The world is too much with us : "culture" in modern Protestant missions

Bibliographic Information

The world is too much with us : "culture" in modern Protestant missions

by Charles R. Taber

(The modern mission era, 1792-1992 an appraisal)

Mercer University Press, c1991

  • : alk. paper

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [189]-203) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Taber explores the interaction in recent history between the modern missionary movement (especially its Protestant expressions) and concurrent developments in the social sciences, specifically the emergence of the concept of culture. To begin, he traces the prehistory of the concept of culture from antiquity through the Enlightenment, and up to the dawn of the modern Protestant missionary movement. He then describes the historical context of the nineteenth century in terms of processes such as the industrial revolution, the abolitionist movement, the colonial enterprise, and in terms of key ideas such as evolution and the birth of anthropology. Taber goes on to situate the place and rise of the modern missionary movement in the nineteenth century, tracing how it was influenced by prevalent ideas and attitudes and how it contributed to our understanding of culture and cultures. He then looks at twentieth-century theories of culture and discusses those that have influenced missiology. Finally, he examines and evaluates some unresolved issues in missions.

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