Keri Day is Associate Professor of Constructive Theology and African American Religion at Princeton Theological Seminary. She is the author of Unfinished Business: Black Women, the Church and the Struggle to Thrive in America (2012), Religious Resistance to Neoliberalism: Womanist and Black Feminist Perspectives (2015), and Notes of a Native Daughter: Testifying in Theological Education (2021).
Introduction: Subversive Beginnings
1. Capitalist Visions of Pentecost
2. Toppling White Evangelical and Market Orthodoxies
3. Black Female Genius
4. Azusa's Erotic Life
5. Lawlessness: A Critique of American Democracy
6. A Democracy to Come: Embracing Azusa's Political Moodiness