Adam Shields

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If celebration of whiteness as sacred was a frequent feature of the Jim Crow racial order, the post-1960s colorblind order immersed in evangelical religiosity took exactly the opposite stance: racial consciousness suggested a lack of Christian maturity. Those who challenged Christian colorblindness arrayed themselves against God. In this sense the colorblind racial order of the late twentieth century retained the classic features of a racial hierarchy pervaded with theological significance.
The Myth of Colorblind Christians: Evangelicals and White Supremacy in the Civil Rights Era
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