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Photograph of Onaje Woodbine

Onaje Woodbine Associate Professor Philosophy and Religion

Degrees
Ph.D. Religious Studies, Boston University

M.T.S. Philosophy, Theology and Ethics, Boston University

B.A. Philosophy, Yale University

Bio
Onaje X. O. Woodbine is Associate Professor of Philosophy and Religion and African American Studies at 麻豆破解版 in Washington, D.C. He earned a B.A. in Philosophy at Yale University and a Ph.D. in Religious Studies at Boston University. His research examines vital expressions of lived religion and healing, especially among contemporary African American communities in the United States.

His first book, Black Gods of the Asphalt: Religion, Hip-Hop, and Street Basketball, garnered national praise as 鈥渁 profound narrative of survival [and] self-determination 鈥 in this season where black male bodies are under attack.鈥 Covered by The New York Times (鈥渟treet basketball functions as an outlet of mourning and healing of urban youths鈥), NPR鈥檚 All Things Considered (鈥渋nvites readers to look at basketball differently 鈥 as a sacred space where young black boys go to 鈥榬eclaim their humanity鈥欌), ESPN (鈥渇ull of colorful tales and haunting heartbreaks鈥), Boston Magazine (鈥減ainful, beautiful, nonfiction debut鈥), and the National Catholic Reporter (鈥淎 powerful and deeply moving work 鈥 reveals a world of redemption and hope rarely glimpsed from the outside鈥), Black Gods was longlisted for the 2017 PEN/ESPN Award for Literary Sports Writing and named one of The Boston Globe鈥檚 best books of 2016.

Dr. Woodbine鈥檚 second book, Take Back What the Devil Stole: An African American Prophet鈥檚 Encounters in the Spirit World, also draws from 鈥渓ived religion,鈥 womanist theory, and ethnographic studies, to center the healing practices of an African American woman (Donna Haskins) who wrestles with structural inequality in the streets of Boston by inhabiting an alternate dimension she refers to as the 鈥渟pirit realm.鈥 Both ethnographic and phenomenological, this book explores Donna鈥檚 experiences of the supernatural and her sense of multireligious belonging as she blends together Catholic, Black Baptist, and Afro-Caribbean traditions. Devil Stole has received praise from The Christian Century as 鈥渁 model of ethnographic work that centers the voice of its subject.鈥

In addition to his academic scholarship, Dr. Woodbine鈥檚 research has also contributed to increased awareness of African American religions and healing in the public square. Black Gods was adapted into a stage play, which was performed at the Grahamstown National Arts Festival in South Africa by Dr. Woodbine鈥檚 students and at independent schools across the United States. Dr. Woodbine鈥檚 research has been featured in an Ad campaign for Dove + Men Care on Black masculinity (2021) and led to consultations for the Netflix film High Flying Bird (2019) and the Museum of the City of New York鈥檚 exhibition 鈥淐ity/Game: Basketball in New York鈥 (2020).
For the Media
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