Have You Heard of Womanist Theology?

Womanist theology emerged in the late twentieth century as a resounding voice giving African American women theologians a new sense of freedom in reclaiming their spaces within the realms of theology, the church and the community. With the publication of Alice Walker’s book, In Search of Our Mothers' Gardens: Womanist Prose
Three works in particular: Katie G. Canon’s, Black Womanist Ethics
Canon’s work, which traces the moral agency of the Black woman from slavery to post slavery to literary images in Black women’s fiction novels, develops a womanist ethics using the experiences of African American women as the impetus for a non-androcentric theological model of survival.
Weems’ text builds upon the importance of centralizing Black women’s experiences through her interpretation of nine Biblical stories that connects the realities of Black women’s social location to their religious practices. And finally, Grant’s book sets out to distinguish the different faith thought processes between Black and White women by challenging what she sees as an embedded racism within feminist theology. She asserts that through a universalization of religious thought, white feminists seek to deny Black women their right to form their own theologies independent of other’s constructions.
As the above sources became more frequently available, other womanist theologians began emerging, adding their own critiques to the canon. One in particular, (and a favorite of mine), Delores S. Williams’ groundbreaking work,Sisters in the Wilderness
Womanist theology, as an established field of study, seeks to confront the negative stereotypes and erasure of Black women’s roles in theology, the church, the community and society, by challenging the constructions of their personhoods (or nonexistence) in these respective areas. It critically examines the dialogical relationship between Black women’s social location and faith as dual sources of survival and liberation. By using Black women’s unique experiences as a marginalized group of human beings in the West as the impetus for rereading and reexamining androcentric theological texts and patriarchal paradigms, Womanist theology resoundingly asserts the Black woman’s voice into history.
Alice J. Rollins is an aspiring freelance writer and blogger who holds an M.A. in Women’s and Gender Studies from DePaul University. Her areas of interest include African American women’s spirituality, feminist/womanist pedagogy and politics of migration.
She is currently based in Chicago, IL. Email her at: alice@forharriet.com
No comments: