Introduction
Part I. Theoretical and Methodological Approaches
Chapter 1: Somewhere Underneath the MC’s Wit and the Evangelical
Word: Toward a Christian Ethical Evaluation of Hip Hop Polemic
James W. Perkinson
Chapter 2: The Message from the Wilderness
Michael D. Royster
Chapter 3: “To Set at Liberty Them that are Bruised”: Exposing
Liberation Theology within Hip Hop
Weldon Merrial McWilliams, IV
Chapter 4: “Put Your Hands Together”: The Theological Meaning of
Call-Response and Collective Participation in Rap Music
Angela M. Nelson
Chapter 5: “Let the Redeemed of the Lord say so”: Viewing Rap Music
as a Form of African American Spirituality
Darrell Wesley
Chapter 6: From the same Womb, of the same Struggle: Hip Hop Music
and its Connection with the Blues and the Gospels
VaNatta S. Ford
Chapter 7: Performing Spirituality: Lil Wayne’s Letters from a New
York Jail
Sharon Lauricalla
Part II. Hip Hop and Religion
Chapter 8: Rap with Soul and Pray with Flow: Youth on Hip Hop
Musicality and Catholic Spirituality
Tim Huffman and Amira De la Garza
Chapter 9: Embracing the Nation: Hip Hop, Louis Farrakhan, and
Alternative Music
Dawn-Marie Gibson
Chapter 10: Oath Continuities: The Inner Structure, Meaning, and
Spiritualism of Mau Mau Hip Hop
Mickie Mwanzia Koster
Chapter 11: My Soul Knows how to Flow: A Critical Analysis of the
History of Urban Black Christian-Themed Rap
Erika D. Gault
Chapter 12: Morality, the Sacred, and God in Ghanaian Hip Hop
Harry Nii Koney Odamtten
Chapter 13: In the Church, in the Streets: A Spectrum of Religious
Expression in Christian Hip Hop and Spoken Word Poetry in Atlanta
and Detroit
Shanesha R. F. Brooks Tatum
Andre E. Johnson is the Dr. James L. Netters Associate Professor of Rhetoric & Religion and African American Studies at Memphis Theological Seminary.
Johnson’s efforts to promote ongoing dialogue between religious
expressions and the ever-expanding cultural force of hip hop are
laudable and useful for their interdisciplinary reach beyond
religious and theological studies. This book is a valuable read for
laity, students, and scholars alike that promises to make a robust
contribution to the diversity of intellectual resources in the
burgeoning area of religion in hip hop studies.
*Monica R. Miller, Lehigh University; author of Religion and Hip
Hop*
The scholarly study of hip hop and spirituality is strong and
growing. Urban God Talk: Constructing a Hip Hop Spirituality adds a
serious and much needed anthology to this field of study. What Dr.
Johnson has done is essentially capture cutting edge research and
help the field rise to new levels of thought and scholarship. What
Dr. Johnson has here is a canon for a stronger understanding of hip
hop and spirituality. A must read!
*Daniel White Hodge, North Park University, Chicago and author of
"The Soul Of Hip Hop: Rimbs, Timbs, & A Cultural Theology"*
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