ABSTRACT

In popular imagination, saints exhibit the best characteristics of humanity, universally recognizable but condensed and embodied in an individual. Recent scholarship has asked an array of questions concerning the historical and social contexts of sainthood, and opened new approaches to its study. What happens when the category of sainthood is interrogated and inflected by the problematic category of race?

Sainthood and Race: Marked Flesh, Holy Flesh explores this complicated relationship by examining two distinct characteristics of the saint’s body: the historicized, marked flesh and the universal, holy flesh. The essays in this volume comment on this tension between particularity and universality by combining both theoretical and ethnographic studies of saints and race across a wide range of subjects within the humanities. Additionally, the book’s group of emerging and established religion scholars enhances this discussion of sainthood and race by integrating topics such as gender, community, and colonialism across a variety of historical, geographical, and religious contexts. This volume raises provocative questions for scholars and students interested in the intersection of religion and race today.

chapter |17 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|27 pages

An African Saint in Medieval Europe

The Black Saint Maurice and the Enigma of Racial Sanctity

chapter 2|21 pages

The Threefold Man

Lavater, Physiognomy, and the Rise of the Western Icon

chapter 3|16 pages

The Recanonization of Saint Cyprian

A Deep History of Black Religion and Racialism

chapter 4|20 pages

The Interspecies Logic of Race in Colonial Peru

San Martín de Porres's Animal Brotherhood

chapter 5|22 pages

Cuba's Virgin of Charity

Sanctity, Caribbean Creolization, and the Color Continuum

chapter 6|26 pages

Saffron Saint of the Most Spiritual Race

Sundar Singh and the Western Oriental Christ

chapter 7|14 pages

Racialized Crossings

Coptic Orthodoxy and Global Christianities

chapter 8|18 pages

The “Desolated Center”

Baby Suggs, Holy, in Toni Morrison's Beloved

chapter 9|17 pages

The Post-Racial Saint?

From Barack Obama to Paul of Tarsus

chapter 10|17 pages

The Pre-Racial Saint?

Ma(r)king Aztec God-Bodies