What inspired you to write “New World A-Coming: Black Religion and Racial Identity During the Great Migration”?
I have been fascinated by the Black new religious movements of the Great Migration era since I read Arthur Huff Fauset’s 1944 “Black Gods of the Metropolis: Negro Religious Cults of the Urban North” as an undergraduate. There has been a renewed scholarly interest in many of the groups he profiled that had emerged or expanded in the early 20th-century urban North — Black Jews, the Moorish Science Temple, Holiness and Pentecostal churches, and Father Divine’s Peace Mission, for example — and attention to other groups he did not include in his study, such as the Nation of Islam. I thought the time was right to do a comparative study like his and revisit the period in which he conducted his ethnographic work, thinking across the groups about commonalities and differences.
I chose to focus on the Moorish Science Temple, the Nation of Islam, Father Divine’s Peace Mission, and congregations of Ethiopian Hebrews, all early 20th-century urban Black religious movements in which founders, leaders and members embraced new ways of thinking about the relationship of religion to racial identity. Like Fauset, I was interested in how migration and urbanization shaped the religious worlds of African-Americans and Afro-Caribbean immigrants, but questions about the intersection of religion and racial identity frame my project.
What’s the most important take-home message for readers?
I want readers to come away with an understanding of the complexity with which religion and racial identity have been intertwined for people of African descent in the United States. Religious ideas, practices and institutions have contributed to the production and maintenance of racial categories across American history and, with these groups — which I call religio-racial movements — we have rich cases of Black people challenging and reformulating racial identity through religious means.
These were flamboyant, performative movements in which people took spiritual names, adopted new styles of dress and food practices, and ordered their families and communities in ways that sometimes chafed against social conventions.
By looking at how members of these groups understood religio-racial identity, we see that Black people were not only subject to racial construction — that is, that white people produced and imposed categories and hierarchies — but contributed to racial thinking in American history, and religion was often central to these contributions. I also hope the book inspires readers to ask questions about the intersections of religion and race for other groups and at different moments in American history.
Is there anything you had to leave out?
I had to cut a good deal of material to get the book down to a reasonable length. Most of what I left out were short narrative sections that offered supporting examples supplementing other examples in the book, and the streamlining benefited the flow. Nevertheless, editing out stories of average members of the groups, even though many remained, was difficult for me because I was especially interested in highlighting their experiences.
What are some of the biggest misconceptions about your topic?
The characterization of these groups in earlier literature and in popular discourse as deviant “sects and cults,” their founders and leaders as fakers and charlatans and the members as gullible dupes has obscured the complexity of the religious and social worlds participants created. Critics at the time and some scholars since have characterized leaders and members of the movements as pretending to be something they were obviously not: Asiatic Muslims, Ethiopian Hebrews, Moorish Muslims or raceless children of Father Divine. When we focus on the religio-racial theologies and practices of the movements, we see their argument that Negro, the prevailing racial category of the time, is an invention and a product of slavery and how they sought new religious frameworks for understanding the Black past and future.
Did you have a specific audience in mind when writing?
I want the book to be of interest and useful to a scholarly reader, but I had my undergraduate students in mind, particularly those I have taught in courses on African-American religious history and religion and race in America. I wanted to engage them with a readable text that offers new theoretical insights about the co-constitution of race and religion in this period and that locates these religious groups that highlight religious diversity, in a prominent place in the narrative of African-American religious history.
Are you hoping to just inform readers? Entertain them? Piss them off?
My hope is that readers will be engaged by the stories of the leaders and members of these groups who were striving to remake the landscape of possibility for Black flourishing. There’s a lot of playfulness on their part, mixed in with their serious work, and I hope I conveyed this as well.
What alternative title would you give the book?
“Apostles of Race” was the working title throughout the years of research and writing, drawn from a chapter title of journalist Roi Ottley’s 1943 “New World A-Coming: Inside Black America,” in which he discussed culture, politics, religion and social life among African-Americans and Afro-Caribbean immigrants in Harlem. I used Ottley’s work as a primary source because of his interest in questions about Black history and “the Negro’s future” in transnational perspective.
I came to think of the people I was writing about as “apostles of race” in offering new ways of thinking about the relationship between religio-racial identity. When I submitted the manuscript, my editor, Jennifer Hammer, and her colleagues at New York University Press, encouraged me to go with a title that emphasized the dynamic change the leaders and members wanted to effect, so we settled on “New World A-Coming.”
Is there a book out there you wish you had written? Which one? Why?
So many to choose from! I’ve been thinking a lot lately about Toni Morrison’s “Playing in the Dark: Whiteness and the Literary Imagination” (which she published 25 years ago) and James Baldwin’s “The Devil Finds Work.” Both are beautifully written and offer penetrating analysis of race, the arts and American identity.
What’s your next book?
I’m just getting started on a book about the intersections of race, African-American religions and psychiatry in the late 19th and early 20th century United States. I’m interested in the way that psychiatric theory framed African and African diaspora religious practices in relation to ideas about normal and disordered minds, and in the treatment Black people deemed to be suffering from religiously grounded mental illness received in communities, courts and mental institutions.
Other works by Judith Weisenfeld:
“Hollywood Be Thy Name: African American Religion in American Film, 1929-1949”
From the earliest years of sound film in America, Hollywood studios and independent producers of “race films” for Black audiences created stories featuring African-American religious practices. In the first book to examine how the movies constructed images of African-American religion, Weisenfeld explores these cinematic representations and how they reflected and contributed to complicated discourses about race, the social and moral requirements of American citizenship, and the very nature of American identity.
“African American Women and Christian Activism: New York’s Black YWCA, 1905-1945”
The middle class Black women profiled here were committed both to social action and to institutional expression of their religious convictions. Their story provides an illuminating perspective on the varied forces working to improve quality of life for African-Americans in crucial times. When undertaking to help young women migrating to and living alone in New York, Weisenfeld’s protagonists chose to work within a national evangelical institution. Their organization of a Black chapter of the Young Women’s Christian Association in 1905 was a clear step toward establishing a suitable environment for young working women; it was also an expression of their philosophy of social uplift. And predictably it was the beginning of an equal rights struggle — to work as equals with white women activists. Growing and adapting as New York’s Black community evolved over the decades, the Black YWCA assumed a central role both in the community’s religious life and as a training ground for social action.
(Source: judithweisenfeld.com)