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Christianity and Black Oppression: Duppy Know Who Fe Frighten
Contributor(s): Green, Zay (Author)
ISBN: 1479191450     ISBN-13: 9781479191451
Publisher: Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
OUR PRICE:   $25.60  
Product Type: Paperback
Published: August 2012
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Religion | Atheism
LCCN: 2012286900
Physical Information: 0.64" H x 5.98" W x 9.02" (0.91 lbs) 308 pages
 
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Publisher Description:
This work, "Christianity and Black Oppression: Duppy Know Who Fe Frighten" asks: How is it that blacks have been Christianized for more than four hundred years, and in some cases more than five hundred years, and yet blacks are stereotyped as morally and mentally inferior? At the very first encounter between Europeans and Africans, Africans were perceived as "pagan", "heathen", and "devil worshippers". The tool that would transform Africans, it was postulated, would be the Christian religion. In spite of over four centuries of Christianity, the perception of blacks as morally and mentally inferior has not changed. Blacks, it would appear, carry a stigma that is genetic and can be transmitted. "Christianity and Black Oppression: Duppy Know Who Fe Frighten" also addresses the issue as to why there has not been a radical change in the perception of blacks in spite of centuries of blacks' investment of an inordinate amount of time, energy and money in the Christian religion. Green argues that Blacks were forced to surrender their African world view and adopt a European Christian world view. Black history and culture are marginalized, and at times demonized, within Christianity, and this is transferred to other areas of the lives of blacks. Indeed in this work, a comparison is made between the Dalits of India who are ostracized within the Hindu religion and blacks who share the commonality of oppression that is based on a stigma that is supposedly genetic and therefore can be transmitted. In the light of the fact that Christianity is considered to be an egalitarian religion with a God who is benevolent and who intervenes in peoples' lives, and the reality of black oppression, the question then arises as to whether blacks are subjected to "divine racism".