The Word of the Lord Is Upon Me: The Righteous Performance of Martin Luther King, Jr. | 
enlarge | Author: Jonathan Rieder Publisher: Belknap Press Category: Book
List Price: $29.95 Buy New: $16.97 You Save: $12.98 (43%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 2 reviews Sales Rank: 105552
Media: Hardcover Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 408 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.6 Dimensions (in): 9.2 x 6.4 x 1.3
ISBN: 0674028228 Dewey Decimal Number: 323.092 EAN: 9780674028227 ASIN: 0674028228
Publication Date: April 4, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Book is brand new, and has never been opened. Thousands of satisfied customers!
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Product Description
“You don’t know me,” Martin Luther King, Jr., once declared to those who criticized his denunciation of the Vietnam War, who wanted to confine him to the ghetto of “black” issues. Now, forty years after being felled by an assassin’s bullet, it is still difficult to take the measure of the man: apostle of peace or angry prophet; sublime exponent of a beloved community or fiery Moses leading his people up from bondage; black preacher or translator of blackness to the white world? This book explores the extraordinary performances through which King played with all of these possibilities, and others too, blending and gliding in and out of idioms and identities. Taking us deep into King’s backstage discussions with colleagues, his preaching to black congregations, his exhortations in mass meetings, and his crossover addresses to whites, Jonathan Rieder tells a powerful story about the tangle of race, talk, and identity in the life of one of America’s greatest moral and political leaders. A brilliant interpretive endeavor grounded in the sociology of culture, The Word of the Lord Is Upon Me delves into the intricacies of King’s sermons, speeches, storytelling, exhortations, jokes, jeremiads, taunts, repartee, eulogies, confessions, lamentation, and gallows humor, as well as the author’s interviews with members of King’s inner circle. The King who emerges is a distinctively modern figure who, in straddling the boundaries of diverse traditions, ultimately transcended them all. (20080321)
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| Customer Reviews:
A must read! April 23, 2008 This book is very informative. In this time where sounds bites seems to define who we are, this book takes a deep look into Dr. King's complete "personhood". A must read for those who want to understand Dr. King complete ministry.
How Dr. King spoke, and what he meant by what he said April 13, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
The Word of the Lord is Upon Me is perhaps best described as a biography of the rhetoric of the century's greatest orator. Rieder mentions that part of the aim of the book is to reclaim the true Martin Luther King from the shallow appreciations of St. Martin that occur every January. King's medium was speech, and he was less saint than maestro, sampling from cultural traditions across the spectrum, recasting, remaking, and retelling.
Through King's words -- often plagiarized, borrowed, or written by others, then spoken in his inimitable voice and made his own -- Rieder's academic study and close reading becomes compelling. Rieder has a keen ear for language, bringing out the subtle nuances in the maestro's recombined rhetoric in beautiful prose of his own. "Righteous performance" in the book's title captures the extent to which King's inspired prophecy was carefully calibrated; his themes and voices often reflected the audience; and he was always keenly aware of his desired effect.
The one thing missing from the book is the voice of King himself, the instrument that animates the pages. As Rieder points out, absent his voice the words themselves can be uneven, as in King's published work, which was invariably heavily edited for white audiences. King's genius was in speaking to audiences across racial lines, connecting with each within their own tradition, and then analogizing that with the African-American struggle with civil rights. King did this with audiences from Southern Afro-Baptist congregations to Reform Jews, from white liberal Protestants to the AFL-CIO, bringing his audiences into his fold by the power of his charisma.
He was able to reach all these disparate listeners in part because he himself contained multitudes: his love of opera, weighty theological discussions, and language were no less authentic than his love of soul food, his bawdy sense of humor, or his deep belief in the redemptive power of a Christ who loved all humanity regardless of race.
(Full disclosure: Jonathan Rieder is an old friend.)
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