After Redemption: Jim Crow and the Transformation of African American Religion in the Delta, 1875-1915

Front Cover
Oxford University Press, Nov 21, 2007 - History - 336 pages
After Redemption fills in a missing chapter in the history of African American life after freedom. It takes on the widely overlooked period between the end of Reconstruction and World War I to examine the sacred world of ex-slaves and their descendants living in the region more densely settled than any other by blacks living in this era, the Mississippi and Arkansas Delta. Drawing on a rich range of local memoirs, newspaper accounts, photographs, early blues music, and recently unearthed Works Project Administration records, John Giggie challenges the conventional view that this era marked the low point in the modern evolution of African-American religion and culture. Set against a backdrop of escalating racial violence in a region more densely populated by African Americans than any other at the time, he illuminates how blacks adapted to the defining features of the post-Reconstruction South-- including the growth of segregation, train travel, consumer capitalism, and fraternal orders--and in the process dramatically altered their spiritual ideas and institutions. Masterfully analyzing these disparate elements, Giggie's study situates the African-American experience in the broadest context of southern, religious, and American history and sheds new light on the complexity of black religion and its role in confronting Jim Crow.
 

Contents

African American Religion in the Age of Segregation in the Delta
3
1 TRAIN TRAVEL and the Black Religious Imagination
23
2 FRATERNAL ORDERS Disfranchisement and the Institutional Growth of Black Religion
59
3 THE INTERSECTING RHYTHMS of Spiritual and Commercial Life
96
4 THE MATERIAL CULTURE of Religion
137
5 THE MAKING of the African American Holiness Movement
165
Delta Journeys
194
NOTES
201
SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY
253
INDEX
299
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2007)

John M. Giggie is Assistant Professor of History at the University of Alabama. He is the co-editor of Faith in the Market: Religion and the Rise of Urban Commercial Culture.

Bibliographic information