In this book, Dennis C. Dickerson examines the long history of the African Methodist Episcopal Church and its intersection with major social movements over more than two centuries. Beginning as a religious movement in the late eighteenth century, the African Methodist Episcopal Church developed as a freedom advocate for blacks in the Atlantic World. Governance of a proud black ecclesia often clashed with its commitment to and resources for fighting slavery, segregation, and colonialism, thus limiting the full realization of the church's emancipationist ethos. Dickerson recounts how this black institution nonetheless weathered the inexorable demands produced by the Civil War, two world wars, the civil rights movement, African decolonization, and women's empowerment, resulting in its global prominence in the contemporary world. His book also integrates the history of African Methodism within the broader historical landscape of American and African-American history.
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Product Details
Weight: 960g
Dimensions: 162 x 235mm
Publication Date: 09 Jan 2020
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
Language: English
ISBN13: 9780521191524
About Dennis C. Dickerson
Dennis Dickerson is James M. Lawson Jr Professor of History at Vanderbilt University Tennessee. A scholar of American labor history the American civil rights movement and African American religious history he has received grants and fellowships from the American Academy in Berlin the National Endowment for the Humanities and the American Council of Learned Societies among others. He is the author of Out of the Crucible: Black Steelworkers in Western Pennsylvania 1875-1980 (1986) African American Preachers and Politics: The Careys of Chicago (2010) and Militant Mediator: Whitney M. Young Jr (1998) which was awarded the 1999 Distinguished Book from the National Conference of Black Political Scientists.