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“Our God is Marching On”: James Hudson and the Theological Foundation of the Civil Rights Movement

dc.creatorRivers, Larry Omar
dc.date.accessioned2020-08-22T17:40:46Z
dc.date.available2017-06-30
dc.date.issued2010-08-02
dc.identifier.urihttps://etd.library.vanderbilt.edu/etd-07202010-124847
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/1803/13310
dc.description.abstractThis dissertation is an intellectual biography of James Hudson (1903-1980), a black minister and philosopher of religion. Standing just over five feet tall with a body that lacked a right arm and weighed less than 140 pounds, Hudson was a small man who became a giant in the mid-twentieth century struggle against Jim Crow. As a college chaplain in the Florida’s capital city, he played an indispensable role in building that community’s civil rights movement. Specifically, Hudson connected Tallahassee to a powerful network of black religious intellectuals that, with his avid participation, built a “freedom curriculum” which systematized a militant ethics of Christian nonviolence. By teaching from this curriculum, he inspired local students and churchgoers to engage in noncooperation against segregation, beginning with a 1956 boycott of Tallahassee’s bus system. The Inter-Civic Council (ICC) Hudson and others founded to coordinate this protest, which followed the lead of similar boycott organizations in Baton Rouge and Montgomery, became an integral part of what sociologist Aldon Moris called the “institutional soil from which the [Southern Christian Leadership Conference] would emerge.” Furthermore, as one of the black Baptist church’s most widely read Personalist philosophers on the eve of the Civil Rights Movement, Hudson laid a critical foundation for Martin Luther King, Jr., another black Personalist, to become the movement’s premier spokesman. This manuscript examines Hudson’s life, with particular emphasis on his thought and praxis. It adds to a small but growing body of literature about the movement’s ideational origins.
dc.format.mimetypeapplication/pdf
dc.subjectAfrican Americans
dc.subjectBiography
dc.subjectHistory
dc.subjectReligion
dc.subjectTallahassee
dc.subjectFlorida
dc.subjectChristianity
dc.title“Our God is Marching On”: James Hudson and the Theological Foundation of the Civil Rights Movement
dc.typedissertation
dc.contributor.committeeMemberMichael Bess
dc.contributor.committeeMemberThomas Schwartz
dc.contributor.committeeMemberLewis V. Baldwin
dc.type.materialtext
thesis.degree.namePHD
thesis.degree.leveldissertation
thesis.degree.disciplineHistory
thesis.degree.grantorVanderbilt University
local.embargo.terms2017-06-30
local.embargo.lift2017-06-30
dc.contributor.committeeChairDennis C. Dickerson


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