Activism in the Name of God: Religion and Black Feminist Public Intellectuals from the Nineteenth Century to the Present
Activism in the Name of God: Religion and Black Feminist Public Intellectuals from the Nineteenth Century to the Present
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Abstract
Activism in the Name of God: Religion and Black Feminist Public Intellectuals from the Nineteenth Century to the Present presents an historical and rhetorical trajectory of religious or spiritual Black female public intellectuals from the nineteenth through the twenty-first century that demonstrates their efficacy in calling for and effecting social change. The book enters a conversation begun by liberation theologians in the 1970s, and has continued since womanist and feminist theologians made explicit Black women’s contributions to the public sphere through their intellectual production. Though the focus of this anthology is not explicitly Christological, many of the chapters’ subjects are women whose Christian ethics undergirded their activism. And of the women who do not specifically confess Christianity, Afro-centric spiritual traditions inform their principles. At the heart of the book is Black justice, Black activism, and Black love. The essays in this collection call attention to these twelve women’s commitment to the social, political, and economic well-being of African American people. Whether through their autobiographical writing, sermons, poetry, prose, speeches, music, art, teaching, or digital media, or their leadership in major organizations from the NAACP to the YWCA, the Black women highlighted in this collection overcame the social and cultural proscriptions that attempted to inhibit their ability to contribute their religious and intellectual output due to their race, gender, and gender identity.. This anthology offers readers exemplars, including Jarena Lee, Theressa Hoover, Pauli Murray, Sandra Bland, and many more, with whose minds and spirits we can engage, from whose ideas we can learn, and upon whose social justice work we can build.
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Front Matter
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Introduction
Witnesses of the Spirit
Jami L. Carlacio
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Nineteenth Century
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1
More than “Mere” Rhetoric: Jarena Lee’s Religious Experience Read through a Womanist Lens
Neely McLaughlin
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2
Journeys and Warnings: Nancy Prince’s Resistant Truth-Telling in New England, Russia, and Jamaica
Cheryl J. Fish
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3
“Fishers of Men”: Understanding Frances Ellen Watkins Harper’s Poetry as Vocational Autobiography
Jennifer Mcfarlane-Harris
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1
More than “Mere” Rhetoric: Jarena Lee’s Religious Experience Read through a Womanist Lens
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Twentieth Century
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4
Cultivating “Mass Intelligence”: Nannie Helen Burroughs and the Quest for Racial Justice
Angela Hornsby-Gutting
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5
The Gospel According to Madame E. Azalia Smith Hackley
Lisa Pertillar Brevard
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6
Mothers and the God of the Oppressed: Carrie Williams Clifford and a Literary Theology of Black Freedom
P. Jane Splawn
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7
Theressa Hoover: Black Feminist, Methodist, Southerner
Janet Allured
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8
The Life and Thought of Anna Arnold Hedgeman: A Pragmatic Christian Feminist
Hettie V. Williams
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9
“It Sings in Our Blood”: Pauli Murray’s Re-Mattering of the World
Darcy Metcalfe
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4
Cultivating “Mass Intelligence”: Nannie Helen Burroughs and the Quest for Racial Justice
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Twenty-First Century
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10
Sandy Speaks: The Digital Resurrection of Sandra Bland’s Religious History
Phillip Luke Sinitiere
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11
“Black Feminist Love Evangelist” and “Prayer Poet Priestess”: Alexis Pauline Gumbs
Laura L. Sullivan
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12
“Love Wins” and Black Lives Matter: The Spiritual Underpinnings of Patrisse Cullors’s Crusade for Justice
Jami L. Carlacio
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10
Sandy Speaks: The Digital Resurrection of Sandra Bland’s Religious History
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End Matter
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