Description |
1 online resource (632 pages). |
|
African languages |
|
text file |
Series |
Mzuni books ; no. 24
|
|
Mzuni books ; no. 24.
|
Note |
Description based upon print version of record. |
Contents |
Cover -- Copyright page -- Title page -- Dedication -- Acknowledgments -- Contents -- Note on Naming and Translation -- Map 1: Peoples of the Lake Nyasa basin, ca. 1875 -- Map 2: Livingstonia Mission stations -- Map 3: Embangweni (Loudon) Station, 2000 -- INTRODUCTION -- The Research Context -- A History of Encounters -- Choosing a Field Site -- Embangweni Station -- The Embangweni Ecclesiastical Context -- The Research Framework -- The Broader Research Context: Crisis and Challenge -- Conclusion -- PART ONE. History and Theory |
|
CHAPTER ONE -- Missiology and Anthropology in the Study of Christian Missions in Africa -- Missiological Perspectives on Conversion and Syncretism -- Anthropological Perspectives on Syncretism and Conversion -- Anthropological Theories of Conversion: Rationalization, Cosmology, and Colonialism -- Further Anthropological Theories of Conversion: Power, Pragmatism, and the Contradictions of Colonization -- Anthropological Theories of Syncretism: As Structure and Meaning -- Modeling and Schematization: Towards Developing a Cognitive Anthropology of Syncretism and Conversion |
|
Cultural Models and Analogic Schematization -- Structures of Conjuncture and Disjuncture -- Of Christianity, Colonialism, and Consciousness -- Durable Schemas and Challenging Hegemonies -- CHAPTER TWO -- Historical Theologies of Bodily Resurrection and the Emergence of a Dualist Paradigm in Modern Western Culture -- Introduction -- A Christian of Death and Resurrection -- Metaphors of Decay and Fertility in an Emergent Christian Theology of Bodily Resurrection -- Developments in Thirteenth and Fourteenth Century Theology: The Soul's Desire for the Resurrected Body |
|
Body/Soul Hierarchies and the Emergence of a Dualist Paradigm -- Cartesian Dualism and the Further Intellectualization of Soul -- Protestantism and the Reformed Tradition -- Presbyterianism -- The Emergence of Biomedicine: Dualism and the Scientific Ethic of the Body -- CHAPTER THREE -- History, Religion, and Medicine in Northern Nyasaland -- A Series of Migrations -- Regional Religious Cults and Movements -- Tumbuka Religion: Early Missionary Accounts -- Tumbuka Religion: Malawian Christian Accounts -- Ngoni Religion -- The Tumbuka-Ngoni Religious Encounter |
|
The Arrival of the Livingstonia Mission -- CHAPTER FOUR -- The Establishment, Growth, and Segmentation of the Livingstonia Mission -- Tribal"" Responses to Missionary Activity -- From Hora to Lwasozi: A History of Embangweni -- Embangweni and the Mission Biomedical Project -- The Mission's Educational Expansion -- Religious Competition and Independency -- CHAPTER FIVE -- Missionary and Tumbuka Models of Personhood and Being: Conjunctions and Disjunctions Between Western Dualist and African Monist Schemas -- Introduction |
Note |
Missionary Models of Personhood and Being: Essentialism, Intellectualism, and Individualism |
Local Note |
eBooks on EBSCOhost EBSCO eBook Subscription Academic Collection - North America |
Subject |
Christianity and other religions -- African.
|
|
Christianity and other religions. |
|
Christianity and other religions -- Malawi.
|
|
Malawi. |
|
Healing -- Religious aspects -- Christianity.
|
|
Healing -- Religious aspects -- Christianity. |
|
Traditional medicine -- Malawi.
|
|
Traditional medicine. |
|
Africans -- Religion. |
|
Christianity. |
|
Interfaith relations. |
Other Form: |
Print version: Lindland, Eric Crossroads of Culture : Christianity, Ancestral Spiritualism, and the Search for Wellness in Northern Malawi Oxford : MZUNI Press,c2020 |
ISBN |
9789996060427 (electronic book) |
|
999606042X (electronic book) |
|
9996060411 |
|
9789996060410 |
|