ABSTRACT

Religion, Culture and Spirituality in Africa and the African Diaspora explores the ways in which religious ideas and beliefs continue to play a crucial role in the lives of people of African descent. The chapters in this volume use historical and contemporary examples to show how people of African descent develop and engage with spiritual rituals, organizations and practices to make sense of their lives, challenge injustices and creatively express their spiritual imaginings.

This book poses and answers the following critical questions: To what extent are ideas of spirituality emanating from Africa and the diaspora still influenced by an African aesthetic? What impact has globalisation had on spiritual and cultural identities of peoples on African descendant peoples? And what is the utility of the practices and social organizations that house African spiritual expression in tackling social, political cultural and economic inequities? The essays in this volume reveal how spirituality weaves and intersects with issues of gender, class, sexuality and race across Africa and the diaspora. It will appeal to researchers and postgraduate students interested in the study of African religions, race and religion, sociology of religion and anthropology.

chapter 1|14 pages

Introduction

Mapping the Religious Expressions and Spirituality of African Descendant Communities

part 1|81 pages

Religious Expressions, Traditions and Identities

chapter 2|15 pages

Church Women’s Legacy of Power

The Case of the U.S. African Methodist Episcopal Church

chapter 3|8 pages

The Blacksmith’s Razor and the Vulture’s Head

African Spirituality and the Emancipation of Africa

chapter 4|15 pages

A Tale of Two Worlds

An Early Nineteenth-Century Encounter Between the Akan and the Danes and the Rise of Protestantism in West Africa

chapter 6|11 pages

Pain and the Black Garment

Pastoral Responses to African Widowhood

chapter 7|15 pages

An Act of Theological Négritude

Kwame Bediako on African Christian Identity

part 2|102 pages

Arts, Aesthetics and Culture

chapter 8|15 pages

From Selma to Ferguson

Embodied Performance, Social Change and Political Organizing Within the United States

chapter 10|16 pages

The Cornel West Theory

Prophetic Criticism and the Cultural Production of Hip-Hop

chapter 11|13 pages

Politically Freed Yet Mentally Enslaved!

Reflecting on Psalm 8 in View of Steve Biko’s Notion of Black Beauty

chapter 12|14 pages

Rape, Rage and Culture

African Men’s Indigenous Knowledge and Resolutions to the Rape Crisis

chapter 13|13 pages

Responding to Black Youth Invisibility

The Black Church Nurturing the Artist Within