Black African Neo/Pentecostal Political Subjectivity and/as Black Consciousness
被引:0
|
作者:
Dube, Siphiwe Ignatius
论文数: 0引用数: 0
h-index: 0
机构:
Univ Witwatersrand, Dept Polit Studies, Johannesburg, South Africa
Univ Witwatersrand, Dept Polit Studies, 1 Jan Smuts Ave, ZA-2000 Johannesburg, South AfricaUniv Witwatersrand, Dept Polit Studies, Johannesburg, South Africa
Dube, Siphiwe Ignatius
[1
,2
]
机构:
[1] Univ Witwatersrand, Dept Polit Studies, Johannesburg, South Africa
[2] Univ Witwatersrand, Dept Polit Studies, 1 Jan Smuts Ave, ZA-2000 Johannesburg, South Africa
African Neo/Pentecostalism;
Black Consciousness;
black subjectivity;
Marshall;
Wariboko;
PENTECOSTAL;
THEOLOGY;
D O I:
10.1080/1462317X.2024.2338321
中图分类号:
B9 [宗教];
学科分类号:
010107 ;
摘要:
This article explores the political implications of the intersection of African Political Theology and critical race discourse. Its main argument is that, African Neo/Pentecostal Political Theology highlights that moral and political subjectivity in the context of a necropolitical postcolonial Africa is a result of the intersection of a complex set of practices linked to oneself, others, the state, and G/god. Moreover, in its concern with political well-being, African Neo/Pentecostal Political Theology further highlights the black racial identity of its adherents as part of its ideological participation in the broader project of black emancipation. Such a centering of race not only de-abstracts African Political Theology and its Neo/Pentecostal subjects from their specific socio-political location of Africa, including all the implications of such a location. This centering is important to foreground also because it provides a different dimension through which to apprehend and comprehend the rise of Neo/Pentecostalism on the continent.