Missionaries, indigenous peoples, and cultural exchange

著者

書誌事項

Missionaries, indigenous peoples, and cultural exchange

edited by Patricia Grimshaw and Andrew May

(First nations and the colonial encounter / series editor, David Cahill)

Sussex Academic Press, 2010

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注記

Includes bibliographical references (p. 185-200) and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

This book brings together fresh insights into the relationships between missions and indigenous peoples, and the outcomes of mission activities in the processes of imperial conquest and colonisation. Bringing together the work of leading international scholars of mission and empire, the focus is on missions across the British Empire (including India, Africa, Asia, the Pacific), within transnational and comparative perspectives. Themes throughout the contributions include collusion or opposition to colonial authorities, intercultural exchanges, the work of indigenous and local Christians in new churches, native evangelism and education, clashes between variant views of domesticity and parenting roles, and the place of gender in these transformations. Missionaries could be both implicated in the plot of colonial control, in ways seemingly contrary to Christian norms, or else play active roles as proponents of the social, economic and political rights of their native brethren. Indigenous Christians themselves often had a liminal status, negotiating as they did the needs and desires of the colonial state as well as those of their own peoples. In some mission zones where white missionaries were seen to be constrained by their particular views of race and respectability, black evangelical preachers had far greater success as agents of Christianity. This book contains contributions by historians from Australasia and North America who observe the fine grain of everyday life on mission stations, and present broader insights on questions of race, culture and religion. The volume makes a timely intervention into continuing debates about the relationship between mission and empire.

目次

  • Reappraisals of Mission History: An Introduction
  • Mother's Milk: Gender, Power & Anxiety on a South African Mission Station, 1839-1840
  • "The Natives Uncivilise Me": Missionaries & Interracial Intimacy in Early New Zealand
  • Contested Conversions: Missionary Women's Religious Encounters in Early Colonial Uganda
  • "It is No Soft Job to be Performed": Missionaries & Imperial Manhood in Canada, 1880-1920
  • An Indigenous View of Missionaries: Arthur Wellington Clah & Missionaries on the North-west Coast of Canada
  • The Promise of a Book: Missionaries & Native Evangelists in North-east India
  • Translation Teams: Missionaries, Islanders, & the Reduction of Language in the Pacific
  • Practising Christianity, Writing Anthropology: Missionary Anthropologists & their Informants
  • Missionaries, Africans & the State in the Development of Education in Colonial Natal, 1836-1910
  • Colonial Agents: German Moravian Missionaries in the English-Speaking World
  • "A Matter of No Small Importance to the Colony": Moravian Missionaries on Cape York Peninsula, Queensland, 1891-1919
  • Mission Dormitories: Intergenerational Implications for Kalumburu & Balgo, Kimberley, Western Australia
  • Bibliography
  • Index.

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