Research in Religion and Family
Black Perspectives
This series aims to provide a framework and opportunity for
original research that explores both the ground and the goals of
family and religion in the black tradition. Monographs in the series
will examine the ways in which kinship networks wert forrned and
maintained, how the community raised and socialized children, how
they carved out a religion and fashioned a rieh and expressive
culture that refleeted their uninhibited imagination and provided a
means to articulate their hopes and Kurts, their dreams and doubts.
Research will not only focus an the pass and present, but will also
look at the adequacy of current modeln of family and religion to
take the black community into the twenty-first century.
This series aims to provide a framework and opportunity for
original research that explores both the ground and the goals of
family and religion in the black tradition. Monographs in the series
will examine the ways in which kinship networks wert forrned and
maintained, how the community raised and socialized children, how
they carved out a religion and fashioned a rieh and expressive
culture that refleeted their uninhibited imagination and provided a
means to articulate their hopes and Kurts, their dreams and doubts.
Research will not only focus an the pass and present, but will also
look at the adequacy of current modeln of family and religion to
take the black community into the twenty-first century.
This series aims to provide a framework and opportunity for
original research that explores both the ground and the goals of
family and religion in the black tradition. Monographs in the series
will examine the ways in which kinship networks wert forrned and
maintained, how the community raised and socialized children, how
they carved out a religion and fashioned a rieh and expressive
culture that refleeted their uninhibited imagination and provided a
means to articulate their hopes and Kurts, their dreams and doubts.
Research will not only focus an the pass and present, but will also
look at the adequacy of current modeln of family and religion to
take the black community into the twenty-first century.
Titles
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Pastoral Care from a Third World Perspective
A Pastoral Theology of Care for the Urban Contemporary Shona in ZimbabweVolume 6©2013 Monographs 200 Pages -
The Missionary Outreach of the West Indian Church
Jamaican Baptist Missions to West Africa in the Nineteenth CenturyVolume 3©2000 Textbook 324 Pages