Description

Book Synopsis
Blackness, as a concept, is extremely fluid: it can refer to cultural and ethnic identity, socio-political status, an aesthetic and embodied way of being, a social and political consciousness, or a diasporic kinship. This book offers a study of blackness as it is understood within a specific community.

Trade Review
"WithGod and Blackness, Abrams gives us an engaging case study of a twenty-first-century American Religious world, expanding our conceptions of contemporary Protestantism scholars of American religion, race and class will find this ethnography fascinating." * Religion and Society *
"What does it mean to treat everyday and existential commitments to 'blackness' in anthropologically holistic ways? God and Blackness provides one compelling version of an answer to that question. Abrams uses this rich ethnographic study of an Afrocentric church in suburban Atlanta to tackle an important and longstanding conceptual terrain, pushing readers to think just a little bit differently about some of their taken-for-granted assumptions vis-à-vis race, gender, class, and spirituality in all of their mutually constitutive simultaneity. . . . A very engaging read!" -- John L. Jackson, Jr.,author of Real Black: Adventures in Racial Sincerity
"

"A welcome ethnographic study on middle-class African Americans. Abrams's research constitutes a significant advance in the study of Black religion and African American Studies. She reports on congregants views concerning blackness, middle-class status, feminism, and national identity and skillfully explores how middle class African Americans manage the tensions that arise between middle-class identity, Afro centrism, and Womanist perspectives.

" -- Stephen D. Glazier,University of Nebraska-Lincoln
"Abrams has written a striking interrogation of the multivalence of black identity constructions within Afrocentric communities wedded to Christianity. Using First Afrikan Presbyterian Church in Atlanta, GA, as a lens by which to expose the problematic nature of racial essentialism within concepts of Afrocentrism, Abrams reveals the fluid, convoluted ways black identity is constructed through class and gender experiences within local black Christian communities seeking to root themselves in Afrocentric paradigms. Furthering the arguments ofVictor Turner and W. E. B. DuBois around liminality and double consciousness, Abrams discloses the numerous ways in which black Christian nationalism, Americanness, and middle classness are structured within Afrocentric Christian identities.Summing Up: Recommended." * Choice *
"God and Blacknessis an ideal introductory text for undergraduate courses on American religion and critical race theory, illustrating First Afrikan beliefs in compelling fashion while situating them within the contours of current scholarship on the intersections of race, class, and gender in the US." * Anthropological Quarterly *

Table of Contents
Acknowledgments Introduction: Sunday Morning: Anthropology of a Church 1. The First Afrikan Way: Method and Context 2. Situating the Self: Becoming Afrikan in America 3. "Who I Am and Whose I Am": Race and Religion 4. Ebony Affluence: Afrocentric Middle Classness 5. Eve's Positionality: Afrocentric and Womanist Ideologies Conclusion: The Benediction: Ashe Ashe Ashe O References Index About the Author

God and Blackness Race Gender and Identity in a

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    A Paperback / softback by Andrea C. Abrams

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      View other formats and editions of God and Blackness Race Gender and Identity in a by Andrea C. Abrams

      Publisher: New York University Press
      Publication Date: 21/03/2014
      ISBN13: 9780814705247, 978-0814705247
      ISBN10: 0814705243

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Blackness, as a concept, is extremely fluid: it can refer to cultural and ethnic identity, socio-political status, an aesthetic and embodied way of being, a social and political consciousness, or a diasporic kinship. This book offers a study of blackness as it is understood within a specific community.

      Trade Review
      "WithGod and Blackness, Abrams gives us an engaging case study of a twenty-first-century American Religious world, expanding our conceptions of contemporary Protestantism scholars of American religion, race and class will find this ethnography fascinating." * Religion and Society *
      "What does it mean to treat everyday and existential commitments to 'blackness' in anthropologically holistic ways? God and Blackness provides one compelling version of an answer to that question. Abrams uses this rich ethnographic study of an Afrocentric church in suburban Atlanta to tackle an important and longstanding conceptual terrain, pushing readers to think just a little bit differently about some of their taken-for-granted assumptions vis-à-vis race, gender, class, and spirituality in all of their mutually constitutive simultaneity. . . . A very engaging read!" -- John L. Jackson, Jr.,author of Real Black: Adventures in Racial Sincerity
      "

      "A welcome ethnographic study on middle-class African Americans. Abrams's research constitutes a significant advance in the study of Black religion and African American Studies. She reports on congregants views concerning blackness, middle-class status, feminism, and national identity and skillfully explores how middle class African Americans manage the tensions that arise between middle-class identity, Afro centrism, and Womanist perspectives.

      " -- Stephen D. Glazier,University of Nebraska-Lincoln
      "Abrams has written a striking interrogation of the multivalence of black identity constructions within Afrocentric communities wedded to Christianity. Using First Afrikan Presbyterian Church in Atlanta, GA, as a lens by which to expose the problematic nature of racial essentialism within concepts of Afrocentrism, Abrams reveals the fluid, convoluted ways black identity is constructed through class and gender experiences within local black Christian communities seeking to root themselves in Afrocentric paradigms. Furthering the arguments ofVictor Turner and W. E. B. DuBois around liminality and double consciousness, Abrams discloses the numerous ways in which black Christian nationalism, Americanness, and middle classness are structured within Afrocentric Christian identities.Summing Up: Recommended." * Choice *
      "God and Blacknessis an ideal introductory text for undergraduate courses on American religion and critical race theory, illustrating First Afrikan beliefs in compelling fashion while situating them within the contours of current scholarship on the intersections of race, class, and gender in the US." * Anthropological Quarterly *

      Table of Contents
      Acknowledgments Introduction: Sunday Morning: Anthropology of a Church 1. The First Afrikan Way: Method and Context 2. Situating the Self: Becoming Afrikan in America 3. "Who I Am and Whose I Am": Race and Religion 4. Ebony Affluence: Afrocentric Middle Classness 5. Eve's Positionality: Afrocentric and Womanist Ideologies Conclusion: The Benediction: Ashe Ashe Ashe O References Index About the Author

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