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Race, Slavery, and Land. Legacies in a Global Context,
1722-2000

, November 4-5, 2022

Friday, November 4, 2022

12:00-1:00. UBC Room, Haupert Union Building (HUB). Friday Forum. Visibility Through Voices From Bethlehem's Black Community. Rayah Levy 

4:45-5:00. Saal, The Theological Seminary. Words of Welcome. President Bryon Grigsby. Heikki Lempa 

5:00-5:30. Saal (MTS). David Schattschneider Awarding Ceremony. Craig Atwood 

Keynote
Saal, The Theological Seminary
5:30-6:30pm

Jon Sensbach University of Florida Complacent Hostages? Colonial Legacies and the Paradox of History

Saturday, November 5, 2022

1. 9:00-10:30. PPHAC 101. Slavery. Rethinking Eighteenth-Century Conceptualizations 

 

Moderator: Scott Gordon, Lehigh University
Peter Vogt Church, Herrnhut, Germany What did s Say about Slavery? An Overview of Relevant Passages in 18th Century Publications
Josef Köstlbauer University of Bonn Eighteenth-Century s and Contemporary Perceptions of Slavery and Dependence
Craig Atwood A. G. Spangenberg's Ambiguous Attitude Toward Chattel Slavery?

2. 9:00-10:30. PPHAC 102. s in the Caribbean: Slavery in the Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Centuries

Moderator: Paul Peucker, Archives
Jessica Cronshagen; Frank Marquardt University of Oldenburg Possession and "Madness" as Political Knowledge. On the Justification of Deviance and Violence in the Mission in the Danish Caribbean and Suriname (ca. 1735-1790)
Wolf Behnsen University of Hanover “O Miserable Freedom!”: The Church and the Abolition of Slavery in Suriname in the 19th Century
Winelle Kirton-Roberts The Geneva Fellowship, Switzerland Did You See My Chains? An Inquiry into the Mission at Sharon in Barbados and Its Justification for Shackled Africans, 1795-1834
 

3. 11:00-12:30. PPHAC 102. Race in Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century Communities 

Moderator: Kelly Denton-Borhaug,
Livingstone Thompson Kilwarlin Church, Ireland Christianity and Colonial Cruelty: s in Jamaica 1754-1854
Katharine Gerbner University of Minnesota Race, Indigeneity and the “Heathen” in the Missions to Shekomeko and Jamaica
Natasha Lightfoot Columbia University s and the Regulation of Families and Intimacies in Post-Emancipation Antigua
Lunch
12:30-2:00pm

4. 2:00-3:30. PPHAC 101. Race, Land, and Colonization in Communities in Eighteenth-Century North America 

Moderator: Jamie Paxton,
Benjamin Pietrinka University of Heidelberg Observing Otherness: Articulations of Nature and Race in Eighteenth-Century Mission Fields
BJ Lillis Princeton University Losing Shekomeko: Mohicans, s, and the Dynamics of Dispossession in the Colonial Hudson Valley
Rachel Wheeler Indiana University-Purdue University, Indianapolis s, Missions, and Settler Colonialism in the Eighteenth Century

5. 2:00-3:30. PPHAC 102. s and Land in Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century America and Africa 

Moderator: Richard Anderson,
Sharon Muhlfeld To Preach, Celebrate, and Discuss: Delawares and their Neighbors in the Revolutionary Ohio Valley
Menja Holtz Technical University of Brunswick s and the Lenape Land in Fairfield, Canada, in the Early Nineteenth Century
Maximilian Rose University of Hamburg Africanness, Personal Failure, and Interactions with “Heathens” in the Writing of the Euro-African Missionaries Christian Protten and Philip Quaque

6. 4:00-5:30. PPHAC 101. Legacies of Racism and Slavery in Communities in the Twentieth Century 

Moderator: Belinda Waller-Peterson,
Frank Crouch Rev. Dr. Charles Martin: A Black Immigrant ’s Resistance to Slavery’s Legacies, 1908-42
Crystal Jannecke Cornerstone Institute, South Africa A South African Mission Experience in the 20th Century: Land, Slavery, Race and Community
Felicity Jensz University of Münster (Re)claiming Land in Enemy Territories: s in the Aftermath of WWI

7. 4:00-5:30. PPHAC 102. Legacies of Racism and Land in Contemporary Communities 

Moderator: Craig Atwood,
Riddick Weber Desegregating Sunrise: The Vexing Legacies of Segregation for Modern Liturgical Practice
Jørgen Bøytler Church, Christiansfeld, Denmark The Church, Land, and People in the Contemporary World

5:50-6:00pm. PPHAC 101. Concluding Remarks. 

is located in "Lenapehoking," the traditional homelands of the Lenape, whose homeland includes Delaware, New Jersey, Eastern Pennsylvania, and Southern New York.  We honor the traditional Native inhabitants of these lands and revere their historic and everlasting relationships with this land, which is their ancestral homeland.