AltaMira Press
Pages: 224
Trim: 6 x 9½
978-0-7425-0420-2 • Hardback • September 2000 • $138.00 • (£106.00)
978-0-7425-0421-9 • Paperback • September 2000 • $54.00 • (£42.00)
978-0-7591-1715-0 • eBook • September 2000 • $51.00 • (£39.00)
Phil Zuckerman is also the author of Strife in the Sanctuary (AltaMira Press, 1999). He is currently a professor of sociology at Pitzer College.
Chapter 1 1. Introduction
Chapter 2 2. The Problem of Amusement
Chapter 3 3. The Philadelphia Negro
Chapter 4 4. Credo
Chapter 5 5. The Negro Chruch
Chapter 6 6. Of the Faith of the Fathers
Chapter 7 7. Of Alexander Crummel
Chapter 8 8.A Litany in Atlanta
Chapter 9 9. Religion in the South
Chapter 10 10. Jesus Christ in Georgia
Chapter 11 11. The Church and the Negro
Chapter 12 12. The Burden of Black Women
Chapter 13 13. Jesus Christ in Baltimore
Chapter 14 14. Easter
Chapter 15 15. The Negro Church
Chapter 16 16. The White Christ
Chapter 17 17. The Gospel According to Mary Brown
Chapter 18 18. The Second Coming
Chapter 19 19. The Prayers of God
Chapter 20 20. A Hymn to the Peoples
Chapter 21 21. Pontius Pilate
Chapter 22 22. The Gift of the Spirit
Chapter 23 23. The Color Line and the Church
Chapter 24 24. Will the Church Remove the Color Line?
Chapter 25 25. The Son of God
Chapter 26 26. Jacob and Esau
Chapter 27 27. The Negro Church and the Warsaw Ghetto
Zuckerman's work represents an important first step in recognizing the significant contributions Du Bois made in the study of religion—work equally important as his scholarly advances in the areas of sociology, education, journalism, civil rights, and politics....
— Yolanda Pierce
Nowhere is political activist W.E.B. DuBois's special gift for keen observation and biting social analysis more evident than in these 26 short essays, selections, and stories on black religion.....
— T.L. Lott
William Edward Burghardt Du Bois is considered one of the foremost sociologists on the African-American experience. In Du Bois on Religion, Phil Zuckerman reminds us that W.E.B. Du Bois was also an outstanding thinker and scholar in the sociology ofreligion.... As a result of Zuckerman's editorial skills, the reader sees a portrait of Du Bois as an outspoken activist against racism, classism, discrimination, and segregation found in white society as well as class- and sex-based segregations that often occurred in the African-American community.... Of particular strength is Zuckerman's ability to arrange excerpts of longer works and seldom-published pieces to support Du Bois's contention that the African-American church was as much a social institution as a spiritual one ('The Church and the Negro') and the fluidity of the sacred and the secular for African-Americans ('Souls of Black Folk').... The book succeeds both at presenting samples of Du Bois's scholarly studies and personal writings on the sociology of religion as well as capturing the gradual progression from Du Bois the optimistic, reverent, and somewhat naive proselyte to Du Bois the cynical, disillusioned agnostic... Zuckerman situates Du Bois with classical sociological greats such as D
— Sandra L. Barnes
This volume presents a collection of 26 works by W.E.B. DuBois (1868-1963) that establish his place in the sociology of religion & offer a new perspecive on the influence of religion on his ideas on race & social justice.
— K. Hyatt Stewart
This classroom-usable collection compiles major essays, addresses, poems, and personal writings by W.E.B. Du Bois about religious topics....a most useful compilation text.....
— Paul Harvey