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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Michael Muhammad Knight (Assistant Professor of Philosophy, University of Central Florida)Publisher: Pennsylvania State University Press Imprint: Pennsylvania State University Press Volume: 4 Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.80cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.145kg ISBN: 9780271087092ISBN 10: 0271087099 Pages: 314 Publication Date: 15 September 2020 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsAcknowledgments List of Illustrations Introduction: “The Most Dynamic Pamphlets in History” 1. “I Am the Raisin-Headed Slave”: The Nubian Ahl al-Bayt, Sudanese Mahdiyya, and Global Blackness as Islamic Revival 2. Heralds of the Reformer: Visions of Blackamerican Muslim History 3. “The Covenant Is Complete in Me”: Nubian Islamic Hebraism and the Religion of Abraham 4. Between Zion and Mecca: Bilal as Islamic and Hebrew 5. The Sudan Is the Heart Chakra: The AAC/NIH as Sufi Tariqa 6. Islam Is Hotep: Ansar Egyptosophy 7. The Pyramidal Kaʿba: Malachi Z. York and the Nuwaubian Turn 8. Nuwaubian Ether: Ansar Legacies in Hip-Hop Coda: The View from Illyuwn Notes Bibliography IndexReviews"“Metaphysical Africa: Truth and Blackness in the Ansaru Allah Community is an important, well researched documentation of one of the more controversial representations of Islam in modern American society. You may not agree with their practices or what they believed in, but Knight will convince you their influence can’t be ignored.” —Richard Marcus Blogcritics “Michael Muhammad Knight’s Metaphysical Africa offers fresh insight into the Ansaru Allah Community. His approach provides a theory that explains many of the apparent inconsistencies seen in York’s teachings. This is a well-researched and well-organized book for anyone interested in American religious history, particularly with a focus on Black separatism.” —Dawn Hutchinson Nova Religio “Metaphysical Africa is a great achievement. Students and scholars of Afrodiasporic religion, culture, and politics will find much use in the concept of ‘metaphysical Africa,’ Knight’s innovative discursive approach, and his reinterpretation of the movement’s teachings.” —Justine M. Bakker Reading Religion “An important book on an overlooked movement, Metaphysical Africa contributes to the broader study of “Africa” as imagined in and through African American religious practice.” —Spencer Dew Religious Studies Review “In Metaphysical Africa, Michael Muhammad Knight demonstrates a substantial grasp of the origins and ""inner workings"" of the AAC-NIH in a refreshingly fulsome fashion. With a wonderful fusion of journalistic zeal and scholarly rigor, each chapter of this book lends itself to an intriguing, insightful representation of a profoundly dynamic Black religious worldview coming into its own.” —Juan M. Floyd-Thomas, coauthor of The Altars Where We Worship: The Religious Significance of Popular Culture “This book is the best study yet of the Ansaru Allah Community/Nubian Islamic Hebrews’ teachings, a major leap forward in understanding the history of this much-misunderstood group. Michael Muhammad Knight departs from existing scholarly literature on the movement by showing the continuities as well as the changes in the group’s religious thought, particularly concerning the place of its Islamic identity, and analyzes the coherence of the system rather than dismissing it as a senseless hodgepodge of a mad prophet.” —Edward E. Curtis IV, editor of The Practice of Islam in America: An Introduction “Metaphysical Africa is significant as it provides close readings of the primary AAC/NIH materials, many of which have never been examined seriously. Michael Muhammad Knight convincingly discusses the internecine arguments over the nature of Islam, Africa, and blackness for African American religious movements.” —Nora L. Rubel, author of Doubting the Devout: The Ultra-Orthodox in the Jewish American Imagination" In Metaphysical Africa, Michael Muhammad Knight demonstrates a substantial grasp of the origins and inner workings of the AAC-NIH in a refreshingly fulsome fashion. With a wonderful fusion of journalistic zeal and scholarly rigor, each chapter of this book lends itself to an intriguing, insightful representation of a profoundly dynamic Black religious worldview coming into its own. -Juan M. Floyd-Thomas, coauthor of The Altars Where We Worship: The Religious Significance of Popular Culture This book is the best study yet of the Ansaru Allah Community/Nubian Islamic Hebrews' teachings, a major leap forward in understanding the history of this much-misunderstood group. Michael Muhammad Knight departs from existing scholarly literature on the movement by showing the continuities as well as the changes