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Lewis
Baldwin
Professor of Religious Studies
Director of African American Studies
B.A. (Talladega 1971)
M.A., M.Div. (Rochester 1973, 1975)
Ph.D. (Northwestern 1980)
lewis.v.baldwin@vanderbilt.edu
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Dr.
Baldwin is a native of Camden, Alabama. He received his early education
in the public schools of Wilcox County, the heart of the so-called
Alabama Blackbelt, where he participated in student demonstrations
and other civil rights activities in the 1960s. He graduated from
Camden Academy High School in 1967.
During the height of the civil rights and black power movement, Dr.
Baldwin matriculated at Talladega College, Talladega, Alabama. He
received a B.A. degree in History from that institution in 1971. He
then studied at Colgate-Rochester Divinity School/Bexley Hall/Crozer
Theological Seminaries in Rochester, New York, where he was awarded
the M.A. degree in Black Church Studies in 1973 and the M.Div. degree
in Theology in 1975. In 1980, he received the Ph.D. degree in American
Christianity from Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois.
Dr. Baldwin has established himself as a professor and scholar with
a growing reputation. He has taught at Wooster College in Ohio, Colgate
University in New York, and Colgate-Rochester Divinity School in New
York, and is now an Associate Professor in Religious Studies at Vanderbilt
University in Nashville, Tennessee. He is the author of some sixty
articles and several books, among which are "Invisible"
Strands in African Methodism: A History of the African Union Methodist
Protestant and Union American Methodist Episcopal Churches, 1805-1980
(1983); The Mark of a Man: Peter Spencer and the African Union Methodist
Tradition (1987); There is a Balm in Gilead: The Cultural Roots of
Martin Luther King, Jr. (1991); To Make the Wounded Whole: The Cultural
Legacy of Martin Luther King, Jr. (1992); Freedom is Never Free: A
Biographical Portrait of E.D. Nixon, Sr. (1992); and Toward the Beloved
Community: Martin Luther King, Jr. and South Africa (1995). His "Invisible"
Strands in African Methodism won the American Theological Library
Association Award, and his There is a Balm in Gilead won the Midwest
Book Achievement Award of the Midwest Independent Publishers Association.
Dr. Baldwin has contributed substantially to two major works that
will appear in published form in 2000. They are Between the Cross
and the Crescent: Christian and Muslim Perspectives on Malcolm and
Martin, co-authored by Baldwin and Amiri YaSin Al-Hadid; and The Boundaries
of Law, Politics, and Religion: Revisiting the Legacy of Martin Luther
King, Jr., edited by Baldwin and Roger D. Hatch.
Dr. Baldwin is currently working on several major publications. They
include God of Our Silent Tears: Sermons from the Depths of the Human
Spirit; The Harmonies of Liberty: Malcolm X and the Black Nationlist
Tradition; Slave Thought: The Contours of a Folk Theology; In the
Backwaters of African Methodism: Small Black Methodist Denominations,
1805-1990; Standing in John's Shoes: The Black Preacher and the Folk
Sermon; and The World as Parish: John Wesley and the Oppressed.
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