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A Diplomatic Meeting
2022,2021
Drawing on a host of recently declassified documents from the
Reagan-Thatcher years, A Diplomatic Meeting: Reagan, Thatcher,
and the Art of Summitry provides an innovative framework for
understanding the development and nature of the special
relationship between British prime minister Margaret Thatcher and
American president Ronald Reagan, who were known as \"political
soulmates.\" James Cooper boldly challenges the popular conflation
of the leaders' platforms, and proposes that Reagan and Thatcher's
summitry highlighted unique features of domestic policy in their
respective countries. Summits, therefore, were a significant
opportunity for the two world leaders to further their own domestic
agendas. Cooper uses the relationship between Reagan and Thatcher
to demonstrate that summitry politics transcended any distinction
between foreign policy and domestic politics-a major objective of
Reagan and Thatcher as they sought to consolidate power and
implement their domestic economic programs in a parallel quest to
reverse notions of their countries' \"decline.\"
This unique and significant study about the making of the
Reagan-Thatcher relationship uses their key meetings as an avenue
to explore the fluidity between the domestic and international
spheres, a perspective that is underappreciated in existing
interpretations of the leaders' relationship and Anglo-American
relations and, more broadly, in the field of international
affairs.
Black Women’s Christian Activism
by
Betty Livingston Adams
in
African American women
,
African American women civil rights workers
,
African American women in church work
2016
2017 Wilbur Non-Fiction Award Recipient Winner of
the 2018 Author's Award in scholarly non-fiction, presented by the
New Jersey Studies Academic Alliance
Winner, 2020 Kornitzer Book Prize, given by Drew
University Examines the oft overlooked role
of non-elite black women in the growth of northern suburbs and
American Protestantism in the first half of the twentieth
century When a domestic servant named Violet Johnson moved
to the affluent white suburb of Summit, New Jersey in 1897, she
became one of just barely a hundred black residents in the town of
six thousand. In this avowedly liberal Protestant community, the
very definition of \"the suburbs\" depended on observance of unmarked
and fluctuating race and class barriers. But Johnson did not intend
to accept the status quo. Establishing a Baptist church a year
later, a seemingly moderate act that would have implications far
beyond weekly worship, Johnson challenged assumptions of gender and
race, advocating for a politics of civic righteousness that would
grant African Americans an equal place in a Christian nation.
Johnson's story is powerful, but she was just one among the many
working-class activists integral to the budding days of the civil
rights movement. Focusing on the strategies and organizational
models church women employed in the fight for social justice, Adams
tracks the intersections of politics and religion, race and gender,
and place and space in a New York City suburb, a local example that
offers new insights on northern racial oppression and civil rights
protest. As this book makes clear, religion made a key difference
in the lives and activism of ordinary black women who lived,
worked, and worshiped on the margin during this tumultuous
time.