Search results for ""Author James L. Conyers, Jr.""
Hamilton Books Africana Faith
Book SynopsisThis primer aspires to make a concentric analysis of the function and capacity of spirituality and religiosity, within the African American Muslim movement. This collection of essays places emphasis on the role and views of the missionary and voluntary spread of Islam among African Americans in the United States.Trade ReviewAfricana Faith: A Religious History of the African American Crusade in Islam has that rare virtue of being a necessary text. In breadth, creative organization, and nuance, the anthology works on many levels as James Conyers has assembled works offering analyses of African American Muslims within the context of American historiography and a broad array of debates across the social sciences. A classic reader is born! ——Lewis Gordon, author of An Introduction to Africana Philosophy -- Lewis GordonTable of ContentsPreface vii Acknowledgments ix PART I: HISTORICAL OVERVIEW 1 1 Notes in Negro American Influences on the Emergence of African Nationalism (1960) George Shepperson 3 2 Islam as a Factor in West African Culture (1911) George W. Ellis 23 3 Muslims in Early America (1994) Michael A. Gomez 47 PART II: SOCIOLOGY OF RELIGION 91 4 The Voodoo Cult among Negro Migrants in Detroit (1938) Erdmann Doane Beyon 93 5 Elijah in the Wilderness (1960) Nat Hentoff 107 6 Registerested with Allah (1997) Arna Bontemps and Jack Conroy 117 7 Moorish Science Temple of America (1957) Arthur H. Fauset 141 8 Negro Nationalism and the Black Muslims (1962) Claude Lightfoot 153 PART III: POLITICS OF RELIGION 173 9 The Black Muslims and the Negro American’s Quest for Communion: A Case Study in the Genesis of Negro Protest Movements (1969) Howard Kaplan 175 10 The Black Muslim Movement and the American Constitutional System (1983) Oliver Jones Jr. 191 11 Black Muslims and the Police (1965) Lee P. Brown 211 PART IV: ECONOMICS OF RELIGION 227 12 The Protestant Ethic among the Black Muslims (1966) Lawrence L. Tyler 229 13 Christian Elements in Negro American Muslim Religious Beliefs (1964) Abbie Whyte 241 14 Watchtower Influences on Black Muslim Eschatology: An Exploratory Story (1970) William Maesen 251 15 The Moslem Influence Among American Negroes (1962) John F. Hatchett 259 PART V: PSYCHOLOGY OF RELIGION 267 16 The Muslim Mission in the Context of American Social History (1983) C. Eric Lincoln 269 17 African American Muslim Women (1991) Beverly Thomas (Aminah) McCloud 287 18 What Shall We Call Him? Islam and African American Identity (1997) Richard Brent Turner 301 19 Family Stability Among African-American Muslims (1991) Na’im Akbar 335 20 Aspects of Black Muslim Theology (1981) Zafar Ishaq Ansari 353 PART VI: INTERDISCIPLINARY PERSPECTIVES 389 21 W.D. Muhammad: The Making of a “Black Muslim” Leader (1933–1961) (1985) Zafar Ishaq Ansari 391 22 From Black Muslim to Bilalian: The Evolution of a Movement (1982) Lawrence H. Mamiya 409 23 The Black Muslims: From Revolution to Institution (1964) Michael Parenti 433 24 The Black Muslims in America: A Reinterpretation (1963) W. Haywood Burns 451 25 Islam in the United States of America: A Review of the Sources (1981) Sulayman S. Nyang Index About the Editor and Contributors
£107.10
Anthem Press Muhammad Ali in Africana Cultural Memory
Book SynopsisOne critical priority of the discipline of Africana studies is applied memory, specifically, how the record of the culture’s survival and agency reveals usable and reproducible knowledge and behavior. In terms of how Muhammad Ali, as an historical actor, has left an heroic legacy that bequeaths to us a sort of inheritance, the critical task at hand is to systematically explore this historical actor’s life, feats, philosophy, grit, worldview, and even his folkloric antihero to decipher his Africana cultural memory value. At the core of this edited collection is a commitment to enhance the cultural storytelling about Muhammad Ali and to critically itemize the lessons we garner from his life as allegory. The ancestral life