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Jimmy's Faith: James Baldwin, Disidentification, and the Queer Possibilities of Black Religion

Current price: $98.00
Jimmy's Faith: James Baldwin, Disidentification, and the Queer Possibilities of Black Religion
Jimmy's Faith: James Baldwin, Disidentification, and the Queer Possibilities of Black Religion

Barnes and Noble

Jimmy's Faith: James Baldwin, Disidentification, and the Queer Possibilities of Black Religion

Current price: $98.00
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Size: Hardcover

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QSpirit Top 24 LGBTQ Christian Books of 2024
A novel approach to understanding the work of James Baldwin and its transformative potential
The relationship of James Baldwin’s life and work to Black religion is in many ways complex and confounding. What is he doing through his literary deployment of religious language and symbols?
Despite Baldwin’s disavowal of Christianity in his youth, he continued to engage the symbols and theology of Christianity in works such as
The Amen Corner
,
Just Above My Head
, and others. With
Jimmy’s Faith
, author Christopher W. Hunt shows how Baldwin’s usage of those religious symbols both shifted their meaning and served as a way for him to build his own religious and spiritual vision. Engaging José Esteban Muñoz’s theory of disidentification as a queer practice of imagination and survival, Hunt demonstrates the ways in which James Baldwin disidentifies with and queers Black Christian language and theology throughout his literary corpus.
Baldwin’s vision is one in which queer sexuality signifies the depth of love’s transforming pos­sibilities, the arts serve as the (religious) medium of knitting Black community together, an agnostic and affective mysticism undermines Christian theological discourse, “androgyny” troubles the gender binary, and the Black child signifies the hope for a world made new. In disidentifying with Christian symbols,
reveals how Baldwin imagines both religion and the world “oth­erwise,” offering a model of how we might do the same for our own communities and ourselves.

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