v ● d ● e 
The word womanism was adapted from Pulitzer Prize winning author, Alice Walker. 
In her book In Search of Our Mother’s Garden: Womanist Prose, Walker used the 
word to describe the perspective and experiences of "women of color." Although 
most Womanist scholarship centers on the African American woman's experience, 
other non-white theologians identify themselves with this term.

The need for this term arose from the early feminist movements that were led 
specifically by white women who advocated social changes such as woman’s 
suffrage. The feminist movement focused largely on oppressions based on sexism. 
But this movement, largely a white middle-class movement, ignored oppression 
based on racism and classism. It was at this point that Womanists pointed out 
that black women experienced a different and more intense kind of oppression 
than did white women.

The roots of theological womanism grew out of the theology of James Hal Cone, 
Jacquelyn Grant, and Delores Williams. Cone developed black theology which 
sought to make sense out of theology from black experience in America. In his 
book A Black Theology of Liberation, Cone argued that “God is black” in an 
effort to demonstrate that God identifies with oppressed people. Grant, a first 
generation womanist theologian, argued that Cone did not attend to the fullness 
of black experience — specifically that of black women. She argued that the 
oppression of black women is different than that of black men. Grant pointed 
out that black women must navigate between the three-fold oppression of racism, 
sexism, and classism in her books Womanist Theology and White Woman's Christ 
Black Women's Jesus. For her, Jesus is a “divine co-sufferer” who suffered in 
his time like black women today. Therefore, black women are more oppressed and 
in need of further liberation than black men and especially white women. 
Delores Williams took the work of theologians such as Cone and Grant and 
expanded upon them. She suggested that womanist theologians need to “search for 
the voices, actions, opinions, experience, and faith” of black women in order 
to experience the God who “makes a way out of no way.” In her book Sisters in 
the Wilderness, she defines womanism in the following way:

“Womanist theology is a prophetic voice concerned about the well-being of the 
entire African American community, male and female, adults and children. 
Womanist theology attempts to help black women see, affirm, and have confidence 
in the importance of their experience and faith for determining the character 
of the Christian religion in the African American community. Womanist theology 
challenges all oppressive forces impeding black women’s struggle for survival 
and for the development of a positive, productive quality of life conducive to 
women’s and the family’s freedom and well-being. Womanist theology opposes all 
oppression based on race, sex, class, sexual preference, physical ability, and 
caste” (67).

With the increasing use of the term in Master of Divinity, African American 
Studies, and Women's Studies, programs have clearly begun to incorporate 
womanism into university and seminary courses. Two examples of educational 
institutions that incorporate womanism in their graduate coursework are Eden 
Theological Seminary in Saint Louis, Missouri and Memphis Theological Seminary 
in Memphis, Tennessee.

Professionals such as historians are regarded as "womanist" historians if they 
have incorporated the views and experiences of African American women in their 
accounts of history



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