Article "Black Liberation Means An End To White Power"

Dublin Core

Title

Article "Black Liberation Means An End To White Power"

Description

The article "Black Liberation Means An End To White Power," explores Black Theology and the work of Dr. James H. Cone who believed that Christianity supports oppression and slavery. To him, Christianity was a tool of White Power that needed to be dismantled through black liberation. Dr. Cone additionally believed that violence used by white people was a means of control, believing that violence was ignored until a White Supremacist was the victim. Dr. Cone believed that reconciliation could only occur after the lasting effects of racism are dismantled.

Source

"Black Liberation Means an End to White." The University of Richmond Collegian LIX, no.4. (October 8, 1971): 1. http://collegian.richmond.edu/cgi-bin/richmond?a=d&d=COL19711008.2.6&srpos=4&e=--1920---1989--en-20--1--txt-txIN-

Publisher

The Collegian, University of Richmond

Date

1971-10-08

Format

Language

English

Type

Identifier

CollegianLIX.%204.1-19711008.jpg

Coverage

Richmond (Va.)

Text Item Type Metadata

Student Contributor

Files

http://memory.richmond.edu/files/originals-for-csv-imports/CollegianLIX. 4.1-19711008.jpg

Citation

“Article "Black Liberation Means An End To White Power",” University of Richmond Race & Racism Project, accessed October 15, 2024, https://memory.richmond.edu/items/show/1676.