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Interracialism and Christian Community in the Postwar
South
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By Tracy Elaine K'Meyer |
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256 pages 10 illustrations one map |
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Paper ISBN 0-8139-2002-7 $21.50 |
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| Cloth ISBN 0-8139-1712-3 $42.50 |
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Based on over fifty interviews with current and former Koinonia members, K'Meyer's book provides a history of the farm during its period of greatest influence. K'Meyer outlines the conceptual flaws that have troubled the community, but finds that Koinonia's enduring effect as a social movement--including Millard Fuller's founding of Habitat for Humanity, prompted by a 1965 visit to the farm--is far more meaningful than its internal conflicts. For anyone in search of a hardy strain of Christian progressivism in the Bible Belt, reading K'Meyer's book is an inspiring and intellectually fulfilling experience in its own right. |
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"In this compelling book Tracy K'Meyer narrates the story of Koinonia Farm, which was founded in 1942 and is still in operation in Sumter County, Georgia. . . . Interracialism and Christian Community in the Postwar South succeeds not only as a history but as a primer for social action." --American Studies International "Tracy Elaine K'Meyer captures the intrigue of Koinonia Farm's history in her eloquently crafted book. . . . [Her] research is solid, the writing is lively, and the story is engaging. This book does remarkable service to the task of studying a significant religious and social movement in the twentieth-century South." --North Carolina Historical Review |
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Eugene L. Stelzig, Distinguished Teaching Professor and Chair of the Department of English, SUNY Geneseo, is also the author of Hermann Hesse's Fictions of the Self: Autobiography and the Confessional Imagination and All Shades of Consciousness: Wordsworth's Poetry and the Self in Time. |
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Interracialism and Christian Community in the Postwar
South |
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http://www.upress.virginia.edu/k'meyer.html |
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Revised 9/26/07 |