'The centrality of slavery in the creation of the modern western world is beyond doubt. The history of the enforced movement of millions of Africans across the Atlantic continues to generate fierce political and historical debate. Here, Anthony G. Reddie has assembled a string of compelling contributions to the broader theological debate spawned by slavery. Not always easy or comfortable, the essays force the reader to confront vital moral and theological problems, not merely of the historical past, but of the contemporary world. They tease out the anomalies (of Christianity's role both in supporting, and then in ending slavery) and the challenges faced by Christians when studying the painful story of enslavement in the Atlantic world.' Jim Walvin OBE, University of York, UK 'This is the first intellectually formidable book on the Atlantic slave phenomenon from the perspective of Black Theology. The interdisciplinary scholarship and the cast of scholars and practitioner contributors to this text are unprecedented. Black Theology, Slavery and Contemporary Christianity challenges, enlightens, and delights us. I look forward to teaching and sharing this work with my students and colleagues.' Dwight N. Hopkins, University of Chicago, USA, author of Being Human: Race, Culture, and Religion 'An important interpretation of black liberation theology.' James H. Cone, Union Theological Seminary, USA 'The book is a tour de force, which highlights the practical nature of Black theology not only as an academic discipline, but a subject with real practical out-comes. All the writers seem committed to raise the collective consciousness about the legacies of slavery and how these have played out in Christianity. I have to congratulate the editor, Anthony Reddie, for teasing all the disparate elements and threads into a coherent whole.' Black Theology