Black religious intellectuals the fight for equality from Jim Crow to the twenty-first century
Main Author: | |
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Format: | eBook |
Language: | Inglés |
Published: |
New York :
Routledge
2002.
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Series: | Crosscurrents in African American history.
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://recursos.uloyola.es/login?url=https://accedys.uloyola.es:8443/accedix0/sitios/ebook.php?id=136553 |
See on Universidad Loyola - Universidad Loyola Granada: | https://colectivo.uloyola.es/Record/ELB136553 |
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Table of Contents:
- Introduction: Black intellectuals : a more inclusive perspective
- Sticking to the ship : manhood, fraternity, and the religious world view of A. Philip Randolph
- Expanding the boundaries of politics : the various voices of the Black religious community of Brooklyn, New York before and during the Cold War
- The Pentecostal preacher as public intellectual and activist : the extraordinary leadership of Bishop Smallwood Williams
- The Reverend John Culmer and the politics of Black representation in Miami, Florida
- The Reverend Theodore Gibson and the significance of Cold War liberalism in the fight for citizenship
- "A natural born leader" : the politics of the Rev. Al Sharpton
- The evolving spiritual and political leadership of Louis Farrakhan : from Allah's masculine warrior to ecumenical sage
- Ella Baker, Pauli Murray, and the challenge to male patriarchy.