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  • Writer's pictureDavid Carlson

1098: We suffer an embarrassment of riches

Day 1098: Sunday, March 19, 2023

We suffer an embarrassment of riches



ANNOUNCEMENT #1: Join Today's American Catholic for an inter-generational panel discussion on Small Christian Communities


Join on Tuesday, March 21 at 6pm ET for an inter-generational panel discussion on small Christian communities. Panel participants will include Fr. Joe Healey, a CCRI member and Maryknoll priest with decades of experience working with small Christian communities; Kevin Ahern, an author, editor, and professor of religious studies at Manhattan College; and Paulina Halley, a recent graduate of Yale University and Small Christian Community participant. Panelists will discuss God's Quad: Small Faith Communities on Campus and Beyond (Orbis Books, 2018), edited by Kevin Ahern and Christopher Derige Malano and featuring a contribution from Fr. Joe Healey. To register, click here. For additional information, please email editor@todaysamericancatholic.org.


ANNOUNCEMENT #2: Thursday, March 23, 2023 at 7pm ET

Dr. Nikki Taylor discusses her book on the tragic life of enslaved woman Margaret Garner

Register using this link: Register


Thursday, March 23, 2023 at 7pm ETDr. Nikki Taylor discusses her book on the tragic life of enslaved woman Margaret Garner

As part of our Women Witnesses for Racial Justice series, please join Dr. Nikki M. Taylor, Professor of History and Chair of the Department as she discusses her book Driven Toward Madness: The Fugitive Slave Margaret Garner and Tragedy on the Ohio (2016).

The focus of her story is Margaret Garner, an enslaved wife and mother who, along with her entire family, escaped from slavery in northern Kentucky in 1856. When their owners caught up with the Garner family, Margaret tried to kill all four of her children–and succeeded in killing one–rather than see them return to slavery. Using black feminist and interdisciplinary methodologies, this book retells this harrowing story from the perspective of Margaret Garner–a woman who could not read or write and left little of her own voice in the historical record. Ultimately, Driven Toward Madness examines why this fated act was the last best option for her as an enslaved mother.

Bio

Professor Taylor specializes in 19th century African American History. Her sub-specialties are in Urban, African American Women, and Intellectual History. Educated at the University of Pennsylvania (BA) and Duke University (MA, PhD, Certificate in Women’s Studies). Dr. Taylor has won several fellowships including Fulbright, Social Science Research Council, and Woodrow Wilson. She is also the Principal Investigator of two institutional grants, including the $5 million Mellon Just Futures grant (2021) and the Mellon Mays Undergraduate Fellowship Program Grant ($480k in 2017) Nikki M. Taylor is currently completing her 4th monograph, “‘Brooding Over Bloody Revenge:’ Enslaved Women, ‘Wild Justice’ and Lethal Resistance to Slavery.” The manuscript examines enslaved women who used lethal violence to resist slavery from the colonial to anteblelum eras, challenging all previous interpretations about the nature of their resistance.

Her first book, Frontiers of Freedom: Cincinnati’s Black Community 1802-68 (2005) uses the backdrop of one of the nineteenth-century’s most racist American cities to chart the emergence of a very conscientious black community–a community of people who employed various tactics such as black nationalism, emigration, legislative agitation, political alliances, self-education, and even armed self-defense to carve out a space for themselves as free people living in the shadow of slavery.


Professor Taylor’s second book, America’s First Black Socialist: The Radical Life of Peter H. Clark (2013), is a political and intellectual biography of one of the foremost African American activists, intellectuals, orators, and politicians in the nineteenth-century–a man whose name once was spoken in the same breath as Frederick Douglass, Dr. McCune Smith, and John Mercer Langston. This book charts Clark’s journey from recommending that slaveholders be sent to “hospitable/ graves,” to advocating for a separate black nation, to forging alliances with German socialists and labor radicals, to adopting the conservative mantle of the Democratic Party.


Driven Toward Madness: The Fugitive Slave Margaret Garner and Tragedy on the Ohio (2016) is Dr. Taylor’s third monograph. This book is a biography of Margaret Garner, an enslaved wife and mother who, along with her entire family, escaped from slavery in northern Kentucky in 1856. When their owners caught up with the Garner family, Margaret tried to kill all four of her children–and succeeded in killing one–rather than see them return to slavery. Using black feminist and interdisciplinary methodologies, this book retells this harrowing story from the perspective of Margaret Garner–a woman who could not read or write and left little of her own voice in the historical record. Ultimately, Driven Toward Madness examines why this fated act was the last best option for her as an enslaved mother. Inspired by Garner’s story, Dr. Taylor’s current research is about enslaved women who used armed violence to resist slavery.

Register

ANNOUNCEMENT #3: An Invitation to Share our Story!

 INVITATION to join SpiritUnbounded.org as a Companion on the Road and/or to submit individual Stories for the website


Companion on the Road

Root and Branch ‘soft’ launched SpiritUnbounded on the 30th January. Any group wishing to be a Companion simply needs to complete the online Companion submission form.

It will go on a page looking like this with the heading COMPANIONS ON THE ROAD. It will not go on the About Us page as it currently does but will have its own page - we are evolving all the time. On the About Us page we will have the growing Implementation Team.

Our Stories

We are also seeking Stories from individuals to go on the page headed Our Stories - soon also to be used on social media to generate discussion and support for others experiencing the complexity of being Catholics today.


Here is the story form for individuals wishing to upload their story and photo. Should people choose to remain anonymous we will use the Spirit Unbounded logo instead of a headshot.


ANNOUNCEMENT #4: An Invitation to an Immigrant Stations of the Cross in Southern California (let's see how we can get involved here)

ANNOUNCEMENT #6 Mark your Calendars: May 11, 2023 - Free Concert at St. Leo's



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