Lynched

The Power of Memory in a Culture of Terror

Angela D Sims author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Baylor University Press

Published:22nd Aug '17

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Lynched cover

Lynched chronicles the history and aftermath of lynching in America. By rooting her work in oral histories, Angela D. Sims gives voice to the memories of African American elders who remember lynching not only as individual acts but as a culture of violence, domination, and fear.

Lynched preserves memory even while it provides an analysis of the meaning of those memories. Sims examines the relationship between lynching and the interconnected realities of race, gender, class, and other social fragmentations that ultimately shape a person's - and a community's - religious self-understanding. Through this understanding, she explores how the narrators reconcile their personal and communal memory of lynching with their lived Christian experience. Moreover, Sims unearths the community's truth that this is sometimes a story of words and at other times a story of silence.

Revealing the bond between memory and moral formation, Sims discovers the courage and hope inherent in the power of recall. By tending to the words of these witnesses, Lynched exposes not only a culture of fear and violence but the practice of story and memory, as well as the narrative of hope within a renewed possibility for justice.

Sims offers ethical insights that shed light on lynching culture and how we continue to experience its effects today. -- James L. Gorman -- Reading Religion
Using oral histories, Sims provides the Christian community with a canon of testimonies that illustrate the scriptural imperative to walk by faith and not by sight. The testimonies of the African American elders are replete with biblical allusions and comparisons, such as the failure to love one's neighbor, the suffering servant, the road to Calvary, and the trek to the lynching tree. -- Marcia Y. Riggs -- Interpretation: A Journal of Bible and Theology
Simply for the way it collects and preserves the stories of dozens of African American survivors of the lynching era, Angela D. Sims' Lynched should be considered required reading for every US citizen. But in explicating the theological, sacramental, ethical, and ecclesiological significance of these memories, Sims makes a vital contribution to the field of theology as well. -- Katie Grimes -- Horizons: The Journal of the College Theology Society

ISBN: 9781481306041

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

213 pages