Drawing on the black radical tradition and black feminism, J. Kameron Carter examines the philosophical, theological, and religious history that animates our times to theorize religion as a central feature of settler colonialism and racial capitalism.
Acknowledgments xi
An Anarchic Introduction (Antiblackness as Religion) 1
1. Black (Feminist) Anarchy 27
2. The Matter of Anarchy 47
3. Anarchy and the Fetish 63
4. The Anarchy of Black Religion 75
5. Anarchy Is a Poem, Is a Song . . . 106
An Anarchic Coda (A Mystic Song) 132
Notes 139
Bibliography 171
Index
J. Kameron Carter is Professor of Religious Studies at Indiana University Bloomington and is codirector of IU’s Center for Religion and the Human. He is the author of Race: A Theological Account.