Description

Book Synopsis

Combining ethnographic and historical research conducted in Angola, Portugal, and the United Kingdom, A Prophetic Trajectory tells the story of Simão Toko, the founder and leader of one of the most important contemporary Angolan religious movements. The book explains the historical, ethnic, spiritual, and identity transformations observed within the movement, and debates the politics of remembrance and heritage left behind after Toko’s passing in 1984. Ultimately, it questions the categories of prophetism and charisma, as well as the intersections between mobility, memory, and belonging in the Atlantic Lusophone sphere.



Trade Review

‘The author did a wonderful job of research. The book is self-explanatory and informing not only about Angola but also about the existence of other churches and their practices amidst political manipulations and turmoil.” · African Studies Quarterly

“For scholars of religion in Europe Blanes’s ultimate focus on the Angolan diaspora happily presents his strongest point of argument. Colonial and postcolonial history is brought together into a coherent argument through narrative reconstructions and ideologies of remembrance: more studies of this kind are needed to help place Europe’s colonial legacy into a web of postcolonial migration, ‘southern’ agency and cultural/religious dynamics.” · Journal of Religion

“…the current emphasis on the study of Pentecostal churches is clouding our understanding of the vast variations of African Christianities with their specific theologies, institutional structures and ways of dealing with modernisation, migration and global awareness. Blanes [approaches this problem]… in an exemplary manner with a—most welcome—example from the Lusophone world. He thereby engages fruitfully with such diverse academic fields as narrative theory, postcolonial studies, world Christianity and studies in medialisation… more studies of this kind are needed to help place Europe’s colonial legacy into a web of postcolonial migration, ‘southern’ agency and cultural/religious dynamics.” · Journal of Religion in Europe

“…a welcome and valuable study of contemporary Christianity and the circulation of religion and culture. It also adds to our crystallizing emphasis on history and memory as resources and constructions rather than sheer 'facts'.” · Anthropology Review Database

“Blanes’ multi-sited ethnographic-cum-historical study of a prominent Christian prophetic church of Angolan origin is an excellent piece of scholarship, and makes a unique contribution to the literature on Christianity in Africa and on African Christianity in Europe. More than other scholars in the emerging anthropology of Christianity, Blanes gives detailed attention to the interlocking of temporal and spatial dimensions in the context of diasporic religion and religious self-identification.” · Thomas Kirsch, University of Konstanz



Table of Contents

List of Illustrations
Preface

Introduction: prophetic territories and temporalities

PART I: ITINERARIES

Chapter 1. Trajectories: a prophetic biography, part I
Chapter 2. Trajectories: a prophetic biography, part II

PART II: HERITAGES

Chapter 3. Transmission: word, action and mediation
Chapter 4. Trepidation: spirits, memories and disputed heritage
Chapter 5. Transcendence: Tokoist diasporas

Conclusion

Primary sources
Bibliography
Index

A Prophetic Trajectory: Ideologies of Place, Time

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    A Hardback by Ruy Llera Blanes

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      View other formats and editions of A Prophetic Trajectory: Ideologies of Place, Time by Ruy Llera Blanes

      Publisher: Berghahn Books
      Publication Date: 01/05/2014
      ISBN13: 9781782382720, 978-1782382720
      ISBN10: 1782382720

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Combining ethnographic and historical research conducted in Angola, Portugal, and the United Kingdom, A Prophetic Trajectory tells the story of Simão Toko, the founder and leader of one of the most important contemporary Angolan religious movements. The book explains the historical, ethnic, spiritual, and identity transformations observed within the movement, and debates the politics of remembrance and heritage left behind after Toko’s passing in 1984. Ultimately, it questions the categories of prophetism and charisma, as well as the intersections between mobility, memory, and belonging in the Atlantic Lusophone sphere.



      Trade Review

      ‘The author did a wonderful job of research. The book is self-explanatory and informing not only about Angola but also about the existence of other churches and their practices amidst political manipulations and turmoil.” · African Studies Quarterly

      “For scholars of religion in Europe Blanes’s ultimate focus on the Angolan diaspora happily presents his strongest point of argument. Colonial and postcolonial history is brought together into a coherent argument through narrative reconstructions and ideologies of remembrance: more studies of this kind are needed to help place Europe’s colonial legacy into a web of postcolonial migration, ‘southern’ agency and cultural/religious dynamics.” · Journal of Religion

      “…the current emphasis on the study of Pentecostal churches is clouding our understanding of the vast variations of African Christianities with their specific theologies, institutional structures and ways of dealing with modernisation, migration and global awareness. Blanes [approaches this problem]… in an exemplary manner with a—most welcome—example from the Lusophone world. He thereby engages fruitfully with such diverse academic fields as narrative theory, postcolonial studies, world Christianity and studies in medialisation… more studies of this kind are needed to help place Europe’s colonial legacy into a web of postcolonial migration, ‘southern’ agency and cultural/religious dynamics.” · Journal of Religion in Europe

      “…a welcome and valuable study of contemporary Christianity and the circulation of religion and culture. It also adds to our crystallizing emphasis on history and memory as resources and constructions rather than sheer 'facts'.” · Anthropology Review Database

      “Blanes’ multi-sited ethnographic-cum-historical study of a prominent Christian prophetic church of Angolan origin is an excellent piece of scholarship, and makes a unique contribution to the literature on Christianity in Africa and on African Christianity in Europe. More than other scholars in the emerging anthropology of Christianity, Blanes gives detailed attention to the interlocking of temporal and spatial dimensions in the context of diasporic religion and religious self-identification.” · Thomas Kirsch, University of Konstanz



      Table of Contents

      List of Illustrations
      Preface

      Introduction: prophetic territories and temporalities

      PART I: ITINERARIES

      Chapter 1. Trajectories: a prophetic biography, part I
      Chapter 2. Trajectories: a prophetic biography, part II

      PART II: HERITAGES

      Chapter 3. Transmission: word, action and mediation
      Chapter 4. Trepidation: spirits, memories and disputed heritage
      Chapter 5. Transcendence: Tokoist diasporas

      Conclusion

      Primary sources
      Bibliography
      Index

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