The Bible Told Them So: How Southern Evangelicals Fought to Preserve White Supremacy
Autor J. Russell Hawkinsen Limba Engleză Hardback – 7 sep 2021
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780197571064
ISBN-10: 0197571069
Pagini: 224
Dimensiuni: 163 x 236 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0197571069
Pagini: 224
Dimensiuni: 163 x 236 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
This book is an excellent beginning to confronting these ghosts of our past that still haunt our pursuits of racial justice. Anyone with an interest in the history of race in the United States -- particularly as it connects to religion -- will learn a great deal from this book. It is well-suited for a variety of courses in the sociology or history of religion, as well as for seminary courses.
This book ... not only enhances our understanding of American religious history, but also the development of lay-clerical relations among Southern Baptists and Methodists. ... Hawkins is to be congratulated on writing such a timely and thoughtprovoking book.
This is a great book, compelling and necessary in every way.
The Bible Told Them So is a helpful and enlightening addition to the historiography of religion and the CRM. Hawkins convincingly and logically presents the ways that Southern evangelicals actively lived a segregationist theology in opposition to the CRM. No future historian will be able to claim that Southern evangelical religion bent to the power of the CRM without dialoguing with Hawkins's work.
a book for Church historians, political scientists, and a wider general public
In one concise study, Hawkins adds to the literature on Evangelical racism in the South and expands the direction of future research while enhancing understandings of a religiously justified prejudice that continues in national politics.
How is possible that Southern White Christians could employ their faith to oppose racial equality and opportunity? Dr. Russell Hawkins shows us how with piercing clarity. This deeply-researched work reads like a novel, yet is at the same time packed with page after page of insight and revelation. A true eye-opener.
Hawkins convincingly demonstrates how religion framed, informed, and bolstered South Carolina whites' resistance to racial equality. He further shows how, once the raw biblical justification of segregation acquired a bad reputation, the rhetoric of color-blindness and anti-identity politics carried this resistance forward under a more respectable but deceptive guise.
Increasingly scholars of evangelicalism in the United States are telling more complex stories about the interplay of race and politics within its faithful ranks. The Bible Told Them So generates an important new ripple forcing us to consider the ubiquitous nature of disparate white evangelical Christian denominations in their stance against black racial progress and desegregation. Stylistically unflinching while managing to remain approachably delicate, Hawkins has produced a tour de force that tells an unsettling tale of certain white evangelicals' efforts to maintain a dominant social order
Hawkins's book is both an important contribution to the field, and a reminder of the contemporary relevance of documenting and analysing the influence and tenacity of white supremacy in churches.
This is a fine monographic study that provides new insight into how white Southerners shifted their opposition to racial integration after the successes of the civil rights movement in the mid-1960s.
This is an impressive book, thoroughly researched, and compellingly argued.
This book ... not only enhances our understanding of American religious history, but also the development of lay-clerical relations among Southern Baptists and Methodists. ... Hawkins is to be congratulated on writing such a timely and thoughtprovoking book.
This is a great book, compelling and necessary in every way.
The Bible Told Them So is a helpful and enlightening addition to the historiography of religion and the CRM. Hawkins convincingly and logically presents the ways that Southern evangelicals actively lived a segregationist theology in opposition to the CRM. No future historian will be able to claim that Southern evangelical religion bent to the power of the CRM without dialoguing with Hawkins's work.
a book for Church historians, political scientists, and a wider general public
In one concise study, Hawkins adds to the literature on Evangelical racism in the South and expands the direction of future research while enhancing understandings of a religiously justified prejudice that continues in national politics.
How is possible that Southern White Christians could employ their faith to oppose racial equality and opportunity? Dr. Russell Hawkins shows us how with piercing clarity. This deeply-researched work reads like a novel, yet is at the same time packed with page after page of insight and revelation. A true eye-opener.
Hawkins convincingly demonstrates how religion framed, informed, and bolstered South Carolina whites' resistance to racial equality. He further shows how, once the raw biblical justification of segregation acquired a bad reputation, the rhetoric of color-blindness and anti-identity politics carried this resistance forward under a more respectable but deceptive guise.
Increasingly scholars of evangelicalism in the United States are telling more complex stories about the interplay of race and politics within its faithful ranks. The Bible Told Them So generates an important new ripple forcing us to consider the ubiquitous nature of disparate white evangelical Christian denominations in their stance against black racial progress and desegregation. Stylistically unflinching while managing to remain approachably delicate, Hawkins has produced a tour de force that tells an unsettling tale of certain white evangelicals' efforts to maintain a dominant social order
Hawkins's book is both an important contribution to the field, and a reminder of the contemporary relevance of documenting and analysing the influence and tenacity of white supremacy in churches.
This is a fine monographic study that provides new insight into how white Southerners shifted their opposition to racial integration after the successes of the civil rights movement in the mid-1960s.
This is an impressive book, thoroughly researched, and compellingly argued.
Notă biografică
J. Russell Hawkins is Professor of Humanities and History in the John Wesley Honors College at Indiana Wesleyan University in Marion, Indiana.