mingo in A Sentence

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    Mingo: … in place at that time.

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    Black Theology Mingo.

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    After hearing the women's stories, Mingo noted the songs that came up repeatedly as having been influential during the time period.

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    The Mingo Indian tribe once had a settlement at the location of the present day village, which is the source of its name.

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    For the study, recently published in the journal Black Theology, Mingo interviewed more than 40 women who lived through and participated in the Civil Rights Movement.

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    For the study, which appears in the journal Black Theology, Mingo interviewed more than 40 women who lived through and participated in the Civil Rights Movement.

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    I wanted to learn what gave women the strength to keep going out and protesting day after day and risking all the things that they risked,” Mingo says.

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    I wanted to learn what gave women the strength to keep going out and protesting day after day and risking all the things that they risked,” Mingo said.

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    Mingo says it was important for the women to volunteer for the study, because oftentimes even the church pastors did not know the women had participated in the Civil Rights Movement.

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    Mingo said it was important for the women to volunteer for the study, because oftentimes even the church pastors did not know the women had participated in the Civil Rights Movement.

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    Mingo says she hopes her research can be an example of how theology can be revealed in the everyday lives of people as they use art to make sense of their world through God.

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    Mingo said she hopes her research can be an example of how theology can be revealed in the everyday lives of people as they use art to make sense of their world through God.

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    Mingo says the use of songs as a form of resistance is still alive and well today, with tunes that were popular during the Civil Rights Movement being repurposed and molded to fit current struggles.

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    Mingo said the use of songs as a form of resistance is still alive and well today, with tunes that were popular during the Civil Rights Movement being repurposed and molded to fit current struggles.

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    Communicating through song gives broader access to these thoughts and beliefs than traditional theological or ethical texts because you have to put philosophies in accessible language in music or else it doesn't work,” Mingo says.

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    Communicating through song gives broader access to these thoughts and beliefs than traditional theological or ethical texts because you have to put philosophies in accessible language in music or else it doesn't work,” Mingo said.

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    Additionally, Mingo says that as the popularity of the black church with young people seems to wane, artists like Beyoncé, Janelle Monáe, and Kendrick Lamar, among others,“take on the role of the preacher and prophet by speaking truth to power from the stage or via social media.”.

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