“During that extraordinary period in American history, white
conservatives, civil rights activists, black militants, black moderates
and Klansmen all staked their particular claims for racial justice and
social order on the premise that God was on their side,” said Charles
Marsh, director of the Project on Lived Theology and professor of religious studies in the College of Arts & Sciences.
The new digital archive includes full-length interviews, newspaper
articles, field reports, letters, court filings and other primary
sources from the Civil Rights Movement – much of which is drawn from the
Project on Lived Theology’s paper archive and Marsh’s decades of
research – and organizes everything by actors, scenes, themes and
keywords, to show how people lived out their theological beliefs in the
world, said Kelly West Figueroa-Ray, manager of the new resource and a
doctoral student in religious studies.
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