Faith, Race, and the Lost Cause

Faith, Race, and the Lost Cause

Author: Christopher Alan Graham

Publisher: University of Virginia Press

Published: 2023-03-07

Total Pages: 308

ISBN-13: 0813948819

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Faith, Race, and the Lost Cause is a new history of Richmond’s famous St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, attended by Robert E. Lee and Jefferson Davis during the Civil War and a tourist magnet thereafter. Christopher Alan Graham’s narrative—which emerged out of St. Paul’s History and Reconciliation Initiative—charts the congregation’s theological and secular views of race from the church’s founding in 1845 to the present day, exploring the church’s complicity in Lost Cause narratives and racial oppression in Richmond. Graham investigates the ways that the actions of elite white southerners who imagined themselves as benevolent—liberal, even—in their treatment of Black people through the decades obscured the actual damage to Black bodies and souls that this ostensible liberalism caused. Placing the legacy of St. Paul’s self-described benevolent paternalism in dialogue with the racial and religious geography of Richmond, Graham reflects on what an authentic process of recognition and reparations might be, drawing useful lessons for America writ large.


Hampton Institute

Hampton Institute

Author: Best Books on

Publisher: Best Books on

Published: 1940

Total Pages: 355

ISBN-13: 1623760666

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Compiled by Mentor A. Howe and Roscoe E. Lewis.


Fatal Self-Deception

Fatal Self-Deception

Author: Eugene D. Genovese

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2011-10-24

Total Pages: 251

ISBN-13: 1139501631

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Slaveholders were preoccupied with presenting slavery as a benign, paternalistic institution in which the planter took care of his family and slaves were content with their fate. In this book, Eugene D. Genovese and Elizabeth Fox-Genovese discuss how slaveholders perpetuated and rationalized this romanticized version of life on the plantation. Slaveholders' paternalism had little to do with ostensible benevolence, kindness and good cheer. It grew out of the necessity to discipline and morally justify a system of exploitation. At the same time, this book also advocates the examination of masters' relations with white plantation laborers and servants - a largely unstudied subject. Southerners drew on the work of British and European socialists to conclude that all labor, white and black, suffered de facto slavery, and they championed the South's 'Christian slavery' as the most humane and compassionate of social systems, ancient and modern.


Religion in the Contemporary South

Religion in the Contemporary South

Author: Corrie Norman (E.)

Publisher: Univ. of Tennessee Press

Published: 2005

Total Pages: 364

ISBN-13: 9781572333611

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Religion has always been crucial to the cultural identity of the South. Religion in the Contemporary South is the first book to fully address the emerging religious pluralism in the South today.