392 Religion and Race in Early America

392 Religion and Race in Early America

What does history have to tell us about how we, as Americans, came to define people by their race; the visual ways we have grouped people together based on their skin color, facial features, hair texture, and ancestry? As you might imagine, history has a LOT to tell us about this question! So today, we’re going to explore one aspect of the answer to this question by focusing on some of the ways religion shaped European and early American ideas about race and racial groupings. Kathryn Gin Lum is an Associate Professor of Religious Studies at Stanford University. She’s also the author of Heathen: Religion and Race in American History. Show Notes:https://www.benfranklinsworld.com/392 Complementary Episodes 🎧 Episode 047: Christian Imperialism: Converting the World in the Early American Republic 🎧 Episode 109: The American Enlightenment & Cadwallader Colden 🎧 Episode 139: Indian Enslavement in the Americas 🎧 Episode 311: Religion and the American Revolution 🎧 Episode 334: Missions and Mission Building in New Spain 🎧 Episode 367: The Brafferton Indian School, Part 1 🎧 Episode 376: Cotton Mather’s Spanish Lessons REQUEST A TOPIC 📨 Topic Request Form 📫 liz@benfranklinsworld.com WHEN YOU'RE READY 🗞️ BFW Gazette Newsletter👩‍💻 BFW Listener Community🌍 The History Explorers Club LISTEN 🍎 Apple Podcasts 💚 Spotify 🎶 Amazon Music 🛜 Pandora CONNECT 🦋 Liz on Bluesky 👩‍💻 Liz on LinkedIn 🛜 Liz’s Website SAY THANKS 💜 Leave a review on Apple Podcasts 💚 Leave a rating on Spotify Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Jaksot(500)

441 The Escapes of David George

441 The Escapes of David George

When David George lay sick with smallpox in Savannah during the Revolutionary War, he faced three possible outcomes: death, re-enslavement, or freedom. Greg O'Malley, Professor of History at UC Santa...

19 Touko 1h 15min

BFW Revisited: Running from Bondage in the American Revolution

BFW Revisited: Running from Bondage in the American Revolution

She fled on horseback in the thick of war. Her six-year-old son rode with her. The white tailor at her side would pass, when anyone asked, as her husband. Her name was Sarah. She was one of tens of th...

12 Touko 57min

440 Jefferson's Cut Grievance and the British Monarchy's Role in Slavery

440 Jefferson's Cut Grievance and the British Monarchy's Role in Slavery

Thomas Jefferson's draft of the Declaration of Independence contained 28 grievances against King George III — not 27. The final grievance, the one Congress cut before signing, accused the British kin...

5 Touko 1h 16min

BFW Revisited: Whose Fourth of July?

BFW Revisited: Whose Fourth of July?

On July 5, 1852, Frederick Douglass stood before the Rochester Ladies' Anti-Slavery Society and asked one of the most searing questions in American history: "What, to the slave, is the Fourth of July?...

28 Huhti 1h 15min

439 When the Declaration of Independence Was News

439 When the Declaration of Independence Was News

The Second Continental Congress voted for independence on July 2, 1776, but it had absolutely no plan for telling the world about it. Congress sent just one copy of the Declaration to France. It was ...

21 Huhti 1h 17min

BFW Revisited: Age of Revolutions

BFW Revisited: Age of Revolutions

Between 1763 and 1848, revolutions swept across four continents. We tend to remember three of them — the American, the French, and the Haitian Revolutions. But what about all the rest? And what connec...

14 Huhti 1h 20min

438 The American Revolution & the Fate of the World

438 The American Revolution & the Fate of the World

What if the American Revolution didn't just create the United States, but also created Australia? Most of us learned about the Revolution as a story of thirteen North American colonies pushing back a...

7 Huhti 1h 11min

BFW Revisited: British-Occupied Philadelphia, 1777–1778

BFW Revisited: British-Occupied Philadelphia, 1777–1778

In September 1777, just fourteen months after declaring independence, Philadelphia fell to the British Army. For nearly nine months, the new nation's capital was occupied territory. But what did that...

31 Maalis 1h 10min

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