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Words Made Flesh

Niki Kasumi Clements

Sylvia Wynter and Religion

Barcode 9781531510244
Paperback

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Release Date: 03/06/2025

Genre: Philosophy & Spirituality
Label: Fordham University Press
Contributors: Justine Bakker (Edited by), David Kline (Edited by), Shamara Wyllie Alhassan (Contributions by), Justine Bakker (Contributions by), Niki Kasumi Clements (Contributions by), Tapji Garba (Contributions by), David Kline (Contributions by), Oludamini Ogunnaike (Contributions by), Anthony Bayani Rodriguez (Contributions by), Rafael Vizcaíno (Contributions by), Joseph Winters (Contributions by)
Language: English
Publisher: Fordham University Press

Sylvia Wynter and Religion

The first sustained treatment of religion and religions in the scholarship of a prominent Caribbean thinker
Sylvia Wynter is a profoundly transdisciplinary scholar whose works span an impressive array of theory, literature, science, anthropology, philosophy, and religious studies as well as different forms, including essays, plays, a novel, and a 935-page unpublished manuscript entitled "Black Metamorphosis: New Natives in a New World." Whatever the medium, Wynter frequently engages religion as a relevant category of analysis, from reflections on Christianity, Islam, and Rastafarianism to the category and role of religion as a universal aspect of human social production.
Wynter's writings have received enthusiastic attention by scholars in Black studies, Caribbean theory, critical race theory, literature, and philosophy. But until recently little scholarly writing exists that directly engages the topic of religion in her corpus. Words Made Flesh seeks to fill this gap by focusing exclusively on religion, religions, and religiosity in her work.
Bringing together scholars that provide a wide variety of theoretical perspectives on religion, political theology, social theory, and science studies, this book offers an in-depth engagement with one of the most innovative and important thinkers of the last forty years and illustrates how Wynter's writing has significant implications for the study of religion and religion's relationship to colonialism, race, humanism, science, and political theology.