Introduction by Michele Saracino
An Interview with M. Shawn Copeland, with Robert Rivera and Michele Saracino
Part 1: Engaging Embodiment
1. “A Body of Broken Bones”: Shawn Copeland and the New Anthropological Subject - Roberto S. Goizueta
2. “Today a Black [Wo]man Was Lynched:” A Womanist Christology of Sandra Bland - Eboni Marshall Turman
3. Mapping Methodological Directions for Womanist Scholarship - Katie G. Cannon
4. Learning to Enflesh Freedom: Returning to the Clearing - Laurie Cassidy
5. Black Eucharist: Practical Discipleship for the Human Race - Susan Abraham
6. Black Lives Matter as Enfleshed Theology - Stephen G. Ray Jr.
Part 2: Engaging Discipleship
7. “Enacted Discipleship” as Christian Anthropology - Mary Ann Hinsdale, IHM
8. Standing at the Foot of the Cross - Nancy Pineda-Madrid
9. Enfleshing Freedom: A Christological Focus on Discipleship in Light of the Crucified Jesus and Black Bodies - Shawnee M. Daniels-Sykes
10. Zora Neale Hurston’s Moses, Man of the Mountain and Biblical Studies - Deirdre Dempsey
11. To Be a Thinking Margin: Reframing Christian Intellectual Life - Willie James Jennings
Part 3: Engaging the Political
12. The Significance and Singularity of M. Shawn Copeland’s Methodology - Susan L. Gray
13. God’s Image Revealed in Authentic Living: Mutual Enrichment through the Drama of Theological Education across Cultures - Kathleen Williams, RSM
14. White Supremacy and Christian Theology - Karen Teel
15. The Dark Night(s) of Malcolm X: Apophatic Mysticism and African American Spirituality - Bryan N. Massingale
16. Disturbing the Aesthetics of Race: M. Shawn Copeland and the Justice of Beauty - Maureen O’Connell
17. Drawing Close to Bodily Pain and Grace: Copeland, Social Sin, and Solidarity’s Incarnational Imperative - Christine Firer Hinze
Selected Bibliography of M. Shawn Copeland