0000001507 00000 n
0000002722 00000 n
He explores how this was a profound wrong-turn whose consequences are baked into the very fabric of what we call the modern world and Western democratic societies. In this Issue. Duke University Press. 0000030942 00000 n
%PDF-1.3
%
But I'm also opposed, for the same reasons, to subsidies that keep gas prices artificially low, and enable behavior we abhor. J. Kameron Carter Search for other works by this author on: This Site. Leanora Minai of OCS is the editor of the 'Working@Duke' edition. And rightly so. Table of Contents Back to Top Acknowledgments xi An Anarchic Introduction (Antiblackness as Religion) 1 1. The Anarchy of Black Religion A Mystic Song J. Kameron Carter Duke University Press . Campus Box 90403
PDF Duke University Chapel Reflections Post-Racial Blues (On Charlottesville, Resilience, and Suffering) - J Carters writings reflect the above-mentioned intellectual concerns and subject matters. Professor of Systematic Theology and Black Church Studies at Duke Divinity School. Social Text 1 June 2019; 37 (2): 67107. My website (where youre at right now) is being rebuilt. He teaches courses at the undergraduate and/or graduate levels in black studies and/as critical theory; continental philosophy and aesthetics; religion, modernity, and the secular; political theology; hip hop and religion; black feminism and religion; theories of religion; theory of the sacred; modern theology; race and mysticism; Afro-futurism and religion; black experimental writing and poetics; black nature or eco-poetry; African American literature and religion. These are the legacies of colonialism and empire, political theories of the state, anthropological theories of the human, and philosophy itself, from the eighteenth-century Enlightenment to .
J. Kameron Carter Joins IU - College of Arts & Sciences Driving his work are questions . As long as demand for gas remains high, so will the price, he says. 0000062396 00000 n
The best way for people to spend less on gas is to drive less. Not content only to describe this problem, Carter constructs a way forward for Christian theology. "They speak to the issues of his viability and electability.". A series edited by J. Kameron Carter and Sarah Jane Cervenak. 0000026215 00000 n
2 CVJ. For more, click here. All three of the major parties' presidential candidates are looking at policies that could cap greenhouse emissions. . 1990.
On the other hand, hestudies those aesthetic, literary, and philosophical expressions that reveal blackness as nonexclusionary Otherwise Life--Life that unsettles modernitys theological constitution, Life that moves "paratheologically"both withinmodernity's theo-political constraintsand yet wanders out from and fugitively to the side of those constraints, Life in its breaks, Life that is the outside within, the open. His manuscript in progress, Black Rapture: A Poetics of the Sacred, is in the final stages of completion. Prof. J. Kameron Carter is Assoc. I purse this subject through a theologically informed reading. EISSN 1527-8026. The U.S. has huge corporate tax giveaways built into our tax codes, in the form of oil depletion allowances and accelerated depreciation on capital stock in drilling and exploration. Associate Professor of Theology at Duke University Durham, North Carolina, United States. J. Kameron Carter is professor of religious studies at Indiana University. Duke Divinity School Professors J. Kameron Carter and Xi Lian have been named Henry Luce III Fellows in Theology for 2015-16.The two were selected for a year-long fellowship to conduct creative and innovative theological research. His work focuses on questions of Blackness, empire and ecology as matters of political theology, and the sacred. Carters bookRace: A Theological Accountappeared in 2008 (New York: Oxford University Press).
J. Kameron Carter's research works | Duke University, North Carolina Price: $16.00. He works in African diaspora studies using theological and religious studies concepts, philosophy and aesthetics, and literatures and poetries of the black diaspora in doing so. Working in black studies (African American and African Diaspora studies), using theological and religious studies concepts, critical theory, and increasingly poetry in doing so. 0000001637 00000 n
USDA Photo 20160821-FS-LSC-18 by Lance Cheung, 2016. Working as a theologian, he addresses the basic areas of Christian thought, especially attending to Christology (the Religion and the Future of Blackness. (South Atlantic Quarterly, Fall 2013). Sarah Jane Cervenak . In short, Christianity became white. Articles. but he leaves space that you can actually think . 57 0 obj
<>stream
6-1/8 x 9-1/4 inches . We need to react quickly, not slow things down by forcing prices downward.
