Yeezus is Jesuz Examining the Socio- Hermeneutical Transmediated Images of Jesus Employed by Kanye West

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Daniel White Hodge

Abstract

Kanye West represents a myriad complex trope of issues for not just Black Theological praxis, but also for the broader study of Black people. In this post-civil rights era we, as Black people, find ourselves in a locality that is neither post-racial nor public Jim/ Jane Crowism; neither fully equal nor fully separate; not fully human yet celebrated in full, for culture and entertainment; it is an era that contains all the elements of hope and forward momentum in the symbol of what is the President of the United States and the nefarious nature of racism poignantly symbolized in Michael Brown, Trayvon Martin and countless other Black lives, both male and female, lost at the hands of racism and profiling. West’s symbolism rises as a figure and presents an anomaly of sorts on a post-civil rights era. Located in Kanye is a mixture of voices; the narcissist, the pain, the disillusioned, the proud, the critical interrogator, the double standard, and even the push for a contextual pursuit and understanding of God. Kanye West. Kanye is important for three reasons: 1) in my 2011 research among Hip Hoppers and urban emerging adults, he was ranked above Tupac as a spiritual and religious figure in Hip Hop1, 2) White emerging adults have come to appreciate and love him and, have grown up on his music, and 3) Kanye is a symbol for a postcivil rights context and represents the sacred, the secular, and profane exceptionally well. This is where we must begin, at the intersections of the sacred, profane, and secular.

Author Biography

Daniel White Hodge, Associate Professor of Intercultural Communications, North Park University in Chicago

With 25 years of multi-ethnic & intercultural youth work experience, Daniel White Hodge, Ph.D., is a recognized urban youth culture expert & cultural literacy scholar. Dr. Hodge is the  Associate Professor of Intercultural Communications at North Park University in Chicago where he chairs the Department of Communication Arts & is research lead for the Catalyst_ _ 606 program. His research interests are the intersections of faith, Hip Hop culture, race/ethnicity, & young adult ethnic-minority emerging generations.

Dr. Hodge has worked in the Hip Hop context for over 20 years and continues to focus on justice & disparity issues as it concerns ethnic-minority populations. He has worked for and with organizations such as Young Life and World Vision and has done work with undocumented youth in Los Angeles. His four books are:

  • Heaven Has A Ghetto: The Missiological Gospel & Theology of Tupac Amaru Shakur (VDM 2009),
  • The Soul Of Hip Hop: Rimbs, Timbs, & A Cultural Theology (IVP 2010),
  • Hip Hop’s Hostile Gospel: A Post Soul Theological Exploration (Brill Academic 2017),
  • Homeland Insecurity: A Hip Hop Missiology for the Post-Civil Rights Context (IVP Academic 2018).

Article Details

Section
Black Theology, The Arts, and Popular Culture
How to Cite
Hodge, D. W. (2018). Yeezus is Jesuz: Examining the Socio- Hermeneutical Transmediated Images of Jesus Employed by Kanye West. Black Theology Papers Project, 1(1). https://doi.org/10.7916/btpp.v1i1.479