Cover image for Native Christians : Modes and Effects of Christianity among Indigenous Peoples of the Americas.
Native Christians : Modes and Effects of Christianity among Indigenous Peoples of the Americas.
Title:
Native Christians : Modes and Effects of Christianity among Indigenous Peoples of the Americas.
Author:
Vilaça, Aparecida.
ISBN:
9780754696476
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (267 pages)
Series:
Vitality of Indigenous Religions
Contents:
Cover -- Contents -- List of Illustrations and Maps -- Notes on Contributors -- Introduction -- 1 Towards a Comparative Study of Jesuit Missions and Indigenous Peoples in Seventeenth-Century Canada and Paraguay -- 2 Christians: A Transforming Concept in Peruvian Amazonia -- 3 'Before We Were All Catholics': Changing Religion in Apiao, Southern Chile -- 4 Money, Loans and Faith: Narratives and Images of Wealth, Fertility, and Salvation in the Northern Andes -- 5 The Re-Invention of Mapuche Male Shamans as Catholic Priests: Legitimizing Indigenous Co-Gender Identities in Modern Chile -- 6 Protestant Evangelism and the Transformability of Amerindian Bodies in Northeastern Amazonia -- 7 The Skin of History: Paumari Perspectives on Conversion and Transformation -- 8 Conversion, Predation and Perspective -- 9 Shamans and Missionaries: Transitions and Transformations in the Kivalliq Coastal Area -- 10 Baniwa Art: The Baniwa Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Sustainable Development -- 11 Divine Child and Trademark: Economy, Morality, and Cultural Sustainability of a Guaraná Project among the Sateré-Mawé, Brazil -- Afterword -- Index of Peoples -- Index of Authors -- Subject Index.
Abstract:
Native Christians reflects on the modes and effects of Christianity among indigenous peoples of the Americas drawing on comparative analysis of ethnographic and historical cases. Christianity in this region has been part of the process of conquest and domination, through the association usually made between civilizing and converting. While Catholic missions have emphasized the 'civilizing' process, teaching the Indians the skills which they were expected to exercise within the context of a new societal model, the Protestants have centered their work on promoting a deep internal change, or 'conversion', based on the recognition of God's existence. Various ethnologists and scholars of indigenous societies have focused their interest on understanding the nature of the transformations produced by the adoption of Christianity. The contributors in this volume take native thought as the starting point, looking at the need to relativize these transformations. Each author examines different ethnographic cases throughout the Americas, both historical and contemporary, enabling the reader to understand the indigenous points of view in the processes of adoption and transformation of new practices, objects, ideas and values.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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