The Locator -- [(title = "great migration ")]

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Author:
Gilbert, Kenyatta R., author.
Title:
A pursued justice : Black preaching from the great migration to civil rights / Kenyatta R. Gilbert.
Publisher:
Baylor University Press,
Copyright Date:
2016
Description:
xiv, 210 pages ; 24 cm
Subject:
African American preaching--History--20th century.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents:
Introduction: The migration of hope -- The exodus : history and voices of the great migration -- The promised land : social crisis and the importance of Black preaching -- Preaching as exodus : prophetic imagination, praxis, and aesthetics -- Exodus preaching : gospel and migration -- Exodus as Civil Rights : King and beyond -- Conclusion: Petitionary truth telling -- Appendix A: Chapter 4 sermons -- Appendix B: Chapter 5 sermons.
Summary:
The narrative of Civil Rights often begins with the prophetic figure of Martin Luther King Jr. in the 1960s. City squares became a church, the body politic a congregation, and sermons a jeremiad of social change--or so the story goes. In A Pursued Justice, Kenyatta Gilbert instead traces the roots of Kinǵs call for justice to African American prophetic preaching that arose in an earlier moment of American history.In the wake of a failed Reconstruction period, widespread agricultural depression, and the rise of Jim Crow laws, and triggered by Americás entry into World War I, a flood of southern Blacks movéd from the South to the ́urban centers of the North. This Great Migration transformed northern Black churches and produced a new mode of preaching--prophetic Black preaching--which sought to address this brand new context.Black clerics such as Baptist pastor Reverend Adam Clayton Powell Sr., A.M.E. Bishop Reverdy Cassius Ransom, and A.M.E. Zion pastor Reverend Florence Spearing Randolph rose up within these congregations. From their pulpits, these pastors "spoke truth to power" for hope across racial, ethnic, and class lines both within their congregations and between the Black community and the wider culture.A Pursued Justice profiles these three ecclesiastically inventive clerics of the first half of the twentieth century whose strident voices gave birth to a distinctive form of prophetic preaching. Their radical sermonic response to injustice and suffering, both in and out of the Black church, not only captured the imaginations of participants in the largest internal mass migration in American history but also inspired the homiletical vision of Martin Luther King Jr. and subsequent generations of preachers of revolutionary hope and holy disobedience. - book flap.
ISBN:
1481303988
9781481303989
OCLC:
(OCoLC)945804209
LCCN:
2016003768
Locations:
USUX851 -- Iowa State University - Parks Library (Ames)

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