Popular voices in Latin American Catholicism

Bibliographic Information

Popular voices in Latin American Catholicism

Daniel H. Levine

(Studies in church and state)

Princeton University Press, c1992

  • : hbk
  • : pbk

Available at  / 9 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [375]-395) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Throughout Latin America, observers and activists have found in religion a promise of deep and long-lasting democratization. But for religion to change culture and politics, religion itself must change. Such change is not only a matter of doctrine, ritual, or institutional arrangements but also arises out of the needs, values, and ideas of average believers. Combining rich interviews and community studies in Venezuela and Colombia with analysis of broad ideological and institutional transformations, Daniel Levine examines how religious and cultural change begins and what gives it substance and lasting impact. The author focuses on the creation of self-confident popular groups among hitherto isolated and dispirited individuals. Once silent voices come to light as peasants and urban barrio dwellers reflect on their upbringing and community, on poverty and opportunity, on faith, prayer, and the Bible, and on institutions like State, school, and Church. Levine also interviews priests, sisters, and postoral agents and explains how their efforts shape the links between popular groups and the larger society. The result is a clear understanding of how relations among social and cultural levels are maintained and transformed, how programmes are implemented, why they succeed or fail, and how change appears both to elites and to ordinary people.

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