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The Spirituals and the Blues


Title The Spirituals and the Blues
Writer James H. Cone
Date 2024-10-07 17:11:14
Type pdf epub mobi doc fb2 audiobook kindle djvu ibooks
Link Listen Read

Desciption

James H. Cone revolutionized American theology with the publication in 1969 and 1970 of his first groundbreaking works on Black Liberation Theology--a fusion of themes from the Gospel and the Black Power movement. Some critics challenged him for drawing more on European sources rather than African American history and culture. His response in 1972 was The Spirituals and the Blues, a major examination of the soul-songs that emerged from slavery and Jim Crow oppression. In the Spirituals, as Cone showed, enslaved Black people expressed their deep appropriation of the Gospel message of freedom, and their trust in God's identification with the oppressed. In the Blues, a "secular spiritual" born in the era of segregation and lynching, Black people expressed their dignity, love, and "the gut capacity to survive," amidst all the forces that pressed them down. In a new introduction to this anniversary edition, Cheryl Townsend Gilkes "Cone's work established that theology must attend to the questions and the witness of enslaved Africans and their descendants; they have a voice, through their music, in the serious questions of theology. And fifty years after its first publication in 1972, Cone's work retains its enduring witness."


Review

I have to say that this book is wonderfully written. Dr. Cone is quite at home talking about Christianity in the African American community. Christianity in the African American community shares the same iconography as the Christianity of whites, but the iconography in the former community is interpreted differently in so far as these icons are imbued with African traditions. Dr. Cone uses the spirituals to provide a cogent reading/interpretation of African American/Black Christianity and there were quite a few gems that made this book worth reading. For example, the experience of suffering was not used by the African American community to question the justice and righteousness of God. That was a given. The experience of suffering was used to articulate communal concerns 'centered on the faithfulness of the community of believers in a world full of trouble.'However, while the interpretation of the spirituals is quite excellent, I was disappointed that the blues got one chapter, a chapter that felt rushed. I do hope the author does an expanded/revised edition, but all in all I'd highly recommend it.

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