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https://ixtheo.de/Record/484658514Abstract
In this overview of the historiography of Christianity in Africa a number of desiderata and considerations for future research are reviewed. The first issue considered relates to the practice of historiography. The second issue relates to African identity/-ies and its relationship to global cultural movements. The third desideratum is the pursuit of new disciplinary practices in the study of African Christianity, especially interdisciplinarity as scholarly ethos. Finally, a number of themes that should become foci in historiography of African Christianity are explored, among these are: concentration on local and regional narratives, the gendered character of Christianity in Africa, attention to the material conditions and needs of African religious communities and the various cultural innovations adopted to cope with these conditions, as well as the role of Christian communities in development in Africa and the wider encompassing question of ethics and morality.Date
2016Type
ArticleIdentifier
IXTHEO-https://ixtheo.de/Record/484658514DOI
10.1163/15743012-02303003Copyright/License
All rights reservedae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1163/15743012-02303003
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Photograph: Group Portrait, A.M.E. Church Fort ValleyThomas, R. Lee (UNF Digital Commons, 1948-11-24)Image of five rows of women sitting and standing in a church. Banner on railing in the front. Banner: (?)th AN. SESS. MACON GA. CONF. A.M.E. CHURCH FT. VALLEY BISHOP R.A. WRIGHT JR. PRESIDING REV. J.N. MILLER HOST P.E. REV. J.H. LISSIMORE P.C. NOV.24.48. Date: 11/24/1948. One of 156 black and white photographs by R. Lee Thomas, an African American photographer active in the early twentieth century in the southern United States. Thomas’ work provides photographic documentation of southern black social life, primarily religious and labor groups, circa 1946-1949. The majority of the photographs depict groups from Birmingham, Alabama, and adjacent areas. His imprint contains the caption: Made by R. Lee Thomas, Mound Bayou, Mississippi, The Oldest Negro Town in America.