53 research outputs found
Singing of Satnam: Blind Simon Patros, Dalit Religious Identity, and Satnami -Christian Music in Chhattisgarh, India
Christianity in every context -- whether western or nonwestern, contemporary or ancient -- emerges as a composite entity, combining elements of the religions and cultures that predate it with aspects of the Christian faith, in whatever form it arrives. There is, of course, nothing distinctly Christian about this process, for just as the expansion of Christianity into India involved the Indianization of Christianity, so too did the growth of Hinduism in Bali entail the Balinization of Hinduism. Other religions follow a similar pattern when they cross cultural boundaries
Book Review: \u3ci\u3eGods in America: Religious Pluralism in the United States.\u3c/i\u3e
Book review of, Gods in America: Religious Pluralism in the United States. by Charles L. Cohen and Ronald L. Numbers, eds
Book Review: \u3cem\u3eThe Saint in the Banyan Tree: Christianity and Caste Society in India\u3c/em\u3e
A book review of The Saint in the Banyan Tree: Christianity and Caste Society in India by David Mosse
Book Review of Indian Religions: Renaissance and Renewal
The eighteen articles in this volume grew from papers delivered at the 2006 Spalding Symposium on Indian Religions. The Symposium featured both newer and more advanced scholars who presented papers on a variety of topics and traditions of India (but especially Hinduism and Buddhism)
Book Review: Beyond Boundaries: Hindu-Christian Relationship and Basic Christian Communities
A review of Beyond Boundaries: Hindu-Christian Relationship and Basic Christian Communities by A. Maria David
Review of The Crisis of Secularism
The essays in this volume address the crisis of secularism in India, a crisis which, the editors suggest, emerged during the Emergency and culminated in the 2002 Gujarat violence
Redeeming Indian ‘Christian’ Womanhood?: Missionaries, Dalits, and Agency in Colonial India
This study of dalit Christians in colonial North India suggests that women who converted to Christianity in the region often experienced a contraction of the range of their activities. Bauman analyzes this counterintuitive result of missionary work and then draws on the work of Saba Mahmood and others to interrogate the predilection of feminist historians for agents, rabble-rousers, and gender troublemakers. The article concludes not only that this predilection represents a mild form of egocentrism but also that it prevents historians from adequately analyzing the complexity of factors that motivate and influence human behavior
Book Review: McDonaldisation, Masala McGospel and Om Economics: Televangelism in Contemporary India
A review of McDonaldisation, Masala McGospel and Om Economics: Televangelism in Contemporary India by Jonathan D. James
Review of Missionaries and their Medicine
A review of Missionaries And Their Medicine: A Christian Modernity for Tribal India, by David Hardiman, Manchester University Press, 2008
Review of Religious Division and Social Conflict
A review of Peggy Froerer, Religious Division and Social Conflict: The Emergence of Hindu Nationalism in Rural India. New Delhi: Social Science Press, 2007
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