Ebook
The figure of the Virgin Mary comes loaded with baggage and preconceptions. She is usually depicted as the perfect, obedient, and highly esteemed woman, much like the Victorian notion of the “angel in the house.” For many black women, nothing could be more inaccessible. This book considers the relationship between African American women and Mary of Nazareth. After examining the history of black American motherhood during slavery and beyond, this book then gives an overview of the existing views of Mary in both the church and the academy. Lee then brings African American women and Mary together, creating a womanist Mariology by using womanist biblical and theological interpretation, as well as considering black motherhood during the age of "Black Lives Matter."
“Lee has made a careful introduction for lay
readers to the topics of the biblical Mary, Mary in theological
imagination, and womanist interpretation. Black Madonna is a small but versatile
volume that is invaluable as a primer. Those familiar with the
Western tradition of the Madonna will find here challenge and
exciting new considerations as Lee puts traditional interpretations
in the context of black womanhood, quickening new life in sometimes
too-familiar dogmas and devotions.”
— Preston Yancey, Author of Out of the
House of Bread: Satisfying Your Hunger for God with the Spiritual
Disciplines
“In this short but powerful book, Courtney Hall Lee invites the
reader into reverence for Mary, black and beautiful, and by so
doing, lifts up all black women as blessed.”
—Julia Feder, Assistant Professor of Systematic Theology, Creighton
University
Courtney Hall Lee is a writer, attorney, and co-host of the
Dovetail podcast, a show about the intersections of faith, culture,
and social justice. Courtney is a graduate of Dartmouth College and
Case Western Reserve University School of Law. She is currently
pursuing a graduate certificate at Hartford Seminary. Courtney is a
contributor at Sojourners online and WomenInTheology.org. She
lives in Charlotte, North Carolina with her husband, daughter, and
toy poodle.