|
||||||||||||
|
Meet the FacultySylvester A. Johnson
Education
Contact Information
Background
I wrote this book because I wanted to examine the problems of chosenness, racial philosophies of history, and the strategies that American audiences have employed, incurring tremendous problems, in order to read modern racial identities into ‘biblical history’ as a means of authenticating themselves. The resulting study argues that the idea of being people of God, particularly in its American expressions, has depended upon a configuration of identity violence that has frequently included the participation of those on the underside of such violence. My ongoing research is concerned with the relationship between scriptures and race in the United States, the role of biblical narrative in the American religious imagination, and the interplay of race, gender, and sex in the constitution of modern identities. Of particular interest to me is the work emerging from cultural theoretical approaches to examining textuality, semiotics, and the role of “otherness” in religious identity construction. I am currently working on a history of colonialism and African American religions. Research Interests
Courses Recently Taught
Publication HighlightsBooksThe Myth of Ham in Nineteenth-Century American Christianity: Race, Heathens, and the People of God. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2004 Articles"Tribalism and Religion in the Work of Richard Wright,” Literature and Theology 20, no. 2 (2006): 171–188. "New Israel, New Canaan: The Bible, the People of God, and the American Holocaust,” Union Seminary Quarterly Review 59, nos. 1-2 (2005): 25-39. |
|||||||||||
|
||||||||||||