005 |
|
20221102110052.0 |
020 |
|
|a0230620817
|
020 |
|
|a9780230620810
|
024 |
7
|
|a10.1057/9780230620810|2doi
|
040 |
|
|aUKPGM|beng|cUKPGM|dNOU
|
049 |
|
|aAPTA
|
050 |
14
|
|aBL2400|b.N64 2009
|
082 |
04
|
|a200.89/96|222
|
100 |
1
|
|aNoel, James A.,|d1948-
|
245 |
10
|
|aBlack religion and the imagination of matter in the Atlantic World|h[electronic resource] /|cJames A. Noel.
|
250 |
|
|a1st ed.
|
260 |
|
|aNew York, NY :|bPalgrave Macmillan,|c2009.
|
300 |
|
|axiii, 231 p. :|bill. ;|c22 cm.
|
490 |
1
|
|aBlack religion/womanist thought/social justice
|
504 |
|
|aIncludes bibliographical references (p. [213]-218) and index.
|
505 |
0
|
|aStudying black religion : contacts/exchanges and continuities/discontinuities -- The age of discovery and the emergence of the Atlantic world -- The imagination of matter in the Atlantic world's political economy -- Being, nothingness, and the "signification of silence" in AfricanAmerican religious consciousness -- Epistemologies opaque : conjuring,conjecture, and the problematic of Nat Turner's Biblical hermeneutic -- The mulatto as material/sexual site of modernity's contacts and exchanges -- "The signification of silence" revisited : African American artand hermeneutics -- The meaning of the moan and significance of the shout in Black worship and culture and memory and hope -- The salsa/jazz/blues idiom and Creolization in the Atlantic world.
|
520 |
|
|aThis book situates the study of Black Religion within the modern temporal and historical structures whose geographical contours are the Atlantic World. It describes how black people and Black Religion made a phenomenological appearance in modernity simultaneously and were signified in the identity formation of whites and their religion. James A. Noelaccounts for these new identity formations, religious-social practices, and their accompanying epistemological orientations by describing thenon-reciprocal contacts and exchanges from which ensued new modes of materiality and imagining matter. Black Religion is shown to represent an alternative epistemological mode of imagining matter and a critique of both white Christianity and the Enlightenment.
|
533 |
|
|aElectronic reproduction.|bBasingstoke, England :|cPalgrave Macmillan,|d2009.|nMode of access:World Wide Web.|nSystem requirements: Web browser.|nTitle from title screen (viewed on July 24, 2009).|nAccess may be restricted to users at subscribing institutions.
|
600 |
10
|
|aLong, Charles H.
|
650 |
0
|
|aAfrican Americans|xReligion.
|
650 |
0
|
|aBlacks|xReligion.
|
651 |
0
|
|aAfrica|xReligion.
|
655 |
7
|
|aElectronic books.|2local
|
710 |
2
|
|aPalgrave Connect (Online service)
|
776 |
1
|
|cOriginal|z0230615066|z9780230615069|w(DLC) 2008043012|w(OCoLC)259265677
|
809 |
|
|pEB|dBL2400|eN767|y2009
|
830 |
0
|
|aBlack religion, womanist thought, social justice.
|
856 |
40
|
|3Palgrave Connect|uhttp://www.palgraveconnect.com/doifinder/10.1057/9780230620810|zaccess to fulltext (Palgrave)
|