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Anthony G. Reddie [4]Anthony Reddie [4]
  1.  11
    Crisis in Black Theology: Reasserting a future based on spiritual liberative praxis.Anthony G. Reddie -2020 -HTS Theological Studies 76 (3).
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  2.  35
    From Black Theology to Black Lives Matter and Back Again.Anthony G. Reddie -2024 -Studies in Christian Ethics 37 (1):39-48.
    This article is written by a descendant of enslaved Africans and explores the theological significance of Black bodies. Black bodies have been commodified, controlled and coerced by White hegemony, often lacking agency and self-determination. Using personal experience and contextual analysis, this article, drawing on Black theology inspired reflections, argues that we need to rethink how we conceive of Black bodies ethically, if Black lives are to really matter. The rehabilitation of Black bodies is achieved through a theological reappraisal of holiness (...) and sacraments, underpinned by an embodied pneumatology, in which Black bodies are shown to be sacramental and worthy of mattering in a world underpinned by White supremacy. (shrink)
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    Do Black Lives Matter in Post-Brexit Britain?Anthony G. Reddie -2019 -Studies in Christian Ethics 32 (3):387-401.
    This article speaks to existential challenges facing Black people, predominantly of Caribbean descent, to live in what continues to be a White dominated and White entitled society. Working against the backdrop of the ‘Black Lives Matter’ movement that originated in the United States, this article analyses the socio-political and cultural frameworks that affirm Whiteness whilst concomitantly, denigrating Blackness. The author, a well-known Black liberation theologian, who is a child of the Windrush Generation, argues that Western Mission Christianity has always exemplified (...) a deep-seated form of anti-Blackness that has helped to shape the agency of Black bodies, essentially marking them as ‘less than’. This theological base has created the frameworks that have dictated the sematic belief that Black bodies do not really matter and if they do, then they are invariably second-class ones when compared to White bodies. In the final part of the article, the author outlines the ways in which Black theology in Britain, drawing on postcolonial theological and biblical optics, has sought to critique the ethnocentrism of White Christianity in Britain in order to assert that ‘Black Lives Do Matter’. (shrink)
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  4.  7
    The challenges of the twenty-first century.Anthony Reddie -2006 - In Dennis Bates, Gloria Durka, Friedrich Schweitzer & John M. Hull,Education, Religion and Society: Essays in Honour of John M. Hull. Routledge. pp. 9--115.
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