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Race in a Godless World
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Table of Contents

Introduction: the tangled histories of Christianity, secularization, and race
1 Were Adam and Eve our first parents? Atheism and polygenesis
2 Brute men: race and society in evolution
3 A London Zulu: savagery and civilisation
4 The wise men of the east: India, China, and Japan
5 The best friends the negro ever had: African Americans and white atheists
6 The curse of race prejudice: rethinking race at the turn of the century
Epilogue: what next for racism in a godless world?
Notes
Bibliography
Index

About the Author

Nathan G. Alexander is a Postdoctoral Fellow at the Max Weber Centre for Advanced Cultural and Social Studies, University of Erfurt, Germany

Reviews

'Presents not only a fascinating glimpse into complex racial discussions in the late 19th century but also a wonderful, updated overview of the movement and the intellectual history of free-thought in general.'
Anton Jansson, History of Intellectual Culture 2/2023

'Race in a Godless World is a great contribution to the study of historical atheism, but also intellectual and religious history. It is timely, balanced, well-researched, laying bare the wide range of racial views atheists held.'
Global Intellectual History

'The book will be of interest to both scholars and general readers, who are likely to find this alternative narrative of the origins of racism in Britain and the United States as compelling as it is convincing.'
The Journal of American History

'Race in a Godless World is a timely and important contribution to a growing field.'
The American Historical Review

‘Race in a Godless World is an excellent study. This is intellectual history at its best, demonstrating how the discriminated against minority of unbelievers, at the foot of the religious pecking order, challenged racial hierarchies and championed racial minorities. The book shows that a commitment to science and reason underpinned racial views amongst both atheist and religionist intellectuals of the nineteenth century. But scepticism and contrariness drew atheists to apply the same reason in shifting towards a more inclusive and progressive social agenda. With a strong structure and vivid clarity, this is the best contribution so far to scholarly study of how racist thinking came to be linked with, but also rejected by, atheists in the USA and Britain.’
Callum G. Brown, University of Glasgow

‘An exhaustively researched and gracefully written book that makes a signal contribution to our understanding of the intersection of atheism and racial thought. The first book to fully flesh out the ties between racial thought and atheism, it is a masterful achievement that will be required reading for students and scholars of race, freethought, and British and American history more broadly.’
Christopher Cameron, University of North Carolina at Charlotte

‘Situating the history of freethought in a fully transatlantic framework, Alexander carefully unpacks the ambivalences and contradictions of white atheist views on race and civilisation. Certain about the superiority of science over Christianity, freethinkers were far less clear about the racial and cross-cultural implications of their irreligion. Many embraced scientific racism and white supremacy, while others resisted xenophobia and race prejudice. Alexander captures these secularist complexities with admirable nuance and insight.’
Leigh E. Schmidt, Washington University in St. Louis
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