Jason Craige Harris @jcharris2009 ?

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Full Name

Jason Craige Harris

Bio

Jason Craige Harris is a third-year master’s candidate in Black Religion in the African Diaspora and a Marquand merit scholar at Yale Divinity School, where he was recently awarded the Mary Cady Tew Prize for exceptional ability in history and ethics. He earned a bachelor’s in religion and African-American studies from Wesleyan University and received the Giffin Prize for excellence in the Study of Religion, Spurrier Award for ethics, and an official citation for academic excellence issued by the 2009 Connecticut General Assembly. As a fellow at Wesleyan’s Center for the Humanities and a recipient of the Mellon Mays Undergraduate Fellowship, Harris wrote a senior honors thesis analyzing theological anthropologies along political and racial fault lines in U.S. Evangelical history. His research and writing are principally concerned with black life, Christianity, (post)colonialism, violence, feminisms, critical social theory, and ultimately planetary flourishing. Concerns arising from the academic study of Africana religion, philosophy, and ethics particularly inform his inquiries. Through an interdisciplinary framework, he probes the systems of values that undergird dominant epistemological, rhetorical, cultural, and religious forms to determine to what extent, if at all, they conduce to robust conceptions of justice. With an eye toward contemporary social problems, he considers the religious strategies and visions that historically marginalized peoples have created to respond to conditions of living and being delimited by restrictive understandings of race, gender, religion, and nation. He is a general editor at the Journal of Postcolonial Networks, where, among other things, he helps to facilitate conversations on race and postcolonial/liberation theologies. As a Christian minister and budding public intellectual, Harris seeks and invites others into more holistic and attuned, less violent and constrained, ways of narrating the self and the divine.

Areas of Interest and Research:



African American Religious Studies

Africana Philosophy
African American Moral, Social, and Political Thought
African American Intellectual History
Liberation and Postcolonial (Christian) Thought

Philosophies of Liberation
Contemporary Religious Thought
Race, Gender, and American Christianities

Evangelicalisms and Pentecostalisms
Histories of Race Discourse in the Americas
(Christian) Social Ethics

Critical Social Theory/Social Philosophy
Theories of Race, Gender, and Power
Method and Theory in the Study of Religion

Focus

Theory and Theology

Category

Poco Student-MA

Keywords

christianities, ethnicity, gender, Hybridity and identity, Liberation Theology, Ontology, Postcolonial Theory, Power Analysis, Race, Religion & Culture, Religion & Society, Subaltern, women’s studies, World Christianity

Geographic Location

America-North

Education

Alma Mater(s)

Wesleyan University
Yale Divinity School

Degree(s)

B.A. Religion and African American studies, M.A.R. Black Religion in the African Diaspora

Additional Information

Website

http://www.postcolonialnetworks.com/editors

Recent Publications

“Reappraising Twentieth-Century African American Religious History, ” Glossolalia, Spring 2011. (Forthcoming)

“Co-Articulating Race and Religion: An Analysis of An Antislavery Treatise of Anthony Benezet, ” Glossolalia, Spring 2011. (Forthcoming)

“‘An Exhortation and Caution to Friends’: A Short Analysis of A Quaker Antislavery Treatise.’” Mellon Mays Undergraduate Journal, December 2010.

Review. Brooks, Joanna. American Lazarus: Religion and the Rise of African-American and Native American Literatures. (New York: Oxford University Press, 2003. Pp. viii – 256.) Journal of Race, Religion, and Ethnicity, October 2010.

“Reflections of a Black Man: Toward a Postcolonial Meditation.” Postcolonial Networks, May 2010

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