“In African American intellectual history, religious skepticism, agnosticism, atheism, and secular humanism have long been lost in the shadow of the black church. Taking a closer look at the evidence, Cameron shows that the experience of slavery and the degradations of proslavery Christianity also led some enslaved and free blacks in the nineteenth century to varieties of unbelief. This tradition laid a foundation for the next century, from the Harlem Renaissance to the Black Power movement and beyond. With deft readings of a host of fascinating figures, Cameron shows how black freethinkers made important interventions in American culture.” —Christopher Grasso, author of Skepticism and American Faith: From the Revolution to the Civil War
"Real scholarship on this largely ignored piece of American heritage is long overdue. The work of author and professor Christopher Cameron is now giving that history the platform it deserves." —American Atheist
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“Cameron offers a compelling survey of African American freethought across two centuries. Rather than treating secularism as a regulatory discourse of modern statecraft, Cameron unpacks the alienations, arguments, and aspirations of black secularists themselves. He brings depth and clarity to an aspect of African American religious history rarely given the sustained attention it deserves.” —Leigh Eric Schmidt, author of Hearing Things: Religion, Illusion, and the American Enlightenment — -
"Relying heavily on the writings and speeches of African American freethinkers such as Frederick Douglass, W. E. B. Du Bois, A. Philip Randolph, Zora Neale Hurston, James Baldwin, Richard Wright, and Alice Walker, the book compellingly articulates an important strain in American intellectual and religious development. The author supplements these primary sources with a range of manuscripts, newspapers, and newsletters, and an expansive secondary literature . . . the intersection between freethinkers' thought and other intellectual strains, such as feminism, socialism, and communism, is also well documented." —T. F. Armstrong, formerly, Ministry of Higher Education and Scientific Research, UAE, CHOICE
“While the Black church is a fixture in the story of African American experience, and while numerous ethnographic studies highlight the higher rates of religious participation among African Americans, particularly Christians, Cameron’s work troubles the easy categorizations of the African American religious landscape. This is therefore a useful resource in unpacking and expanding upon conceptualizations of African American religious thought and life.” —Darrius D. Hills, Reading Religion— -