Rituals of White Privilege: Keith Lamont Scott and the Erasure of Black Suffering
Julia Robinson Moore is an associate professor of African American religions and religions of the African diaspora in the Department of Religious Studies at UNC Charlotte. She is the author of Race, Religion, and the Pulpit: The Life of Reverend Robert L. Bradby and the Making of Urban Detroit (Wayne State University Press, 2015). She has lectured on racial and religious violence in Canada, Ghana, Germany, Italy, Japan, and in England at Oxford University.
Shannon Sullivan is the chair of philosophy and a professor of philosophy and health psychology at UNC Charlotte. Her recent publications include Good White People: The Problem with Middle-Class White Anti-Racism (SUNY, 2014), The Physiology of Sexist and Racist Oppression (Oxford, 2015), and Feminist Interpretations of Williams James, coedited with Erin C. Tarver (Penn State, 2015).
Julia Robinson Moore, Shannon Sullivan; Rituals of White Privilege: Keith Lamont Scott and the Erasure of Black Suffering. American Journal of Theology & Philosophy 1 January 2018; 39 (1): 34–52. doi: https://doi.org/10.5406/amerjtheophil.39.1.0034
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