God and Blackness: Race, Gender, and Identity in a Middle Class Afrocentric Church

Author:   Andrea C. Abrams
Publisher:   New York University Press
ISBN:  

9780814705230


Pages:   195
Publication Date:   21 March 2014
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

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God and Blackness: Race, Gender, and Identity in a Middle Class Afrocentric Church


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Overview

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. It is used as a description of skin color ranging from the palest cream to the richest chocolate; as a marker of enslavement, marginalization, criminality, filth, or evil; or as a symbol of pride, beauty, elegance, strength, and depth. Despite the fact that it is elusive and difficult to define, blackness serves as one of the most potent and unifying domains of identity. God and Blackness offers an ethnographic study of blackness as it is understood within a specific community—that of the First Afrikan Church, a middle-class Afrocentric congregation in Atlanta, Georgia. Drawing on nearly two years of participant observation and in‑depth interviews, Andrea C. Abrams examines how this community has employed Afrocentrism and Black theology as a means of negotiating the unreconciled natures of thoughts and ideals that are part of being both black and American. Specifically, Abrams examines the ways in which First Afrikan’s construction of community is influenced by shared understandings of blackness, and probes the means through which individuals negotiate the tensions created by competing constructions of their black identity. Although Afrocentrism operates as the focal point of this discussion, the book examines questions of political identity, religious expression and gender dynamics through the lens of a unique black church.

Full Product Details

Author:   Andrea C. Abrams
Publisher:   New York University Press
Imprint:   New York University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.30cm , Height: 2.00cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.431kg
ISBN:  

9780814705230


ISBN 10:   0814705235
Pages:   195
Publication Date:   21 March 2014
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

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"

Reviews

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 of Victor 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 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-a-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 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-a-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


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-a-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


Author Information

Andrea C. Abrams is Assistant Professor of Anthropology, Gender Studies, and African American Studies at Centre College (Danville, KY).

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