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Afro-Eccentric Forms of Spirituality – with William D. Hart

In this thought-provoking episode, our guest, William D. Hart, shares how his penchant for religious autobiographies led him to critique what he coins as “the standard narrative of Black religion” and how Afro-ecentric forms of spirituality develop strong communities and fight for freedom.

Highlights:

  • What William D. Hart means by “the standard narrative of Black religion”
  • The Black church as a school of leadership, business and virtue – the “outsized” role that the Black church played in the lives of African Americans
  • How historians and sociologists created an entity called “The Black Church”
  • The positive and negative sides of strong communities
  • Afro-Eccentric forms of spirituality as distinct from the norms of “the Black Church”
  • Black freedom movements for the unchurched and anti-church

Guest Information:

William David Hart is the Margaret W. Harmon Professor of Religious Studies at Macalester College. He is the author of The Blackness of Black: Key Concepts in Critical Discourse (Lexington 2020); Afro-Eccentricity: Beyond the Standard Narrative of Black Religion (Palgrave (2011); Black Religion: Malcolm X, Julius Lester, and Jan Willis (Palgrave 2008); and Edward Said and the Religious Effects of Culture (Cambridge 2000). His research interests include Black studies, social theory, philosophy of race, American philosophy, and the intersections of religion, ethics, and politics.

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