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The American Literatures Initiative
The Clay Sanskrit Library
NYU Press
838 Broadway, 3rd Floor
New York, New York 10003
1-800-996-6987
Tel: 212-998-2575
Fax: 212-995-3833

Cloth: $35.00
ISBN: 9780814720103
Release Date: 11/01/2007
276 pages, 12 illustrations
Also available in Paperback



Religion, Race, and Ethnicity
Daddy Grace
A Celebrity Preacher and His House of Prayer
Marie W. Dallam

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Marie Dallam has uncovered an aspect of the African American past about which we have long known too little. In doing so she has made a substantial contribution to the study of twentieth-century African American religion. Assiduously researched and carefully written, Dallam's book finally elevates the scholarship on Sweet Daddy Grace to the level of that of his rival and contemporary, Father Divine.
—Wallace D. Best, Harvard Divinity School

Provides significant insights for our understanding of Daddy Grace and the House of Prayer. This well-researched, clearly written text is a valuable scholarly resource for those interested in New Religious Movements, American Religion, and African American Religion.
— Sandy Dwayne Martin, author of For God and Race

This edgy and resourceful analysis of Daddy Grace, a misunderstood yet highly significant religious luminary, expands our understanding of a critical period in the black church experience. Dallam's meticulous scholarship fills in many crucial pieces and refutes longstanding inaccuracies regarding Grace's life, message, and legacy.
—Shayne Lee, author of T.D. Jakes: America's New Preacher

Charles Manuel Sweet Daddy Grace founded the United House of Prayer for All People in Wareham, Massachusetts, in 1919. This charismatic church has been regarded as one of the most extreme Pentecostal sects in the country. In addition to attention-getting maneuvers such as wearing purple suits with glitzy jewelry, purchasing high profile real estate, and conducting baptisms in city streets with a fire hose, the flamboyant Grace reputedly accepted massive donations from his poverty-stricken followers and used the money to live lavishly. It was assumed by many that Grace was the charismatic glue that held his church together, and that once he was gone the institution would disintegrate. Instead, following his 1960 death there was a period of confusion, restructuring, and streamlining. Today the House of Prayer remains an active church with a national membership in the tens of thousands.

Daddy Grace: A Celebrity Preacher and His House of Prayer seriously examines the religious nature of the House of Prayer, the dimensions of Grace's leadership strategies, and the connections between his often ostentatious acts and the intentional infrastructure of the House of Prayer. Furthermore, woven through the text are analyses of the race, class, and gender issues manifest in the House of Prayer structure under Graces aegis.

Marie W. Dallam here offers both a religious history of the House of Prayer as an institution and an intellectual history of its colorful and enigmatic leader.




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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Marie W. Dallam earned her Ph.D. in the study of American Religion. Her research focuses on the intersections of race, religion and culture, most particularly in relation to New Religious Movements in the United States. She is currently an instructor of Religion at Temple University in Philadelphia.





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