CHAPTER 6: African American Religion & Nationhood

16
CHAPTER 6: African American Religion & Nationhood

description

CHAPTER 6: African American Religion & Nationhood. Slavery. slave trade, 1600s-1700s West Africa importation of slaves outlawed, 1808. By the 19 th century, 20% of the national population was African American. West African Religious Worldviews. sense of community ancestors - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of CHAPTER 6: African American Religion & Nationhood

Page 1: CHAPTER  6: African American Religion  &  Nationhood

CHAPTER 6:African American Religion

& Nationhood 

Page 2: CHAPTER  6: African American Religion  &  Nationhood

Slavery

• slave trade, 1600s-1700so West Africa

• importation of slaves outlawed, 1808

By the 19th century, 20% of the national population was

African American.

Page 3: CHAPTER  6: African American Religion  &  Nationhood

West African Religious Worldviews

• sense of community

• ancestors

• continuity with spirit world

• high God as creator

• Tricksters (spiders, hares)

Page 4: CHAPTER  6: African American Religion  &  Nationhood

West African Religious Practices

• storytelling

• animal sacrifice

• divination

• music & dance

• possession

• magic for healing or harm

Page 5: CHAPTER  6: African American Religion  &  Nationhood

New Land, New Religion

• new Tricksterso Brer Rabbit

• conjure & root worko voodoo in New Orleans o elements of Catholicism

Page 6: CHAPTER  6: African American Religion  &  Nationhood

Black Christianity

• some became Catholico use of material elements in ritualo Saints as intermediaries

• many became Protestanto Methodist & Baptist

Page 7: CHAPTER  6: African American Religion  &  Nationhood

Invisible Institution

• slave revolts o unsupervised meetings banned

• hush harbors

• spirituals

• ring shout

Page 8: CHAPTER  6: African American Religion  &  Nationhood

Sources of African American Religion

1) West African background

2) condition of slavery

3) language of European Christianity

Page 9: CHAPTER  6: African American Religion  &  Nationhood

The Black Church in Freedom

1) blacks within white denominationso separate seating or churches

2) independent black churches

3) black denominationso A.M.E.o A.M.E. Zion

Page 10: CHAPTER  6: African American Religion  &  Nationhood

20th-Century Black Religion

• migration to North

• migration to citieso urbanizationo growing class divisions

• Afro-Caribbean immigrants

Page 11: CHAPTER  6: African American Religion  &  Nationhood

Holiness and Pentecostal Religion

• presence of the Spirit

• gospel music

• healing

• sanctified life

• new esteem for blackness

• Charles Mason & COGIC

Page 12: CHAPTER  6: African American Religion  &  Nationhood

Religious Combinations

• Peace Mission Movemento Father Divineo prosperity

• Spiritual churches of New Orleans

• Haitian vodou

• Afro-Cuban Santeria

Page 13: CHAPTER  6: African American Religion  &  Nationhood

The Religion of Blackness

• Marcus Garvey

• Ethiopianism

• Rastafarianism

• Moorish Science Templeo Wallace D. Fard

Page 14: CHAPTER  6: African American Religion  &  Nationhood

Nation of Islam

• Elijah Poole/Elijah Muhammad

• Yakub’s History

• Malcolm X

• Wallace D. (Warith) Muhammad

• Louis Farrakhan

Page 15: CHAPTER  6: African American Religion  &  Nationhood

Blackness and Christianity

• Martin Luther King, Jr.o civil rights movement

• James Coneo influence of W.E.B. DuBoiso black liberation theology

• Cornell West

Page 16: CHAPTER  6: African American Religion  &  Nationhood

OVERVIEW

• slave trade

• West African traditions

• invisible institution

• growth of the black church

• religion of blackness