Fr. 163.20

In and Out of This World - Material and Extraterrestrial Bodies in the Nation of Islam

English · Hardback

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Description

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With In and Out of This World Stephen C. Finley examines the religious practices and discourses that have shaped the Nation of Islam (NOI) in America. Drawing on the speeches and writing of figures such as Elijah Muhammad, Malcolm X, Warith Deen Mohammad, and Louis Farrakhan, Finley shows that the NOI and its leaders used multiple religious symbols, rituals, and mythologies meant to recast the meaning of the cosmos and create new transcendent and immanent black bodies whose meaning cannot be reduced to products of racism. Whether examining how the myth of Yakub helped Elijah Muhammad explain the violence directed at black bodies, how Malcolm X made black bodies in the NOI publicly visible, or the ways Farrakhan's discourses on his experiences with the Mother Wheel UFO organize his interpretation of black bodies, Finley demonstrates that the NOI intended to retrieve, reclaim, and reform black bodies in a context of antiblack violence.

List of contents










Acknowledgments  ix
Introduction. Black Bodies In- and Out-of-Place: Rereading the Nation of Islam through a Theory of the Body  1
1. Elijah Muhammad, the Myth of Yakub, and the Critique of “Whitenized” Black Embodiment  15
2. Elijah Muhammad, Transcendent Blackness, and the Construction of Ideal Black Bodies  46
3. Malcolm X and the Politics of Resistance: Visible Bodies, Language, and the Implied Critique of Elijah Muhammad  74
4. Warith Deen Mohammed and the Nation of Islam: Race and Black Embodiment in “Islamic” Form  100
5. Mothership Connections: Louis Farrakhan as the Culmination of Muslim Ideals in the Nation of Islam  131
Conclusion. (Re)forming Black Embodiment, White Supremacy, and the Nation of Islam's Class(ist) Response  158
Wheels, Wombs, and Women: An Epilogue  174
The “Louis Farrakhan” That the Public Does Not Know, or Doesn’t Want to Know?: An Afterword  189
Farrakhan’s Swan Song? A Postscript  198
Notes  201
Bibliography  235
Index  245

About the author










Stephen C. Finley is Inaugural Chair, Department of African and African American Studies at Louisiana State University, and coeditor of The Religion of White Rage: White Workers, Religious Fervor, and the Myth of Black Racial Progress and Esotericism in African American Religious Experience.

Summary

Stephen C. Finley offers a new look at the religious practices and discourses of the Nation of Islam, showing how the group and its leaders used multiple religious and esoteric symbols to locate black bodies as sites of religious meaning.

Product details

Authors Stephen C. Finley
Publisher Duke University Press
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 30.11.2022
 
EAN 9781478016137
ISBN 978-1-4780-1613-7
No. of pages 277
Series Religious Cultures of African and African Diaspora People
Religious Cultures of African
Subject Humanities, art, music > Religion/theology > Other religions

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