Russell W. Stevenson summarizes the subject matter of his documentary history of Black Saints in the global Church.
Russell W. Stevenson, For the Cause of Righteousness: A Global History of Blacks and Mormonism, 1830–2013 (Draper, UT: Greg Kofford Books, 2014), p. xviii.
This volume seeks to explore the story of blacks and Mormonism through an intimate lens, focusing not only on the experiences of Church leaders but also the ordinary Latter-day Saint: the day laborer nervous about his African ancestry, the West African woman establishing her own "Mormon" congregation, the Pat Boone-loving Mormon missionary in Africa, the death-defying explorer, John M. Goddard, ruminating on his affection for African dance, and the Black Panther musing on the Mormons' wasted potential. Robert Orsi has argued that religion "comes into being in an ongoing, dynamic relationship with realities of everyday life." This drama played in several theatres: West Africa, the United States, Brazil, and South Africa. This volume seeks to explore the story of blacks and Mormonism through an intimate lens in each of these locales. Race was both a spoken and lived experience. The Mormon people witnessed it, felt it, and absorbed it. But for the Mormon people, racism was also a conscious decision--and one that exacted a heavy toll during their epoch in the wilderness.