Introduction: Protest or Accommodation: Political Engagement in African American Religion 1 Setting the Agenda: Social Activism in New Orleans’ First Spiritualist Church 2 Mother to the Motherless: Mother Catherine Seal’s Manger for the Homeless 3 Laying on Hands: Healing as a Form of Political Activism and Spiritual Restoration 4 Let the Women Speak: Gender Equality and Self-Empowerment in African American Spiritual Churches 5 After the Storm: The Response of African American Spiritual Churches to Shifting Landscapes in Post-Katrina New Orleans Conclusion: A Politico-Spiritual Approach to Social Activism: Implications for African American Religion
Margarita Simon Guillory is an Assistant Professor of Religion at the University of Rochester. She is the co-editor of the volume entitled Esotericism in African American Religious Experience and the co-author of Breaking Bread, Breaking Beats: Churches and Hip Hop—A Basic Guide to Key Issues. In addition to these works, she has published articles in the Journal of Gnostic Studies, Culture and Religion, and Pastoral Psychology.
"Stretching in its historical narrative from Jim Crow to Hurricane
Katrina, this book displays the resilience of southern Africana
religious traditions while addressing both inter and intra-communal
struggles with racism, sexism, classicism, and ageism. Guillory is
gifted in her ability to home in on the contemporary implications
which lie behind work so rigorously researched and carefully
constructed. Guillory refuses the paradigm that separates political
approaches from spiritual ones in Africana religious traditions.
She shows that there is much to be learned from mining the
traditions of Afro-religions which lie at the margins of dominant
narratives. This work displays what is revealed when we pivot the
center."
-Ambre Dromgoole, Yale University
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |