Wesleyan portrait of Marlon  Millner

Marlon Millner

Visiting Assistant Professor of Religion

860-685-2760

Visiting Assistant Professor of African American Studies

860-685-2760

mmillner@wesleyan.edu

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Marlon Millner

Marlon Millner works at the intersection of critical social theory, Black studies, religious studies, and political philosophy. An interdisciplinary scholar, Millner examines the intertwined relationship of Christianity and colonialism in forging modernity and racial hierarchy. His work has been published by The Syndicate Network, Pneuma: The Journal of the Society for Pentecostal Studies, and The Journal of Black Religious Thought. He is currently working on a book project: The Birth of American Pentecostalism, Biopolitics, Blackness and Spirit Baptism.

Dr. Millner received his B.A. from Morehouse College, his M.Div. from Harvard Divinity School, and his Ph.D. from Northwestern University. He formerly served as Director of the Center for Black Studies at Northern Illinois University. His current work re-examines the emergence of early-twentieth-century American Pentecostalism through the lens of Foucauldian biopolitics and Black feminist and Black queer thought. He has curated work on Black and womanist theology on The Syndicate Network. And his published articles include “Dis/parity: Blackness and the (Im)possibility of a Pentecostal (Political) Theology,” for Pneuma: The Journal for the Society for Pentecostal Studies, and a contribution to Tracing Contours: Reflections of World Mission and Christianity. Learn more at his website. In his spare time, Marlon enjoys walking paths, sandy beaches, watching the WNBA in person, and listening to plenty of jazz, house, hip-hop and gospel. In returning to the east coast, Marlon looks forward to weekend trips to the Big Apple as well.

Academic Affiliations

Office Hours

I welcome meeting with students on Wednesdays between 1:30pm and 4:30pm, in person or via zoom, and by appointment.

Courses

Spring 2025
RELI 211 - 01
Black Women and the Sacred

RELI 214 - 01
Spirit of the Postcolony

RELI 325 - 01
The Black Soul