Skip to Main Content
Ask Yale Library
My Library Accounts
Hours
Find, Request, and Use
Help and Research Support
Visit and Study
Explore Collections
About Us
Yale University Library
Yale University Library Research Guides
Divinity
African American Religious History
Other Religious Movements
Search this Guide
Search
African American Religious History: Other Religious Movements
A guide for conducting research on African American religious history at the Yale Divinity Library.
Home
Reference Works
Subject Headings
Databases & Journals
Biblical Interpretation
Toggle Dropdown
Introduction
Single Volume Commentaries
History
Hebrew Bible Interpretation
NT Interpretation
Womanist Interpretation
Study Bibles
Other Case Studies
History
Toggle Dropdown
Introductory Resources
Primary Sources
Black Church Beginnings
Slavery
Abolitionist Movement
Reconstruction
Jim Crow Era
Great Migration
Religion in the South
Civil Rights Era
Civil Rights Leaders
Other Notable Figures
Religion and Music
Religion and Politics
Black Baptists
AME Church
Black Pentecostals
Black Catholics
Black Muslims
Black Women
Black Lives Matter
Evangelicalism
Religion and Literature
Other Religious Movements
Theology
Toggle Dropdown
Introduction
History Of
Liberation Theology
Theology and Race
Womanist Theology Intro
Key Womanist Texts
Womanism & Christology
Womanism & Liberation
Practical Theology
Intro to Preaching
Preaching: Case Studies
Sermon Collections
Pastoral Care
Spirituality
The Body and Sexuality
Other Case Studies
Websites
Special Collections
Toggle Dropdown
Divinity Library Collections
Beinecke Library Collections
Collections Outside Yale
Other Religious Movements
Voodoo: An African American Religion (Online)
by
Jeffrey E. Anderson
Presents a modern account of the faith as it existed in the Mississippi River valley from colonial times to the mid-twentieth century, when it ceased to thrive as a living tradition.
Black Hebrew Israelites (Online)
by
Michael T. Miller
Provides a general overview of the BHI movement, its diverse history/ies, ideologies, and practices.
<<
Previous:
Religion and Literature
Next:
Theology >>