Subversive Habits

Black Catholic Nuns in the Long African American Freedom Struggle

Book Pages: 424 Illustrations: 39 illustrations Published: May 2022

Subjects
Religious Studies, History > U.S. History, African American Studies and Black Diaspora

In Subversive Habits, Shannen Dee Williams provides the first full history of Black Catholic nuns in the United States, hailing them as the forgotten prophets of Catholicism and democracy. Drawing on oral histories and previously sealed Church records, Williams demonstrates how master narratives of women’s religious life and Catholic commitments to racial and gender justice fundamentally change when the lives and experiences of African American nuns are taken seriously. For Black Catholic women and girls, embracing the celibate religious state constituted a radical act of resistance to white supremacy and the sexual terrorism built into chattel slavery and segregation. Williams shows how Black sisters—such as Sister Mary Antona Ebo, who was the only Black member of the inaugural delegation of Catholic sisters to travel to Selma, Alabama, and join the Black voting rights marches of 1965—were pioneering religious leaders, educators, healthcare professionals, desegregation foot soldiers, Black Power activists, and womanist theologians. In the process, Williams calls attention to Catholic women’s religious life as a stronghold of white supremacy and racial segregation—and thus an important battleground in the long African American freedom struggle.

Praise

“Deeply researched, elegantly written, and boldly argued, Subversive Habits is a brilliant excavation of the long political history of Black nuns. This is extraordinary scholarship that is as accessible as it is groundbreaking and illuminating. This timely and essential book widens the frames of Black women’s history, of religion and activism, and of Black Catholicism.” — Barbara D. Savage, author of Your Spirits Walk beside Us: The Politics of Black Religion

“Sweeping in its scope, exhaustively researched, and balanced in presentation,Subversive Habits is a seminal history of Black Catholic Nuns and their struggle for equality and justice in the Catholic Church.” — Bettye Collier-Thomas, author of Jesus, Jobs, and Justice: African American Women and Religion

"An awe-inspiring history book about Black nuns who fought for freedom and equality. . . . Subversive Habits is a stirring history text about the remarkable faith and conviction of Black nuns in America." — Melissa Wuske, Foreword

(Starred Review) "Informative and often surprising, this should be required reading for scholars of Catholic and African American religious history and will undoubtedly become the standard text on its subject." — Publishers Weekly

"The 'uncommon faithfulness' of the nuns in Subversive Habits—taking the church at its word when it teaches that we are all one body—is a model of discipleship from which all Catholics can learn." — Kathleen Manning, U.S. Catholic

"Shannen Williams's book chronicles the bold steps and persistence African-American sisters took to debunk their rejection by white orders that insisted Black women lacked souls and/or virtue suitable to be admitted to them. . . . This outstanding book, Subversive Habits, is well-researched, quite revealing and a set of history and reality lessons of how Black sisters kept the faith and made the Catholic Church change." — Ralph E. Moore, Jr., The AFRO

"This eye-opening, inspiring and thoroughly researched book unearths a history that few Americans know: the challenges and triumphs of Black Catholic nuns in the United States. It’s one of the most exciting new books in Black women’s history and powerfully captures the interconnections between race, religion and politics." — Keisha Blain, Politico

"Subversive Habits demands a committed reader. However, it will reward the resilient and open-minded reader with apokalupsis—tremendous learning about the scope of racism throughout the American Catholic Church as well as the witness of these Black Catholic women and their contributions to the church and the world. Please take up the reading and stick with it. Draw some perseverance from the women the book depicts and take heart in their commitment to justice." — Kevin Spinale, America

"Subversive Habits brings a very necessary balance to histories published in recent decades that focus on civil rights work by Catholics. It seems these historians were writing about the exception and not the norm. This is the story of courageous nuns, including those who felt they couldn't remain any longer, who are the true gems of American Catholic history. Every woman religious must read this book." — Laura Swan, Magistra

"In Subversive Habits, historian Williams has given us a remarkable work of scholarship, one that may be distressing for many readers because she clears away any shred of doubt about the U.S. Catholic Church being racist from its very beginnings." — Kathleen Finley, The Tablet

"I have never read a more thoughtful account of the Black Catholic experience than Shannen Dee Williams’ Subversive Habits. Williams’ book is a revelatory history of the experiences of Black religious women in understanding race, faith, and change in the Catholic church from the antebellum period through the various waves of civil-rights struggle to the contemporary era." — Marcia Chatelain, Chronicle of Higher Education

"Meticulously researched and fully supported by use of archival material, primary sources and interviews. . . . The book can be a gripping read, as Williams tells the stories so many Black sisters had kept to themselves for too long. It offers especially inspiring insights into their lives. . . ." — Mike Mastromatteo, The Dialog

"The painful and inexcusable story of white racism in the context of religious orders is just beginning to be written. This volume is a welcome contribution. It serves as a cautionary tale for the whole Roman Catholic Church. White racists now have no excuse for perpetrating the injustice for another generation." — WATER


"Williams seeks to tell the story of these women and of the Black and majority white sisterhoods in which they participated. The account is well documented, and Williams includes a look at the current departures of Black sisters from religious life and considers the likely future of Black female religious communities. Recommended. Graduate students, researchers, faculty, and professionals."
  — L. H. Hoyle, Choice

"I rate this book a 5.0/5.0 and is a must-read for anyone wanting to learn more about the part of the Church’s history that has largely been ignored and more often erased. You’ll gain an appreciation for these Black women and their faithfulness." — Archuleta Chisolm, Black Girl Nerds

"Williams's book is the go-to work on Black women religious in the United States during and in the afterlife of slavery. Future scholars, practitioners, and interlocutors are indebted to this brilliant author for the treasure trove she has gifted us." — Ahmad Greene-Hayes, Journal of Southern History

Buy


Availability: In stock
Please read our FAQ's to learn more about Pre-Orders
Price: $30.95

Open Access

Author/Editor Bios Back to Top

Shannen Dee Williams is Associate Professor of History at the University of Dayton.

Table of Contents Back to Top
Abbreviations  ix
Note on Terminology  xiii
Preface: Bearing Witness to a Silenced Past  xv
Acknowledgments  xix
Introduction. America’s Forgotten Black Freedom Fighters  1
1. Our Sole Wish Is to Do the Will of God: The Early Struggles of Black Catholic Sisters in the United States  23
2. Nothing Is Too Good for the Youth of Our Race: The Fight for Black-Administered Catholic Education during Jim Crow  61
3. Is the Order Catholic Enough? The Struggle to Desegregate White Sisterhoods after World War II  103
4. I Was Fired Up to Go to Selma: Black Sisters, the Second Vatican Council, and the Fight for Civil Rights  134
5. Liberation Is Our First Priority: Black Nuns and Black Power  167
6. No Schools, No Churches! The Fight to Save Black Catholic Education in the 1970s  200
7. The Future of the Black Catholic Nun Is Dubious: African American Sisters in the Age of Church Decline  231
Conclusion. The Catholic Church Wouldn't Be Catholic If It Wasn’t for Us  259
Glossary  271
Notes  273
Bibliography  345
Index  371
Sales/Territorial Rights: World

Rights and licensing

Named one of Publishers Weekly's Top Books in Religion for 2022


Winner of the 2022 Letitia Woods Brown Prize for the Best Book in African American Women's History, presented by the Association of Black Women Historians


Winner of the 2023 Wesley-Logan Prize, presented by the American Historical Association


Additional InformationBack to Top
Top