Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Studies in Religion, Culture, and Social Development
This series is named for Martin Luther King, Jr. because of his superb scholarship and eminence in religion and society, and is designed to promote excellence in scholarly research and writing in areas that reflect the interrelatedness of religion and social/cultural/political development both in the American society and in the world. Examination of and elaboration on religion and socio-cultural components such as race relations, economic developments, marital and sexual relations, inter-ethnic cooperation, contemporary political problems, women, Black American, Native America, and Third World issues, and the like are welcomed. Manuscripts must be equal to a 200 to 425 page book, and are to be submitted in duplicate.
This series is named for Martin Luther King, Jr. because of his superb scholarship and eminence in religion and society, and is designed to promote excellence in scholarly research and writing in areas that reflect the interrelatedness of religion and social/cultural/political development both in the American society and in the world. Examination of and elaboration on religion and socio-cultural components such as race relations, economic developments, marital and sexual relations, inter-ethnic cooperation, contemporary political problems, women, Black American, Native America, and Third World issues, and the like are welcomed. Manuscripts must be equal to a 200 to 425 page book, and are to be submitted in duplicate.
This series is named for Martin Luther King, Jr. because of his superb scholarship and eminence in religion and society, and is designed to promote excellence in scholarly research and writing in areas that reflect the interrelatedness of religion and social/cultural/political development both in the American society and in the world. Examination of and elaboration on religion and socio-cultural components such as race relations, economic developments, marital and sexual relations, inter-ethnic cooperation, contemporary political problems, women, Black American, Native America, and Third World issues, and the like are welcomed. Manuscripts must be equal to a 200 to 425 page book, and are to be submitted in duplicate.
Titles
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Toward a Womanist Homiletic
Katie Cannon, Alice Walker and Emancipatory ProclamationVolume 13©2013 Monographs 95 Pages -
The Political Economy of Liberation
Thomas Sowell and James Cone on the Black ExperienceVolume 12©2012 Monographs XV, 199 Pages -
AIDS, Sexuality, and the Black Church
Making the Wounded WholeVolume 11©2010 Monographs XII, 184 Pages -
Against Cheap Grace in a World Come of Age
An Intellectual Biography of Clayton Powell, 1865–1953Volume 9©2002 Monographs XXI, 122 Pages -
African American Preaching
The Contribution of Dr. Gardner C. TaylorVolume 7©2004 Textbook XIV, 228 Pages