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Advent Joy: Resistance Against Despair, Celebrating the Beauty of Black Joy / Stacey Floyd-Thomas & Willie James Jennings
Manage episode 390175689 series 2652829
Help the Yale Center for Faith & Culture meet a $10,000 matching challenge for podcast production; click here to donate today.
Part 3 of 4 in our 2023 Advent Series. Stacey Floyd-Thomas presents a vision of Black joy—which the world can't give and the world can't take away. Looking into several depictions of female agency in the Gospels, she outlines a picture of joy that celebrates beauty, redemptive self-love, virtuous pride, and critical engagement with the world. Then Willie James Jennings offers a definition of joy as an act of resistance against despair and its forces that lead to death. He presents a creative, communal joy characterized by fullness, connected to but transcending grief and sorrow.
Show Notes
- Help the Yale Center for Faith & Culture meet a $10,000 matching challenge for podcast production; click here to donate today.
- Macie Bridge and Evan Rosa introduce the episode
- Stacey Floyd-Thomas explains Black joy
- "This Joy That I Have"
- "The world didn't give it / the world can't take it away."
- Beauty and Blackness
- Toni Morrison's The Bluest Eye
- Womanist Theology
- Radical subjectivity
- Communitarian
- Redemptive self-love
- Critical engagement
- Female agency in the Gospels
- Mary and Jesus at the Wedding in Cana
- Mary and Martha
- Syro-Phoenician Woman
- Willie James Jennings defines joy—"an act of resistance against despair"
- "Resisting all the ways in which life can be strangled and presented to us as not worth living"
- Singing a song in a strange land
- Making productive use of pain, suffering, and the absurd—taking them serious
- How does one cultivate joy? You have to have people who can show you how to sing a song in a strand land, laugh where all you want to do is cry, and how to ride the winds of chaos.
- "In contexts where your energies have to be focused on survival, it doesn’t leave a lot of energy for overt forms of complaint—you’re spending a lot of energy just trying to hold it together."
- The commercialization of joy in the empire of advertising—contrasting that with the peoples serious work of joy
- The work and skill of making something beautiful out of what has been thrown away
- Segregated joy—joy in African diaspora communities
- Joy is always embedded in community logics
- The Christological center of joy
- Pentecost joy—joy together
- Geographies of joy: Christians tend not to think spatially, but we should
- Public rituals bound to real space
- Hoping for joyous infection, where the space has claimed you as its own
- Where can joy be found? The church, the hospital room, the barber shop and beauty shops—“things are going to be better"
Production Notes
- This podcast featured Stacey Floyd-Thomas and Willie James Jennings
- Edited and Produced by Evan Rosa
- Hosted by Evan Rosa
- Production Assistance by Macie Bridge
- A Production of the Yale Center for Faith & Culture at Yale Divinity School https://faith.yale.edu/about
- Support For the Life of the World podcast by giving to the Yale Center for Faith & Culture: https://faith.yale.edu/give
204 episodes
Manage episode 390175689 series 2652829
Help the Yale Center for Faith & Culture meet a $10,000 matching challenge for podcast production; click here to donate today.
Part 3 of 4 in our 2023 Advent Series. Stacey Floyd-Thomas presents a vision of Black joy—which the world can't give and the world can't take away. Looking into several depictions of female agency in the Gospels, she outlines a picture of joy that celebrates beauty, redemptive self-love, virtuous pride, and critical engagement with the world. Then Willie James Jennings offers a definition of joy as an act of resistance against despair and its forces that lead to death. He presents a creative, communal joy characterized by fullness, connected to but transcending grief and sorrow.
Show Notes
- Help the Yale Center for Faith & Culture meet a $10,000 matching challenge for podcast production; click here to donate today.
- Macie Bridge and Evan Rosa introduce the episode
- Stacey Floyd-Thomas explains Black joy
- "This Joy That I Have"
- "The world didn't give it / the world can't take it away."
- Beauty and Blackness
- Toni Morrison's The Bluest Eye
- Womanist Theology
- Radical subjectivity
- Communitarian
- Redemptive self-love
- Critical engagement
- Female agency in the Gospels
- Mary and Jesus at the Wedding in Cana
- Mary and Martha
- Syro-Phoenician Woman
- Willie James Jennings defines joy—"an act of resistance against despair"
- "Resisting all the ways in which life can be strangled and presented to us as not worth living"
- Singing a song in a strange land
- Making productive use of pain, suffering, and the absurd—taking them serious
- How does one cultivate joy? You have to have people who can show you how to sing a song in a strand land, laugh where all you want to do is cry, and how to ride the winds of chaos.
- "In contexts where your energies have to be focused on survival, it doesn’t leave a lot of energy for overt forms of complaint—you’re spending a lot of energy just trying to hold it together."
- The commercialization of joy in the empire of advertising—contrasting that with the peoples serious work of joy
- The work and skill of making something beautiful out of what has been thrown away
- Segregated joy—joy in African diaspora communities
- Joy is always embedded in community logics
- The Christological center of joy
- Pentecost joy—joy together
- Geographies of joy: Christians tend not to think spatially, but we should
- Public rituals bound to real space
- Hoping for joyous infection, where the space has claimed you as its own
- Where can joy be found? The church, the hospital room, the barber shop and beauty shops—“things are going to be better"
Production Notes
- This podcast featured Stacey Floyd-Thomas and Willie James Jennings
- Edited and Produced by Evan Rosa
- Hosted by Evan Rosa
- Production Assistance by Macie Bridge
- A Production of the Yale Center for Faith & Culture at Yale Divinity School https://faith.yale.edu/about
- Support For the Life of the World podcast by giving to the Yale Center for Faith & Culture: https://faith.yale.edu/give
204 episodes
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