Title:
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FROM GARVEY TO MARLEY
RASTAFARI THEOLOGY |
By: |
Noel Leo Erskine, Stephen W. Angell (Foreword), Anthony B. Pinn (Foreword) |
Format: |
Hardback |
List price:
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£41.95 |
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ISBN 10: |
0813028078 |
ISBN 13: |
9780813028071 |
Publisher: |
UNIVERSITY PRESS OF FLORIDA |
Pub. date: |
30 April, 2005 |
Series: |
History of African American Religions |
Pages: |
256 |
Description: |
This history of the theology and rituals of Rastafarianism features the reggae of Bob Marley and the teachings and philosophy of Marcus Garvey, who motivated many Jamaicans to embrace their African roots. The author, a theologian raised in the village in which Rastafarianism originated, offers a serious inquiry from the perspective of an insider. |
Synopsis: |
This history of the theology and rituals of Rastafarianism features accents of the reggae rhythms of Bob Marley and the teachings and philosophy of Marcus Garvey, the black nationalist who motivated many of his fellow Jamaicans to embrace their African ancestral roots. The author, a theologian raised in the Jamaican village in which the Rastafarian faith originated, offers a serious inquiry into the movement with the perspective of an insider. Marley, who died in 1981, is the best known and one of the most articulate exponents of the themes of race consciousness that provide the core of Rasta hermeneutics. The poet and musician also made the faith appealing to the Jamaican middle class, which had turned away from the "Back to Africa" message that Garvey delivered in the 1930s. Noel Leo Erskine isolates and defines the main tenets of Rastafarianism, which emerged toward the end of the 20th century as a way of life and as a new international religion. He includes biographical descriptions of the key players in the development of Rastafari theology, provides details of its organization and ethos, and discusses the role of women in the religion.Examining the religion's relationship to Christianity, Erskine relates the Rastas to 19th-century Native Baptist and Revivalist traditions on the island and to the black theology movement in the United States. The Rastas see the European and North American churches as representatives of an oppressive colonial class, he writes. The Rastafarian name for God - "Jah" - is derived from Yahveh, the God of the Hebrews, and members of the faith connect their struggle for dignity and solidarity in Jamaican society with the struggle of the oppressed Israelites. "Jah" and not the Bible is the decisive source of morality and truth for the Rastas. |
Illustrations: |
glossary notes, bibliography, index |
Publication: |
US |
Imprint: |
University Press of Florida |
Returns: |
Returnable |