Prophetic Peril: The Rhetoric of Nineteenth-Century African American Prophetic-Call Narratives

Thomas M. Fuerst
University Press of Mississippi

Prophecy reimagines the world. It critiques what is and encourages its audience to imagine what could be. All prophecy, therefore, begins with a person willing to reimagine their own situation. In the biblical and African American traditions, this person receives a “call” to prophetic ministry that upends their reality and compels them to change the way things are. 

Prophetic Peril: The Rhetoric of Nineteenth-Century African American Prophetic-Call Narratives invites readers into the imaginative, subversive, and ethically complicated stories of four nineteenth-century Black figures who received the call to challenge the what is and live into the what could be in the midst of a hard-hearted world.

Read more at University Press of Mississippi

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The Unseen Truth: When Race Changed Sight in America

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Undivided: The Quest for Racial Solidarity in an American Church