Jamaica Genesis: Religion and the Politics of Moral Orders

Front Cover
University of Chicago Press, 1997 M08 18 - 304 pages
How has Pentecostalism, a decidedly American form of Christian revivalism, managed to achieve such phenomenal religious ascendancy in a former British colony among people of predominately African descent? According to Diane J. Austin-Broos, Pentecostalism has flourished because it successfully mediates between two historically central yet often oppositional themes in Jamaican religious life—the characteristically African striving for personal freedom and happiness, and the Protestant struggle for atonement and salvation through rigorous ethical piety. With its emphasis on the individual experience of grace and on the ritual efficacy of spiritual healing, and with its vibrantly expressive worship, Jamaican Pentecostalism has become a powerful and compelling vehicle for the negotiation of such fundamental issues as gender, sexuality, race, and class. Jamaica Genesis is a work of signal importance to all those concerned not simply with Caribbean studies but with the ongoing transformation of religion andculture.
 

Contents

Cast into a Tumultuous World
17
A Certain Moral Inheritance
34
Revival and the Healing of Sin
51
Precursors
75
Preachers and Pentecostalism
93
Ritual Resolutions
117
Pentecostal Experience and Embodied Rite
133
Exhorting the Saints
158
Hierarchy Healing and the Birth of Brides
195
Conclusion
233
Tables
245
Bibliography
275
Index
297
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About the author (1997)

Diane Austin-Broos is professor emeritus of anthropology at the University of Sydney and the author of Jamaica Genesis: Religion and the Politics of Moral Order, also published by the University of Chicago Press.

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