
The Sacred Act of Reading
From Zora Neale Hurston to Derek Walcott to Toni Morrison, New World black authors have written about African-derived religious traditions and spiritual practices. The Sacred Act of Reading examines religion and sociopolitical power in modern and contemporary texts of a variety of genres from the black Americas. By engaging with spiritual traditions such as Vodou, Kumina, and Protestant Christianity while drawing on canonical Eurocentric literary theory, Anne Margaret Castro presents a novel, nuanced reading of power through the physical and metaphysical relationships portrayed in these great works of New World black literature.
Castro examines prophecy in the dramas of Derek Walcott, preaching in the ethnography of Zora Neale Hurston, and liturgy in the novels of Toni Morrison, offering comparative readings alongside the works of Afro-Colombian anthropologist Manuel Zapata Olivella, Jamaican sociologist Erna Brodber, and Canadian fiction writer Nalo Hopkinson. The Sacred Act of Reading is the first book to bring together literary texts, historical and contemporary anthropological studies, theology, and critical theory to show how black authors in the Americas employ spiritual phenomena as theoretical frameworks for thinking within, against, and beyond structures of political dominance, dependence, and power.
- Jeannine Murray-Román, Florida State University"Offering beautiful readings and an innovative interpretative approach, Anne Margaret Castro presents a much-needed discussion of how the preaching tradition and other religious and spiritual practices are incorporated into and transform Afro-diasporic writing."
- Journal of Africana ReligionsCastro’s cogent mastery, reassemblage, and distillation of the diverse academic production of the past three decades around "Afro-diasporic" spiritual practices compose a book that clearly works through the fraught relationship between and among theology, religious studies, ethnomusicology, anthropological theory, sound studies, literary studies, and critical theory. Castro’s study then belongs alongside some of the most caring scholarship of the past thirty years, scholarship that bridges the traps of academic discipline.
Anne Margaret Castro is Assistant Professor of English at Florida International University.

