----- 一个密西西比,两个密西西比: 卫理教徒、谋杀与尼肖巴县的种族平等起义
Contents Preface Introduction PART I HISTORY AND MEMORY SETTLING LONGDALE, MS. AND MT. ZION METHODIST CHURCH 1) As We Remembered Zion, 1833-1890 2) Mt. Zion Church and It's Memories, 1878 on 3) "I Was Never Scared": Mt. Zion in the Jim Crow Years, 1890-1954 PART II "THE GREAT ANOMALY" THE METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH AND ITS BLACK MEMBERS 4) Sanctified Segregation: Black Methodists and the Central Jurisdiction, 1920-1940 75 5) The Segregationist Insurgency and the Politicization of Mississippi Methodism, 1940-1955 95 6) In The Aftermath of Brown: The Racial Struggle inside the Mississippi Methodist Church, 1954-1964 7) "Segregation Is Not Unchristian": Methodists Debate Desegregation, 1956-1964 8) Neshoba Murders and Mississippi Methodists,1963-1964 PART III MT. ZION'S WITNESS: CREATING MEMORIES 9) Morality and Memory in Neshoba In The Sixties 10) Truth anf Tradition in Neshoba County, 1964-1967 11) The Struggle for Inclusive Schools and Churches, 1964-1974 12) "A Tight Little Town" Tackles It's Future, 1980-2000 13) Addressing Unfinished Business: The Philadelphia Coalition 14) The Contested Past: Black Justice and the Killen Trial Epilogue The Importance of Remembering Acknowledgements EndNotes Bibliography
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