Rhetoric, Religion, and the Civil Rights Movement, 1954-1965, Volume 1
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Publisher: Baylor University Press
ISBN: 9781932792546
Number of Pages: 1018
Published: 30/09/2006
Width: 15.2 cm
Height: 23 cm
The Civil Rights Movement succeeded in large measure because of rhetorical appeals grounded in the Judeo-Christian religion. While movement leaders often used America's founding documents and ideals to depict Jim Crow's contradictory ways, the language and lessons of both the Old and New Testaments were often brought to bear on many civil rights events and issues - from local desegregation to national policy matters. This volume chronicles how national movement leaders and local activists moved a nation to live up to the biblical ideals it often professed but infrequently practiced.
- Introduction
- 1954
- 1 Simcha Kling, Proclaim Liberty
- 1955
- 2 Thomas Buford Maston, I Have Not a Demon
- 3 Leo A. Bergman, God Looks on Mississippi and Emmett Till
- 4 Clyde Gordon, A View of the Race Issue
- 5 Herbert M. Baumgard, Those Who Have Felt the Lash of the Taskmaster
- 1956
- 6 Charles Kenzie (C. K.) Steele, The Tallahassee Bus Protest Story
- 1957
- 7 Aubrey N. Brown, The Church in Southern United States
- 8 Merrimon Cuninggim, To Fashion as We Feel
- 9 Thurgood Marshall, The Good People Sat Down
- 10 Charles C. Diggs Jr., The Star Beckons Again
- 11 C. O. Inge, No Time for Cowards
- 12 Joseph A. De Laine, God Himself Fights for You
- 1958
- 13 Ralph McGill, Send Not to Know for Whom the Bell Tolls
- 14 William B. Silverman, We Will Not Yield
- 15 Harry Golden, The Struggle to End Racial Segregation in the South
- 16 Milton A. Galamison, Ties in Times of Tension
- 17 Paul L. Stagg, Here I Stand
- 18 Jacob M. Rothschild, And None Shall Make Them Afraid
- 1960
- 19 Edward P. Morgan, Gandhi in Greensboro
- 20 Thomas F. Pettigrew, Religious Leadership and the Desegregation Process
- 21 John W. Deschner, Christian Students and the Challenge of Our Times
- 22 Lillian Smith, Are We Still Buying a New World with Old Confederate Bills?
- 1961
- 23 O. Merrill Boggs, This Time of Testing
- 24 William B. Selah, Brotherhood
- 1962
- 25 William Sloane Coffin Jr., The Prophetic Role
- 26 Adam Daniel Beittel, Race Relations in Mississippi
- 27 Andrew Young, The Church and Citizenship Education of the Negro in the South
- 28 John David Maguire, The Church in Race Relations
- 29 Hodding Carter Jr., The Why of Mississippi
- 30 Alex D. Dickson Jr., The Right to a Free Pulpit
- 1963
- 31 Roy C. Clark, Coming to Grips with the Real Issue
- 32 Sargent Shriver, Religion and Race
- 33 Joachim Prinz, A Nation of Silent Onlookers
- 34 Milton L. Grafman, Sick at Heart: Kaddish for Bombing Victims
- 35 James Baldwin, Reinhold Niebuhr, and Thomas Kilgore, The Face of Christ
- 36 John Beecher, Their Blood Cries Out
- 37 Slater King, A Rebirth of Albany
- 38 William Harrison Pipes, What Would Jesus Do?
- 1964
- 39 Vincent Harding, Decade of Crisis
- 40 Mathew Ahmann, Race: Challenge to Religion
- 41 Stephen Gill Spottswood, He Being Dead Yet Speaketh
- 42 Leon A. Jick, Which Side Are You On?
- 43 Theo O. Fisher, Wearing Another Man's Shoes
- 44 Arthur Lelyveld, Earning the Kingdom in an Hour
- 45 Cecil Albert Roberts, The Christian Ethic and Segregation
- 1965
- 46 Clarence Jordan, Loving Our Enemies
- 47 Ralph J. Bunche, The March on Montgomery
- 48 Stanley Yedwab, Memorial Eulogy for Mrs. Viola Liuzzo
- 49 Daniel Germann, What Our Amen Means
- 50 Clifford J. Durr, The Relevance of Morality
- Permissions Acknowledgments
- Index