
The Folk Category Has Often Been Used To Highlight The Vibrant Religious Cultures Of Marginal Communities In The U.s. To Know The Soul Of A People, Though Sympathetic To This Perspective, Shows How The Category In The Study Of Religion Contributed To Shaping The Perceptions Of Black And Lower-class Communities In American Social And Political Thought. From 1924 To 1941, A Cadre Of Social Scientists Used The Category In Their Field Studies Of Black Rural Populations In The Poor South. Charles Johnson, Guy Johnson, Lewis Jones, Alison Davis, Gunnar Myrdal And Other Second-generation Male Social Scientists Deployed The Category To Jettison Biological Views Of Racial Inferiority In Order To Amplify Prejudice And Stagnant Economy That They Felt Contributed To The Social Status Of Black (and White) Rural Communities In The Jim Crow South. But The Reformist Agenda Of The Social Scientists Took A Detour Away From Prejudice And Socioeconomic Conditions To Concentrate On The Cultural And Behavioral Deficits Of America's Folk Population. Perusing Field-notes, Correspondences, Proposals, Monographs, This Book Argues That These Liberal-minded Social Scientists Had A Hand In The Making Of A Folk Population On The Basis Of Their Perceived Antiquated And Underdeveloped Religious Behaviors. Jamil W. Drake Demonstrates How The Religion Of Rural Black Communities In The Social Sciences Laid The Seeds To The Ideas Of The Culture Of Poverty After World War Ii-- Provided By Publisher.
This book investigates how the academic category of 'folk' was utilized by social scientists to construct specific, often detrimental, perceptions of Black and lower-class religious communities in the American South. Jamil W. Drake, a scholar of American religion, examines the work of mid-twentieth-century social scientists who sought to move away from biological racism but inadvertently replaced it with theories focusing on cultural and behavioral deficits. By analyzing field notes, correspondence, and monographs, the author argues that these researchers helped solidify the 'culture of poverty' framework that would dominate social policy after World War II.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars in the fields of religious studies and American history recognize this work as a critical intervention in understanding how social science research shaped public policy and racial perceptions. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose and the author's meticulous use of archival materials to challenge established historical narratives.
Page Count:
0
Publication Date:
2022-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190082720
ISBN-13:
9780190082727
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