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Faith in Flux

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Pentecostalism—Africa’s fastest growing form of Christianity—is known for displacing that which came before. Yet anthropologist Devaka Premawardhana witnessed neither massive growth nor dramatic ru...
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  • 02 March 2018
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Pentecostalism—Africa’s fastest growing form of Christianity—is known for displacing that which came before. Yet anthropologist Devaka Premawardhana witnessed neither massive growth nor dramatic rupture in the part of Mozambique where he worked. His research opens a new paradigm for the study of global Christianity, one centered on religious fluidity and existential mobility, and on how indigenous traditions remain vibrant and influential—even in the lives of converts.

In Faith in Flux, Premawardhana narrates a range of everyday hardships faced by a rural Makhuwa-speaking people—snakebites and elephant invasions, chronic illnesses and recurring wars, disputes within families and conflicts with the state—to explore how wellbeing sometimes entails not stability but mobility. In their ambivalent response to Pentecostalism, as in their historical resistance to sedentarization and other modernizing projects, the Makhuwa reveal crucial insights about what it is to be human: about changing as a means of enduring, becoming as a mode of being, and converting as a way of life.

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Price: $29.95
Pages: 232
Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press, Inc.
Imprint: University of Pennsylvania Press
Series: Contemporary Ethnography
Publication Date: 02 March 2018
ISBN: 9780812294842
Format: eBook
BISACs: SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / General, Anthropology, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Sociology of Religion
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"This fascinating and unique book is the result of Devaka Premawardhana'sjourney of nearly one year to explore the local response to the recent arrivalof Pentecostal churches in northern Mozambique . . . [A] rich and inspiring book, which should be read by anyone interested in African Studies and anthropology of Christianity."
Devaka Premawardhana is Assistant Professor of Religion at Emory University.

Introduction

PART I. Othama—To Move
Chapter 1. A Fugitive People
Chapter 2. Between the River and the Road

PART II. Ohiya ni Ovolowa—To Leave and to Enter
Chapter 3. Border Crossings
Chapter 4. Two Feet In, Two Feet Out

PART III. Okhalano—To Be With
Chapter 5. A Religion of Her Own?
Chapter 6. Moved by the Spirit

Conclusion

Notes
Works Cited
Index
Acknowledgments