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Religious Conversion and Imperial Rule: Self, Otherness Power a Global Perspective (16th–19th Centuries)Religious Conversion and Imperial Rule: Self, Otherness Power a Global Perspective (16th–19th Centuries)

Religious Conversion and Imperial Rule: Self, Otherness Power a Global Perspective (16th–19th Centuries)

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Current price: $62.99
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Religious Conversion and Imperial Rule: Self, Otherness Power a Global Perspective (16th–19th Centuries)

By None

Religious Conversion and Imperial Rule: Self, Otherness Power a Global Perspective (16th–19th Centuries)

Current price: $62.99
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Size: Kobo eBook

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A comparative study of how religious communities shaped ideas of identity and belonging under empire.  Over centuries and across continents, religious communities played a central role in individuals’ self-positioning within society. While studies on the phenomenon of religious conversion have grown considerably in the historical-anthropological literature, the relationship between conversion and imperial rule has been limited to a few geographical areas. In response to this gap, this volume proposes a more global and comparative approach. Although most of the included studies focus on the spread of Christianity and the responses of communities of different faiths, the broader aim of  Religious Conversion and Imperial Rule is to supplement a debate that goes beyond confessions or imperial configurations. By addressing diverse historical cases, the book explores three key aspects of conversion and empire: the multidirectional character of religious conversion practices; the varying degrees of change in conversion, shaped by the possibilities and limits of local structures; and notions of subjectivity within convert communities, which shaped their articulated responses to imperial strategies. Overall, the volume illuminates the interplay between power, agency, and social transformation.
A comparative study of how religious communities shaped ideas of identity and belonging under empire.  Over centuries and across continents, religious communities played a central role in individuals’ self-positioning within society. While studies on the phenomenon of religious conversion have grown considerably in the historical-anthropological literature, the relationship between conversion and imperial rule has been limited to a few geographical areas. In response to this gap, this volume proposes a more global and comparative approach. Although most of the included studies focus on the spread of Christianity and the responses of communities of different faiths, the broader aim of  Religious Conversion and Imperial Rule is to supplement a debate that goes beyond confessions or imperial configurations. By addressing diverse historical cases, the book explores three key aspects of conversion and empire: the multidirectional character of religious conversion practices; the varying degrees of change in conversion, shaped by the possibilities and limits of local structures; and notions of subjectivity within convert communities, which shaped their articulated responses to imperial strategies. Overall, the volume illuminates the interplay between power, agency, and social transformation.

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