49 research outputs found

    Review Of Words Of Fire: An Anthology Of African-American Feminist Thought By B. Guy-Shefthall

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    Review Of Mojo Workin’: The Old African American Hoodoo System By K. Hazzard-Donald

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    Review Of Caribbean Religious History: An Introduction By E.B. Edmonds And M.A. Gonzalez

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    Conjure Americana: Creating A Magic Book Archive

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    Students create an electronic image and text archive that foregrounds the material and cultural production of books related to magic, occult, and esoteric traditions in the United States

    Review Of James Baldwin\u27s God: Sex, Hope And Crisis In Black Holiness Culture By C.E. Hardy III

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    Invasion As Affliction: Worms And Bodily Infestation In African American Hoodoo Practices

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    Review Of A Separate Canaan: The Making Of An Afro-Moravian World In North Carolina, 1763-1840 By J. Sensbach

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    Review Of The Sermon And The African-American Literary Imagination By D. Hubbard

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    Review Of Conjure In African American Society By J.E. Anderson

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    Anderson (history, Middle Georgia College) looks at the history of black American magical beliefs and practices that are known variously as hoodoo, voodoo, tricking, mojo, and conjure, among other terms. According to Anderson, conjure is not a religion, for it lacks the developed theology of most syncretic faiths and focuses instead on practical objectives, including physical healing and empowerment, sexual coercion, aggression, and self-defense. Conjure traditions developed as a combination of African, Anglo-American, and Native American sources, and settled into two primary regions in the US--the Latin and the English cultural zones. This book draws from a rich secondary literature and contains a literature review, illustrations, and an appended note on sources and methodology. Absent from this study is any sustained treatment of the local development and meaning of magic within the multiple contexts in which it appears. Lacking narratives of historical change and social transformation, the book reduces African American conjure to a singular and invariable category. Summing Up: Recommended. Libraries with history, black studies, and religious studies collections supporting upper-level undergraduates through faculty/researchers

    Review Of The African Diaspora And The Study Of Religion Edited By T.L. Trost

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