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Photograph of Onaje Woodbine

Onaje Woodbine Asst Professor Department of Philosophy & Religion

Degrees
Ph.D. Religious Studies, Boston University

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

B.A. Philosophy, Yale University

Bio
Dr. Woodbine’s research explores the varieties of black religious experience, especially as they are lived on the margins of power and outside the bounds of established institutional authority. His most recent book, Black Gods of the Asphalt: Religion, Hip-Hop, and Street Basketball, garnered national praise as “a profound narrative of survival [and] self-determination … in this season where black male bodies are under attack.” Covered by The New York Times (“street basketball functions as an outlet of mourning and healing of urban youths”), NPR’s All Things Considered (“invites readers to look at basketball differently … as a sacred space where young black boys go to ‘reclaim their humanity’”), ESPN (“full of colorful tales and haunting heartbreaks”), Boston Magazine (“painful, beautiful, nonfiction debut”), and the National Catholic Reporter (“A powerful and deeply moving work … reveals a world of redemption and hope rarely glimpsed from the outside”), Black Gods was longlisted for the 2017 PEN/ESPN Award for Literary Sports Writing and named one of The Boston Globe’s best books of 2016.
For the Media
To request an interview for a news story, call AU Communications at 202-885-5950 or submit a request.

Teaching

Fall 2022

  • AFAM-450 Adv St African Am/Diaspora St: Relig/Spiritlty African Diasp

  • CORE-105 Complex Problems Seminar: The Game Behind the Game

Spring 2023

  • RELG-296 Selected Topics:Non-Recurring: African American Religions

  • RELG-486 Topics in Religious Discussion: Varieties of Religious Exper