European University Institute Library

The Religious Left in Modern America, Doorkeepers of a Radical Faith, edited by Leilah Danielson, Marian Mollin, Doug Rossinow

Label
The Religious Left in Modern America, Doorkeepers of a Radical Faith, edited by Leilah Danielson, Marian Mollin, Doug Rossinow
Language
eng
resource.imageBitDepth
0
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
The Religious Left in Modern America
Medium
electronic resource
Nature of contents
dictionaries
Oclc number
1036748546
Responsibility statement
edited by Leilah Danielson, Marian Mollin, Doug Rossinow
Series statement
Springer eBooks.Palgrave Studies in the History of Social Movements
Sub title
Doorkeepers of a Radical Faith
Summary
This edited collection of exciting new scholarship provides comprehensive coverage of the broad sweep of twentieth century religious activism on the American left. The volume covers a diversity of perspectives, including Protestant, Catholic, and Jewish history, and important essays on African-American, Latino, and women's spirituality. Taken together, these essays offer a comparative and long-term perspective on religious groups and social movements often studied in isolation, and fully integrate faith-based action into the history of progressive social movements and politics in the modern United States. It becomes clear that throughout the twentieth century, religious faith has served as a powerful motivator and generator for activism, not just as on the right, where observers regularly link religion and politics, but on the left. This volume will appeal to historians of modern American politics, religion, and social movements, religious studies scholars, and contemporary activists.--, Provided by publisher
Table Of Contents
Chapter 1: Introduction; Leilah Danielson, Marian Mollin, and Doug Rossinow -- Chapter 2: The Other Social Gospelers: The Working-Class Religious Left, 1877-1920; Janine Giordano Drake -- Chapter 3: The Social Gospel, the YMCA, and the Emergence of the Religious Left after World War I; Christopher Evans -- Chapter 4: Judaism, Yiddish Peoplehood, and American Radicalism; David Verbeeten -- Chapter 5: Dorothy Day, Religion, and the Left; Nicholas Rademacher -- Chapter 6: "Saints for this Age": Religion and Radicalism in the American Century; Leilah Danielson -- Chapter 7: Resisting Jim Crow Colonialism: Black Christianity and the International Origins of the Civil Rights Movement; Sarah Azaransky -- Chapter 8: To Create Such a Crisis and to Foster Such a Tension: African American Religious Conceptions of the State; Doug Thompson -- Chapter 9: The Catholic Interracial Council and Mexican American Civil Rights in Iowa, 1952-1974; Felipe Hinojosa -- Chapter 10: Black Power/Black Faith: Rethinking the "De-Christianization" of the Black Freedom Struggle; Angela D. Dillard -- Chapter 11: "Pray to God; She Will Hear Us": Women Reimagining Religion and Politics in the 1970s; Lilian Calles Barger -- Chapter 12: "The 1900-Year Crisis": Arthur Waskow, the Question of Israel/Palestine, and the Effort to Form a Religious Jewish Left in America, 1967-1974; Doug Rossinow -- Chapter 13: Ita Ford and the Spirit of Social Change; Marian Mollin -- Chapter 14: Global Encounters and the Evangelical Left; David R. Swartz
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