000 01261nam a2200265Ia 4500
003 SAIACS
005 20221001150150.0
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020 _a0829814493
020 _a9780829814491
040 _cSAIACS
082 _a268.082
_bW519D
100 _aWestfield, N. Lynne
_95858
245 _a Dear sisters : a womanist practice of hospitality /
260 _aCleveland
_bThe Pilgrim Press
_c©2001
300 _ax, 134 Pages
_b21.5 cm
505 _gWhat allows African American women not just to survive, but to become resilient? N. Lynne Westfield finds an answer to this question as she examines the Dear Sisters' Literary Group. As a Womanist scholar, Westfield reflects on the ways in which the hospitality of the group relates to the long-standing African American tradition of concealed gatherings, the Christian tradition of hospitality, and Christian education.
650 _aAfrican American women - Religious life
_95859
650 _aAfrican American women - Social conditions.
_95860
650 _aAfrican American women - Social life and customs
_95861
650 _aChristian Education.
650 _aHospitality - United States
_95862
650 _aWomanist Theology.
_91336
942 _2ddc
_cBK
999 _c46591
_d46591