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The Middle Passage, Trauma and the Tragic Re-Imagination of African American Theology

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Abstract

African American Christian consciousness developed in response to the traumatic field in which African American subjectivity took shape. The expression of the faith in the African American tradition is fundamentally tragic as a consequence. The Middle Passage is the existential and symbolic nodal point of this experience. There is a sense in which African Americans remain very much on the water; marginalized and suspended between worlds. There is a deeper sense in which the African American situation and response reflects the condition of modernity and post-modernity in the sense that it is hardly more than modernity becoming conscious of itself. A thorough examination and exploration of its significance is essential to developing a theology that adequately expresses African American Christian consciousness. This paper is an attempt to lay out, what I think, are some of the basic components of the experience and the bare outlines or orientation of such a theology grounded in it.

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Correspondence to Matthew V. Johnson Sr..

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Johnson, M.V. The Middle Passage, Trauma and the Tragic Re-Imagination of African American Theology. Pastoral Psychol 53, 541–561 (2005). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11089-005-4820-4

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