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Religion and the Making of Nat Turner's Virginia: Baptist Community and Conflict, 1740-1840
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Barnes and Noble
Religion and the Making of Nat Turner's Virginia: Baptist Community and Conflict, 1740-1840
Current price: $47.50
Barnes and Noble
Religion and the Making of Nat Turner's Virginia: Baptist Community and Conflict, 1740-1840
Current price: $47.50
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For both black and white Virginians, evangelical discourses of authority, community, and meaning provided the material for a wide variety of interpretations of Christianity's social and spiritual message during the Revolutionary and early national eras. Even as some white church leaders sought to institutionalize a white, paternalist vision of evangelicalism's meanings, rapidly increasing black participation in Baptist congregations in the early nineteenth century provided fertile ground for new, alternative interpretations of Baptist concepts and practices. The Turner rebellion brought these diverse subterranean currents of dissent to the surface in ways that upset the delicate balance between white institutional authority and black spiritual independence that had evolved in the previous decades. Reaction to the uprising intensified the trend toward separation and segregation of black and white religion in the antebellum period and had powerful, lasting effects on race relations and religious culture in America.