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Unruly Saint

Dorothy Day's Radical Vision and its Challenge for Our Times

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

In 1933, in the shadow of the Great Depression, Dorothy Day started the most prominent Catholic radical movement in United States history, the Catholic Worker Movement, a storied organization with a lasting legacy of truth and justice.

Day's newspaper, houses of hospitality, and ministry of paying attention to the inequality of her world would eventually become world famous, just as she—a high-energy activist with a cigarette in one hand and a coffee cup in the other—would become a figure of promise for the poor. The ways in which Day and her fellow workers both found the love of God in and expressed it for their neighbors during a time of great social, political, economic, and spiritual upheaval would become a model of activism for decades to come.

In Unruly Saint, activist, writer, and neighbor D. L. Mayfield brings a personal lens to Day's story. In exploring the founding of the Catholic Worker movement and newspaper by revisiting the early years of Day's life, Mayfield turns her attention to what it means to be a good neighbor today.

Through a combination of biography, observations on the current American landscape, and theological reflection, this is at once an achingly relevant account and an encouraging blueprint for people of faith in tumultuous times. It will resonate with today's activists, social justice warriors, and those seeking to live in the service of others.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      September 19, 2022
      Mayfield (The Myth of the American Dream), a teaching fellow at the Center for Faith and Justice, delivers a timely meditation on Catholic activist Dorothy Day. Born to a middle-class family in Chicago at the turn of the 20th century, Day dropped out of college to become a muckraking journalist and moved in politically radical, bohemian circles. Mayfield chronicles how Day’s conversion to Catholicism and her friendship with anarchist Peter Maurin inspired her in 1933 to found the Catholic Worker newspaper, which combined her religious passion with political activism. The paper, Mayfield contends, grew into a movement of voluntary poverty and hospitality that provided food, shelter, and community to those in need. Mayfield reflects on Day’s influence on her own faith, recounting how discovering Day’s writing challenged her to hold Christians accountable to the social justice message of the gospels. The substantial, briskly told narrative uses Day’s story as a case study in progressive Christianity, reminding readers that a Christian left has long existed at the margins, “furiously impatient with all that was wrong in the world.” Incisive and rousing, this should be required reading for social justice–minded Christians.

    • Library Journal

      October 7, 2022

      Couple a personal spiritual crisis with a heart longing for justice, and readers get Mayfield's (The Myth of the American Dream) elegiac homage to Catholic activist Dorothy Day (1897-1980, although the introduction incorrectly lists her birth at 1898). Much of Mayfield's musings are based upon Day's own 1952 autobiography, The Long Loneliness, and her letters as well, which were meant to convince her radical compatriots of the time. The author becomes so deeply invested in her subject, she embraces a personal connection to those letters, which she says helped her with questions about how to be a person of faith in an unequal and unjust world. Mayfield is at pains to explain why Day, whose Protestant parents rarely attended church during her childhood, converted to Catholicism in her twenties after giving birth to her daughter. But the book isn't meant to be a biography. It's about the years surrounding the birth of the Catholic Worker movement, which Day cofounded in 1933--and still exists today--to help those who are unhoused or without food. It also remains committed to nonviolence. VERDICT This is best for readers who already have knowledge about Day and her work.--Sandra Collins

      Copyright 2022 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      October 15, 2022
      Author and podcaster Mayfield (The Myth of the American Dream, 2020) profiles Dorothy Day (1897-1980), one of four "great Americans" identified by Pope Francis in 2015. Unruly Saint introduces Day to those unfamiliar with the social activist, anarchist, cofounder of the Catholic Worker newspaper, and "Servant of God" in the Catholic Church. Early life in urban areas exposed Day to the plight of the downtrodden, while reading and, later, muckraking work increased her compassion. Day's surprising conversion to Catholicism amid a bohemian lifestyle was one of many paradoxes in her remarkable life, as she fearlessly questioned authority of both country and Church and examined why the unmet realities of poverty and discrimination failed to match Catholicism's taught theology. She blended devotion to the sacred with meeting tangible needs of the hungry and homeless, while her writing championed justice for the Indigenous and people of color before ""antiracism"" became a buzzword. Mayfield's readers will agree that the radical Day, unwilling to be defined by others, is just as relevant and necessary today as she was decades ago.

      COPYRIGHT(2022) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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