Críticas:
A most fascinating book. -- Paul Peucker "The Moravian" (06/01/2005) Scholars will appreciate Sensbach's ability to successfully translate what is often understood as an 'American' story into the whole Atlantic world. This book is a rare gem, reminiscent of Laurel Thatcher Ulrich's "A Midwife's Tale"; Sensbach's detective work in piecing together spare Dutch and German sources to recreate Rebecca's life is astonishing. His prose is fluid and graceful, his mind is sharp and the story he tells is riveting. eighteenth-century evangelists...The book should be a must-read for anyone interested in women's history and also for those who study the African diaspora. the Danish West Indies (now the U.S. Virgin Islands) published in 1777, Mr. Sensbach has put together a fascinating story that goes well beyond the biography of one brave woman. [A] most fascinating book. -- Paul Peucker "The Moravian" (06/01/2005) [A] most fascinating book.--Paul Peucker"The Moravian" (06/01/2005) Jon Sensbach's "Rebecca's Revival: Creating Black Christianity in the Atlantic World" is a winning reminder of the grave inaccuracy of the assumption of slave religions' indiscernibility. Eminently readable, and aimed at a wider audience beyond the boundaries of academe, "Rebecca's Revival" recounts the story of an extraordinary mixed-race former slave, neither illiterate nor invisible.--Jonathon Kahn"Books & Culture" (05/01/2005) Jon F. Sensbach's work is a detailed account of an extraordinary black woman, known as Rebecca, whose life experiences took her from the West Indies to Europe and finally to Africa...Sensbach's book, written in a way that is clear and uncluttered, is a microhistorical study of exceptionalism. Rebecca not only is an addition to the gallery of strong black women but also lays claim to being one of the most devoted and committed of eighteenth-century evangelists...The book should be a must-read for anyone interested in women's history and also for those who study the African diaspora.--Carol V.R. George "Journal of American History " There have been many recent books on slaves and slavery, nonfictional and fictional, but for an account of the remarkable life of a freed-slave-turned-evangelist, it would be hard to beat Jon F. Sensbach's "Rebecca's Revival: Creating Black Christianity in the Atlantic World". Working from documents in the German, Danish and West Indian archives, plus a German missionary's book about Protestant missions in the Danish West Indies (now the U.S. Virgin Islands) published in 1777, Mr. Sensbach has put together a fascinating story that goes well beyond the biography of one brave woman.--John M. and Priscilla S. Taylor"Washington Times" (06/26/2005) This book is an excellent microhistory of a West Indian-born Mulatto slave woman named Rebecca...Sensbach skillfully describes the places and events relevant to Rebecca's life and those of her Moravian co-workers throughout her odyssey, and with this illustrates the interconnectedness of Africa, the Caribbean, and Europe on a personal level...This is a good Atlantic study that sheds light on important old questions regarding the conversion of African and African American slaves to Christianity.--Aaron Spencer Fogelman "New West Indian Guide "
Reseña del editor:
The remarkable story of Rebecca Protten, a Caribbean slave who helped inspire the rise of black Christianity in the Atlantic world, is revealed in this account of her evangelical efforts on three continents.
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