Tim Good

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Most black artists were not church-going Christians. Like many artists throughout history, they were concerned human beings who served as society’s ritual priests and prophets, seeking out the meaning of the black experience in a world defined by white supremacy. As witnesses to black suffering, they were, in the words of African American literary critic Trudier Harris, “active tradition-bearers of the uglier phases of black history.”[2]
The Cross and the Lynching Tree
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