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A Plea for British Black Theologies
The Black Church Movement in Britain in its transatlantic cultural and theological interaction with special reference to the Pentecostal Oneness (Apostolic) and Sabbatarian Movements©1992 Thesis -
The Role of the Black Church in Family Literacy
©1999 Monographs -
Black Theology and Youths at Risk
©2001 Monographs -
The Political Economy of Liberation
Thomas Sowell and James Cone on the Black Experience©2012 Monographs -
Racial Reconciliation
Black Masculinity, Societal Indifference, and Church Socialization©2020 Monographs -
Secular, Scarred and Sacred
Education and Religion Among the Black Community in Nineteenth-Century Canada©2019 Monographs -
Invisible in Plain Sight
Self-Determination Strategies of Free Blacks in the Old Northwest©2017 Monographs -
Toward a Womanist Homiletic
Katie Cannon, Alice Walker and Emancipatory Proclamation©2013 Monographs -
A History of the American Civil Rights Movement Through Newspaper Coverage
The Race Agenda, Volume 2©2020 Monographs -
Race and Resistance Across Borders in the Long Twentieth Century
ISSN: 2297-2552
This series focuses on the history and culture of activists, artists and intellectuals who have worked within and against racially oppressive hierarchies in the twentieth century and beyond, and who have then sought to define and to achieve full equality once those formal hierarchies have been overturned. It explores the ways in which such individuals - writers, scholars, campaigners and organizers, ministers, and artists and performers of all kinds - locate their resistance within a global context and forge connections with each other across national, linguistic, regional and imperial borders. Disseminating the latest interdisciplinary scholarship on the history, literature and culture of anti-racist movements in Africa, the Caribbean, the United States, Europe, Asia and Latin America, the series foregrounds, through a cross-disciplinary approach, the transnational and intercultural nature of these resistance movements. The series embraces a range of themes, including but not limited to antislavery, intellectual and literary networks, emigration and immigration, anti-imperialism, church-based and religious movements, civil rights, citizenship and identity, Black Power, resistance strategies, women's movements, cultural transfer, white supremacy and anti-immigration, hip hop and global justice movements. The series is affiliated with the Race and Resistance Research Programme at The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities (TORCH), University of Oxford. Proposals are invited for sole- and joint-authored monographs as well as edited collections. We welcome projects in a wide range of fields, including but not restricted to history, political science, anthropology, literature, cultural studies and media studies. Editorial Advisory Board: Funmi Adewole (DeMontfort University), Joan Anim-Addo (Goldsmiths, University of London), Celeste-Marie Bernier (University of Edinburgh), Alan Cobley (University of the West Indies, Cave Hill), Carolyn Cooper (University of the West Indies, Mona), Zaire Dinzey-Flores (Rutgers, State University of New Jersey), Tanisha Ford (University of Delaware), Maryemma Graham (University of Kansas), Christopher J. Lee (The Africa Institute, UAE), Simon Lewis (College of Charleston), Justine McConnell (King's College London), Pap Ndiaye (Sciences Po), Tessa Roynon (University of Oxford), Barbara Savage (University of Pennsylvania), David Scott (Columbia University), Hortense Spillers (Vanderbilt University), Imaobong Umoren (London School of Economics), Harvey Young (Northwestern University)
7 publications