Seven Questions about Today's Election | Duke Today Race: A Theological Account - Franklin Humanities Institute S`7@!7B/0[Rq n5 }U2O=4xG@~i
@:}g#}/{0Ilmb}$_b vTwRD>r:1j[#>YPV~+4J My name is J. Kameron Carter. He says poll numbers indicate the Mississippi and Ohio primaries are examples of this pattern. In pursuing this research, Professor Carteron the one handexamines how Christian theological ideas, especially christological ideas (claims about the person and work of Jesus Christ) and notions of theological anthropology (the Christian construction of the human),have funded racial, gendered,sexual, colonial, and settler imaginaries, and how the secular only amplifies (notovercomes) modernitys theological protocols. I am the author of Race: A Theological Account (Oxford UP, 2008). It will have information about my journalistic writings, the forthcoming books, when and where Ill be doing public-speaking, and other good things. For example, in 2008 he published a book titled Race: A Theological Account in which he examined how discourses of Christian theology worked with Enlightenment philosophical discourses of reason to shape our current racial common sense or how we have come to understand ourselves as raced beings. Smith Warehouse, Bays 4 & 5 There is nothing anyone can do. 0000023237 00000 n
With Cervenak, hes the editor of a Duke University Press book series, The Black Outdoors: Innovations in the Poetics of Study. I'm a Professor of Religious Studies, English, and African American Studies at Indiana University Bloomington. U~?PMRFA]X ut8J`c~eX,X2@
sX_=ppQqhiMYi9,,03MB_8d`Pr90 >Y8
Race: A Theological Account (OUP '08); The Anarchy of Black Religion: A Mystic Song (forthcoming, Duke UP) Associate Professor in Theology and Black Church Studies, Divinity School.
The Black Outdoors: Fred Moten and Saidiya Hartman in Conversation with J. Kameron Carter and Sarah Jane Cervenak, Transgender Studies: Course Listings & Sample Reading List, FHI-NCCU Digital Humanities Fellows holds second annual symposium, Table of Contents for Humanities Futures Papers, Instructor Guest Post: Building Global Audiences for the Franklin Humanities Institute, Announcing new cohort of FHI-NCCU Digital Humanities Fellows (2017-18), Academic Precarity in American Anthropology, After the Rebellion: Religion, Rebels, and Jihad in South Asia, Climate Change, Cultures, Territories, Nonhumans, and Relational Knowledges in Colombia, Clive Bells "Signicant Form" and the Neurobiology of Aesthetics, An Interview with David Novak, UC Santa Barbara, The Education of Bruno Latour: From the Critical Zone to the Anthropocene Feature-Length Documentary, From Body to Body: Duke Students Learn From a Dance Legend, Archaeology, Memory, and Conflicts Workshop [Panopto stream], Craig Klugman: Future Trends in Health Humanities Publishing and Pedagogy, Neurodiversities | Deborah Jenson: Flauberts Brain: Epilepsy, Mimesis, and Injured-Self Narrative, global & emerging humanities working groups, global and emerging humanities working groups, Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License. Request a desk or exam copy . "The main need of real people right now is to find a way to increase the fuel efficiency of their transportation," Munger wrote in an April 27 column in the DurhamHerald-Sun. Tuesday, March 12 ~ J. Kameron Carter Wednesday, March 13 ~ Cristina Comer Thursday, March 14 ~ Alma Jones Friday, March 15 ~ Onye Akwari and Anne Micheaux Akwari 905 W. Main St. Ste 18-B Durham, NC 27701 USA. The next president, he says, will have to turn to diplomacy to build a more solid foundation for rebuilding Iraqi society. 0000027591 00000 n
Please try again. Duke's Kerry Haynie says Obama may not be able to make the connection with the white working-class voters. Carter's claim is that Christian theology, and the signal transformation it (along with Christianity) underwent, is at the heart of these legacies. My name is J. Kameron Carter. m#?-1XT5ubVVe5}4pgNsd.VrHM~'3x[oA)s;HMzL+=Uex_(k#Q'A&d9;=TnqbKxo)~V6V*F I:D'DQ2qw$j,?m4ksc%vkq:;1$;ki#
b=vSPci7ffj5,6. Peter Feaver sees the politics of the Iraq war as being a major division in the general election. We need to shift from a military to a diplomatic surge," Jentleson wrote in a column in The News and Observer. Im a Professor of Religious Studies, English, and African American Studies at Indiana University Bloomington. J. Kameron Carter works at the intersection of questions of race and the current ecological ravaging of the earth. Published: 02 September 2008. 0[Z79aR-coX,F@$x
Hp/"oye2k`D This site uses cookies. He is interested in what these intertwined issues have to do with the modern world, generally, and with America (or rather the Americas), more specifically, as a unique religious situation or phenomenon. Professor Carter's bookRace: A Theological Accountappeared in 2008 (New York: Oxford UP).