Spirits of extraction: Christianity, settler colonialism and the geology of race

Author:   Claire Blencowe
Publisher:   Manchester University Press
ISBN:  

9781807072681


Pages:   240
Publication Date:   21 July 2026
Format:   Paperback
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Spirits of extraction: Christianity, settler colonialism and the geology of race


Overview

Spirits of extraction revisits the troubling history of socially reformist, ostensibly anti-racist, Christianity and its role in the expansion of the extractive industries, British imperialism, and settler colonialism. The book explores key moments in the history of Methodism and the evangelical movement. Colonial fears, and the attempt to ‘civilise savages’, were crucial to the movement’s foundation in eighteenth-century industrialising Bristol, England. Through the culture of the Cornish mining diaspora of the nineteenth century, Methodism enmeshed with all the complexity of race and labour-structures of the British empire. At the same time, in Anishinaabewaki/Upper Canda/Ontario, Methodist missionaries laid the foundation of abusive education and racialised ideas of redemption that both enable and sacralise the mining industry. Through these histories of our present, the book theorises the relation of religion and education to racism, modernity, biopower, extractivism, and the geology of race. -- .

Full Product Details

Author:   Claire Blencowe
Publisher:   Manchester University Press
Imprint:   Manchester University Press
ISBN:  

9781807072681


ISBN 10:   1807072681
Pages:   240
Publication Date:   21 July 2026
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Children/juvenile ,  Tertiary & Higher Education ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Forthcoming
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release.

Table of Contents

Introduction: John Wesley’s ghost and the metaphysics of race 1 Savage encounters and the scene of evangelical awakening in Bristol, England 2 Mining, methodism and the geology of race in the Cornish diaspora 3 Methodist missions, Ojibwe Copper, and civilisational education in Upper Canada (Ontario)/ Anishinaabewaki Afterword: Bristol in the colonial present, 2024 Bibliography Index -- .

Reviews

'In this critically important and theoretically daring book, Claire Bencowe takes us on a journey through places that appear disconnected yet are deeply entangled. She skilfully traces links between her own situated history within colonial webs of extraction, the rise of Methodism in Bristol and the UK, Cornish miners and migrants, and residential schools on Indigenous lands in Canada. Beautifully written, the book grounds the concept of a ‘geology of race’ with audacity, making it an essential guide for anyone seeking to understand the entanglements of planetary extraction, Christianity and British colonialism.' Dr Negar Elodie Behzadi, Editor of Extraction/Exclusion: Beyond Binaries of Exclusion and Inclusion in Natural Resource Extraction (Bloomsbury, 2024) 'Christianity, Settler Colonialism and the Geology of Race is compact in form but expansive in scope. It brings together theology, political economy, and the lived realities of migration and extraction in a way that challenges any neat separation between religious history, the metaphysics of racism, and colonial capitalism, showing how Methodism underpinned the genocidal destruction of Indigenous peoples and their rights to land, rocks, animals, and ancestral spirits, while simultaneously policing Cornish miners to prevent them from turning to alcohol. The prose is lucid, the research meticulous, and the argument both unsettling and necessary.' Özge Onay, Ethnic and Racial Studies 'The role of religiously charged racism does indeed demand sustained critical attention, not least where and when it fused with other powerful forces that have damaged and decimated human communities and cultures. Blencowe's hard-hitting book is a welcome addition to this necessary critical endeavour.' Diarmid A. Finnegan, Journal of Historical Geography 'Moving from Bristol and Cornwall to Australia, Africa and the Americas, this book tells a transnational story of racism and cruelty, underpinned by ‘good intentions’ and desire for redemption. Whether it is Bristol city council’ attempt to move on from its history of slavery, Methodist clerics’ management of residential schools, or the exclusionary labour policies of Cornish miners who were themselves racialised as ‘Blackened’, Claire Blencowe shows how even groups opposed to, and marginalised, by empire inflicted colonial violence onto Indigenous populations. At its core, the book asks whether race and not class functions as the primary means of socio-economic oppression.' Dr. Angela Last, International Research Fellow (University of Bonn) 'The book powerfully demonstrates how material extraction - of minerals, labour, and land - was inextricably linked to the racialised Christianising and colonial orders that shaped modernity. Its greatest strength lies in tracing the temporal depth and spatial reach of these entanglements, connecting Britain's industrial heartlands to its settler colonies overseas.' Mitsutoshi Horii, Journal of Political Power 'The second exceptional contribution of Blencowe’s work lies in the way her theorizations expand the concept of geology of race (Yussof, 2018), challenging some of its more universalist tendencies. The author embeds the concept developed by the geographer Kathryn Yussof in a traceable historical process documented through deep archival and empirical research. In doing so, she contributes to decolonising this framework, which is sometimes articulated in abstraction or theoretical isolation.' Negar Elodie Behzadi, Interrogations Book Forum (Institute for Contemporary Critical Thought) 'Exposes the redemptive futures of settler colonial extractivism and dispossession at the level of discourse, land, race, religion, gender and sexuality.' Goldie Osuri, Interrogations Book Forum (Institute for Contemporary Critical Thought) 'Claire makes a very significant contribution to ‘material eco/geo-feminism’ with her detailed historical work on Methodism, race and mining, articulating what she calls its ‘evangelical extractivist-exorcist aesthetic’. She shows how the modern ideology of race came to have a vertical coding, underwritten by geological ideas of the superposed layers of the lithosphere, with lower layers older, darker, more primitive, and newer layers exposed to the light.' Bronislaw Szerszynski, Interrogations Book Forum (Institute for Contemporary Critical Thought) 'A genuine inspiration for those of us pondering how to engender forms of collective respiration - political, spiritual, planetary - beyond the logics of redemption, salvation, and damnation, in the enduring violence and dislocations that make live-in under duress on an earth at loose ends with itself.' Martin Savransky, Interrogations Book Forum (Institute for Contemporary Critical Thought) -- .


Author Information

Claire Blencowe is Professor of Sociology at the University of Warwick -- .

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