How Did White Southern Churchwomen Use Their Race, Gender, and Faith in the Struggle for Civil Rights, 1945-1968?
written by Edith Holbrook Riehm, fl. 2008 (Alexandria, VA: Alexander Street, 2008), 208 page(s),
Source: documents.alexanderstreet.com
Source: documents.alexanderstreet.com
Details
- Field of Interest
- Women and Social Movements
- Author
- Edith Holbrook Riehm, fl. 2008
- Collection
- Women and Social Movements in the United States,1600-2000
- Content Type
- Document project
- Duration
- 0 sec
- Warning: Contains explicit content
- No
- Format
- Related Web resources
- URL
- https://documents.alexanderstreet.com/node/79
- Page Count
- 208
- Publication Year
- 2008
- Publisher
- Alexander Street
- Place Published / Released
- Alexandria, VA
- Subject
- Women and Social Movements, History, Women and Rights, Women and Religion, Religious faiths, Race relations, Civil rights, Mujer y Derechos, Direitos da Mulher, Mujer y Religión, Mulher e Religião, Southern Regional Council, Fellowship of the Concerned, Atlanta, GA, Civil Rights Movement, Association of Southern Women for the Prevention of Lynching, Dorothy Rogers Tilly, 1883-1970, Women of Color, Women and Religion, Race Discrimination, Religious Leadership and Religious Activism, Depression & World War II (1929–1945), Post-war Era (1945–1960), The Sixties (1960–1974), 20th Century in World History (1914--2000)
- Topic
- Race Discrimination, Religious Leadership and Religious Activism
- Keywords and Translated Subjects
- Mujer y Derechos, Direitos da Mulher, Mujer y Religión, Mulher e Religião