in the group's religious thought, particularly concerning the place of its Islamic identity, and analyzes the coherence of the system rather than dismissing it as a senseless hodgepodge of a mad prophet. -Edward E. Curtis IV, editor of The Practice of Islam in America: An Introduction Metaphysical Africa is significant as it provides close readings of the primary AAC/NIH materials, many of which have never been examined seriously. Michael Muhammad Knight convincingly discusses the internecine arguments over the nature of Islam, Africa, and blackness for African American religious movements. -Nora L. Rubel, author of Doubting the Devout: The Ultra-Orthodox in the Jewish American Imagination Metaphysical Africa: Truth and Blackness in the Ansaru Allah Community is an important, well researched documentation of one of the more controversial representations of Islam in modern American society. You may not agree with their practices or what they believed in, but Knight will convince you their influence can't be ignored. -Richard Marcus, Blogcritics Metaphysical Africa is significant as it provides close readings of the primary AAC/NIH materials, many of which have never been examined seriously. Michael Muhammad Knight convincingly discusses the internecine arguments over the nature of Islam, Africa, and blackness for African American religious movements. -Nora L. Rubel, author of Doubting the Devout: The Ultra-Orthodox in the Jewish American Imagination This book is the best study yet of the Ansaru Allah Community/Nubian Islamic Hebrews' teachings, a major leap forward in understanding the history of this much-misunderstood group. Michael Muhammad Knight departs from existing scholarly literature on the movement by showing the continuities as well as the changes in the group's religious thought, particularly concerning the place of its Islamic identity, and analyzes the coherence of the system rather than dismissing it as a senseless hodgepodge of a mad prophet. -Edward E. Curtis IV, editor of The Practice of Islam in America: An Introduction In Metaphysical Africa, Michael Muhammad Knight demonstrates a substantial grasp of the origins and inner workings of the AAC-NIH in a refreshingly fulsome fashion. With a wonderful fusion of journalistic zeal and scholarly rigor, each chapter of this book lends itself to an intriguing, insightful representation of a profoundly dynamic Black religious worldview coming into its own. -Juan M. Floyd-Thomas, coauthor of The Altars Where We Worship: The Religious Significance of Popular Culture Metaphysical Africa is significant as it provides close readings of the primary AAC/NIH materials, many of which have never been examined seriously. Michael Muhammad Knight convincingly discusses the internecine arguments over the nature of Islam, Africa, and blackness for African American religious movements. -Nora L. Rubel, author of Doubting the Devout: The Ultra-Orthodox in the Jewish American Imagination This book is the best study yet of the Ansaru Allah Community/Nubian Islamic Hebrews' teachings, a major leap forward in understanding the history of this much-misunderstood group. Michael Muhammad Knight departs from existing scholarly literature on the movement by showing the continuities as well as the changes in the group's religious thought, particularly concerning the place of its Islamic identity, and analyzes the coherence of the system rather than dismissing it as a senseless hodgepodge of a mad prophet. -Edward E. Curtis IV, editor of The Practice of Islam in America: An Introduction In Metaphysical Africa, Michael Muhammad Knight demonstrates a substantial grasp of the origins and inner workings of the AAC-NIH in a refreshingly fulsome fashion. With a wonderful fusion of journalistic zeal and scholarly rigor, each chapter of this book lends itself to an intriguing, insightful representation of a profoundly dynamic Black religious worldview coming into its own. -Juan M. Floyd-Thomas, coauthor of The Altars Where We Worship: The Religious Significance of Popular Culture In Metaphysical Africa, Michael Muhammad Knight demonstrates a substantial grasp of the origins and inner workings of the AAC-NIH in a refreshingly fulsome fashion. With a wonderful fusion of journalistic zeal and scholarly rigor, each chapter of this book lends itself to an intriguing, insightful representation of a profoundly dynamic Black religious worldview coming into its own. -Juan M. Floyd-Thomas, author of The Altars Where We Worship: The Religious Significance of Popular Culture Author InformationMichael Muhammad Knight is Assistant Professor of Religion and Cultural Studies at the University of Central Florida. He is the author of thirteen books, including most recently Muhammad: Forty Introductions. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |