Mission Stations and the Coloured Communities of the Eastern Cape, 1800-1852
Title | Mission Stations and the Coloured Communities of the Eastern Cape, 1800-1852 PDF eBook |
Author | Jane M. Sales |
Publisher | |
Pages | 200 |
Release | 1975 |
Genre | Cape of Good Hope (South Africa) |
ISBN |
Protestant Missions and Local Encounters in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries
Title | Protestant Missions and Local Encounters in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries PDF eBook |
Author | Hilde Nielssen |
Publisher | BRILL |
Pages | 346 |
Release | 2011-07-27 |
Genre | Religion |
ISBN | 9004202986 |
This book makes visible an important but neglected aspect of Christian missions: its transnational character. Missionaries considered themselves global actors, yet they operated within a variety of nation-states. The volume demonstrates how processes on a national level are closely linked to larger transnational processes.
Mission Station Christianity
Title | Mission Station Christianity PDF eBook |
Author | Ingie Hovland |
Publisher | BRILL |
Pages | 275 |
Release | 2013-08-08 |
Genre | Religion |
ISBN | 9004257403 |
In Mission Station Christianity, Ingie Hovland presents an anthropological history of the ideas and practices that evolved among Norwegian missionaries in nineteenth-century colonial Natal and Zululand (Southern Africa). She examines how their mission station spaces influenced their daily Christianity, and vice versa, drawing on the anthropology of Christianity. Words and objects, missionary bodies, problematic converts, and the utopian imagination are discussed, as well as how the Zulus made use of (and ignored) the stations. The majority of the Norwegian missionaries had become theological cheerleaders of British colonialism by the 1880s, and Ingie Hovland argues that this was made possible by the everyday patterns of Christianity they had set up and become familiar with on the mission stations since the 1850s.
Constructing Mission History
Title | Constructing Mission History PDF eBook |
Author | Stanley H. Skreslet |
Publisher | Augsburg Fortress Publishers |
Pages | 477 |
Release | 2023-01-17 |
Genre | Religion |
ISBN | 1506481892 |
Challenging other narratives of mission history, Skreslet offers a new speech-act theory approach to the modern roots of World Christianity that differentiates between what a missionary might intend to communicate and the effects of what has been said or actions taken both in the moment and over time.
Colonial South Africa:Origins Racial Order
Title | Colonial South Africa:Origins Racial Order PDF eBook |
Author | Tim Keegan |
Publisher | A&C Black |
Pages | 379 |
Release | 1997-01-01 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 0718501349 |
It is a story that is strong in notable events -slave emancipation, the arrival of the 1820 British settlers, a series of frontier wars, the Great Trek of Boer emigrants - as well as in striking personalities, among them Dr John Philip, Andries Stockenstrom, John Fairbairn, Moshoeshoe and Sir Harry Smith. In Keegan's pages these familiar historical landmarks and characters emerge in entirely novel ways, the subject of fresh interpretations and original insights.
The Borders of Race in Colonial South Africa
Title | The Borders of Race in Colonial South Africa PDF eBook |
Author | Robert Ross |
Publisher | Cambridge University Press |
Pages | 365 |
Release | 2014 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 1107042496 |
This is the detailed narrative of the Kat River Settlement, which was located on the border between the Cape Colony and the amaXhosa in the Eastern Cape of South Africa during the nineteenth century. The settlement created a fertile landscape in the valley and developed a political theology of great political and racial importance to the evolution of the Cape and of South Africa as a whole.
Unreasonable Histories
Title | Unreasonable Histories PDF eBook |
Author | Christopher J. Lee |
Publisher | Duke University Press |
Pages | 390 |
Release | 2015-02-20 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 0822376377 |
In Unreasonable Histories, Christopher J. Lee unsettles the parameters and content of African studies as currently understood. At the book's core are the experiences of multiracial Africans in British Central Africa—contemporary Malawi, Zimbabwe, and Zambia—from the 1910s to the 1960s. Drawing on a spectrum of evidence—including organizational documents, court records, personal letters, commission reports, popular periodicals, photographs, and oral testimony—Lee traces the emergence of Anglo-African, Euro-African, and Eurafrican subjectivities which constituted a grassroots Afro-Britishness that defied colonial categories of native and non-native. Discriminated against and often impoverished, these subaltern communities crafted a genealogical imagination that reconfigured kinship and racial descent to make political claims and generate affective meaning. But these critical histories equally confront a postcolonial reason that has occluded these experiences, highlighting uneven imperial legacies that still remain. Based on research in five countries, Unreasonable Histories ultimately revisits foundational questions in the field, to argue for the continent's diverse heritage and to redefine the meanings of being African in the past and present—and for the future.