Martin Luther King : a religious life
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Martin Luther King : a religious life
(The library of African-American biography)
Rowman & Littlefield, c2021
- : cloth
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Note
Bibliographic essay: p. 187-199
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
In the first In the first biography of Martin Luther King to look at his life through the prism of his evolving faith, distinguished historian Paul Harvey examines Martin Luther King's life through his complex, emerging, religious lives. Harvey will introduce many readers, perhaps for the first or only time, to the King of diverse religious and intellectual influences, of an increasingly radical cast of thought, and of a melange of intellectual influences that he aligned in becoming the spokesperson for the most important social movement of twentieth-century American history. Not only does Harvey chronicle King's metamorphosis and its impact on American and African American life, but he seeks to explain his "afterlives"-how in American culture King became transformed into a mainstream civil saint, shorn of his radical religious critique of how power functioned in America. Harvey's concise biography will allow readers to see King anew in the context of his time and today.
Table of Contents
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
IntroductionThe Redemptive Power of Martin Luther King
1Growing Up King
2The Young Preacher in Boston and Montgomery
3The Montgomery Uprising
4Montgomery and SCLC
5The Dream, the Letter, and the Nightmare
6 Struggling in Selma and Chicago
7Shot Rings Out in the Memphis Sky
EpilogueThe Irrelevance of Sainthood: The Afterlives of King
Bibliographic Essay
by "Nielsen BookData"