
Attribution
David L. ChappellPublication Details
BookUniversity of North Carolina Press2004Availability
LOCATION CALL # STATUS (LOWER LEVEL) E185.61 .C5435 2004 AVAILABLE New Feature: Text this to your cellphone
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Subject
- African Americans — Civil rights — History — 20th century
- African Americans — Segregation — History — 20th century
- Civil rights movements — United States — History — 20th century
- Civil rights workers — Religious life — United States — History — 20th century
- Civil rights — United States — Religious aspects — Christianity — History — 20th century
- Christianity and politics — United States — History — 20th century
- Church and social problems — United States — History — 20th century
- United States — Race relations
- United States — Church history — 20th century
Places in this work
Notes
- "David Chappell reconsiders the intellectual roots of civil rights reform, showing how northern liberals’ faith in the power of human reason to overcome prejudice was at odds with the movement’s goal of immediate change. Even when liberals sincerely wanted change, they recognized that they could not necessarily inspire others to unite and fight for it. But the prophetic tradition of the Old Testament - sometimes translated into secular language - drove African American activists to unprecedented solidarity and self-sacrifice. Martin Luther King Jr. Fannie Lou Hamer, James Lawson, Modjeska Simkins, and other black leaders believed, as the Hebrew prophets believed, that they had to stand apart from society and instigate dramatic changes to force an unwilling world to abandon its sinful ways. Their impassioned campaign to stamp out "the sin of segregation" brought the vitality of a religious revival to their cause. Meanwhile, segregationists found little support within their white southern religious denominations. Although segregationists outvoted and outgunned black integrationists, the segregationists lost, Chappell concludes, largely because they did not have a religious commitment to their cause."- -BOOK JACKET
Contents
- 1. Hungry Liberals: Their Sense That Something Was Missing
- 2. Recovering Optimists
- 3. The Prophetic Ideas That Made Civil Rights Move
- 4. Prophetic Christian Realism and the 1960s Generation
- 5. The Civil Rights Movement as a Religious Revival
- 6. Broken Churches, Broken Race: White Southern Religious Leadership and the Decline of White Supremacy
- 7. Pulpit versus Pew
- 8. Segregationist Thought in Crisis: What the Movement Was Up Against
- Conclusions: Gamaliel, Caesar, and Us
- App. A Philosophical Note on Historical Explanation
ISBN
- 080782819x
- 080782819x
LCCN
Open Library ID
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