * Mr. Dubno was a red diaper baby raised in Coney Island who celebrated Hanukkah with his family as more of a cultural than religious event
 * 2008 — Josh Getlin, "45 years later, Dylan's lover tells us what it was like", Toronto Star, 13 May 2008:
 * She was a red diaper baby whose parents were communists.
 * She was a red diaper baby whose parents were communists.