The Souls of Womenfolk: The Religious Cultures of Enslaved Women in the Lower South

The Souls of Womenfolk: The Religious Cultures of Enslaved Women in the Lower South

by Alexis Wells-Oghoghomeh
The Souls of Womenfolk: The Religious Cultures of Enslaved Women in the Lower South

The Souls of Womenfolk: The Religious Cultures of Enslaved Women in the Lower South

by Alexis Wells-Oghoghomeh

eBook

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Overview

Beginning on the shores of West Africa in the sixteenth century and ending in the U.S. Lower South on the eve of the Civil War, Alexis Wells-Oghoghomeh traces a bold history of the interior lives of bondwomen as they carved out an existence for themselves and their families amid the horrors of American slavery. With particular attention to maternity, sex, and other gendered aspects of women's lives, she documents how bondwomen crafted female-centered cultures that shaped the religious consciousness and practices of entire enslaved communities. Indeed, gender as well as race co-constituted the Black religious subject, she argues—requiring a shift away from understandings of "slave religion" as a gender-amorphous category.

Women responded on many levels—ethically, ritually, and communally—to southern slavery. Drawing on a wide range of sources, Wells-Oghoghomeh shows how they remembered, reconfigured, and innovated beliefs and practices circulating between Africa and the Americas. In this way, she redresses the exclusion of enslaved women from the American religious narrative. Challenging conventional institutional histories, this book opens a rare window onto the spiritual strivings of one of the most remarkable and elusive groups in the American experience.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781469663616
Publisher: The University of North Carolina Press
Publication date: 09/13/2021
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 320
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

Alexis Wells-Oghoghomeh is assistant professor of religious studies at Stanford University.

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

A novel interpretation of African American religiosity that centers the experiences of Black women who drew on a range of cultural sources to build a robust cosmology and worldview that has been too long overlooked. Perhaps most striking, Alexis Wells-Oghoghomeh argues that ideas about gender in Africa and the Americas provided much of the ideological framework upon which slavery was built. A signal contribution to Black religious history as well as to the history of slavery and the transatlantic slave trade."—Jason R. Young, University of Michigan



With boldness, care, and exacting skill, Alexis Wells-Oghoghomeh maps cultural institutions of gender in West Africa in connection to those of the U.S. Lowcountry. Immersed in multiple archives, this book provides a generative challenge to all who seek to understand the transnational and diasporic historical and social linkages that have constituted Africana religions. It answers the call for more creative methods of interpretation and bold efforts to thoughtfully and deliberately render the agency, epistemology, and larger lifeworlds of those who were forced into the most violent forms of domination."—Sylvester A. Johnson, Virginia Tech

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