is one that is remembered and recalled. The contributors’ research uncovers Ali’s local, national, and global encounters that are legacy worldviews. These perspectives give us direction for mining the critical depth of Ali’s encounters which map his memory in terms of culturally sustaining confidence, self-esteem, reinvention, immortalization, and empathy. These are the fertile seeds of Africana cultural memory which bloom into powerful markers and monuments of an epic life of hyperheroic activity relevant to cultural memory, sports, history, politics, health, and aesthetics.Trade Review“An anthology exploring the life, significance, and influence of Muhammad Ali is exciting. Ali has largely been framed as the greatest fighter ever to grace the ring and undeniably a cultural icon. However, such a simplistic narrative undermines Ali as the greatest athlete social activist in history rooted in the best of Africana cultural and political traditions. This anthology seeks to frame Ali as a complex and multi-faceted personality who has had one of the most profound impacts on social justice movements in the United States.” —Dr. Adisa Alkebulan, San Diego State University, US“Muhammad Ali in Africana Cultural Memory succinctly describes how Ali challenged white hegemony in the sporting community and in the broader national and international arena. It explains how Ali defined social norms and fought for boxing championships as well as the right for self-actualization by crafting a highly intelligent theatrical presentation of self in and out of the ring. The book reminds us of Black Hope, cultural pride and the courage to help navigate the challenges that the intersection of life with race presents. That like Ali we can defend our rights to breathe and ‘float like a butterfly and sting like a bee.’”— Theresa Rajack Talley, Dalhousie University, CanadaTable of ContentsList of Illustrations; Foreword; Preface; Acknowledgments; Chapter One “Something Greater than Pride”: Muhammad Ali and Black Cultural Mythology, Christel N. Temple; Chapter Two Muhammad Ali, the Nation of Islam, and Sport: The Grind of Spirituality, James L. Conyers Jr.; Chapter Three Muhammad Ali and the European Fabric of Domination, Molefi Kete Asante; Chapter Four Muhammad Ali as Skh, Wade W. Nobles; Chapter Five Let Us Make a Man: Muhammad Ali’s Reeducation through Critical Black Pedagogy, Abul A. Pitre, Ruby Holden-Pitre, and Natalie Williamson; Chapter Six The Challenge of Race and Religion in the United States: From Cassius Clay to Muhammad Ali; Bayyinah S. Jeffries; Chapter Seven Global Influence of Muhammad Ali’s Pan-Ethnic Vision and Conviction: Africa and Asia in the 1970s, Suzuko Morikawa; Chapter Eight Muhammad Ali’s Cuba Connections, Anju Reejhsinghani; Chapter Nine Muhammad Ali: The Greatest Advocate for Peace and Humanity, Rebecca Hankins; Chapter Ten Muhammad Ali, aka “The Greatest”: Demonstration of Ubuntu, Derek Wilson; Chapter Eleven Still the People’s Champ and Relevant in the Fight for Social Justice: Muhammad Ali’s Conversion of Athletic Capital into Sociopolitical Capital, Billy Hawkins; Chapter Twelve Influencing at the Intersections: Black Sportswomen’s Activism in the Era of Muhammad Ali, Akilah R. Carter-Francique; Chapter Thirteen Caring for the Minds of Our Heroes: A Brief Overview of Common Mental Health Impairments, Treatment Modalities, and Veteran Administration Resources, Karen E. Alexander, Ryan Moore, Jeanette Anderson, William Kouba, and Waveney LaGrone; Chapter Fourteen The Complementary Duo of Sports and Activism: Critical Reflections on Muhammad Ali as a Formidable Athlete and Activist, Howard Bartee Jr.; Chapter Fifteen Nostra Aetate, Inshallah: Muhammad Ali in Community Dialogue with Catholic Communicators, Autumn Raynor; Chapter Sixteen Ali: Standing for Something, Brandon Allen; Chapter Seventeen Muhammad Ali and Health and Wellness, Angela Branch-Vital, Andrea McDonald, Park Esewiata Atatah, Catherine Kisavi-Atatah, and James L. Conyers Jr.; Conclusion; List of Contributors; Index.
£72.00