《一步一步:美国种族间主义和谈话优先行动主义的起源》

Q2 Arts and Humanities
Connor S. Kenaston
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引用次数: 0

摘要

友谊和对话是创造更美好世界的第一步,这一观点由来已久。在20世纪上半叶,美国新教徒推动了一场不同种族之间对话与合作的全国性运动。在20世纪40年代和50年代,以白人为主的基督教合一机构的黑人领袖举办了一系列研讨会和对话指南,普及了种族间交流将导致行动的观念。在其机构的财政、道德和组织资源的支持下,他们既改变了种族间运动,也改变了对如何改变社会的主流理解。然而,虽然黑人领袖坚持认为促进种族间交流只是结束歧视的开始,但他们无意中助长了关于建立更公平社会的“第一步”的独立力量的有问题的假设。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Step by Step: American Interracialism and the Origins of Talk-First Activism
The idea that friendship and dialogue are the first steps to making a better world has a history. During the first half of the twentieth century, American Protestants powered a national movement for dialogue and cooperation among people of different races. In the 1940s and 1950s, Black leaders in predominantly white ecumenical Protestant institutions created a series of workshops and dialogue guides that popularized the notion that interracial exchange would lead to action. Backed by their institutions’ financial, moral, and organizational resources, they transformed both the interracial movement and dominant understandings of how to change society. Yet, while Black ecumenical leaders insisted that facilitating interracial exchange was just the beginning form of action in ending discrimination, they unintentionally facilitated problematic assumptions about the standalone power of “first steps” in creating a more equitable society.
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来源期刊
Modern American History
Modern American History Arts and Humanities-History
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
19
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