Ideologies of Catholic Missionary Practice in a Postcolonial Era
- 1 January 1981
- journal article
- missionary messages
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Comparative Studies in Society and History
- Vol. 23 (1) , 130-149
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0010417500009713
Abstract
In recent years, a number of anthropologists have come to recognize that missionaries, who play a central role in many of the social systems that anthropologists study, have yet to receive the ethnographic and theoretical attention they deserve. Often, when anthropologists discussed missionaries at all, they treated them as part of the setting, much like rainfall and elevation: matters one felt obliged to mention, but peripheral to the real object of social anthropological description and analysis. There were, to be sure, exceptions, notably the body of anthropological literature that has dealt with the effects of missionaries on various areas of native life.Keywords
This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Missions and Anthropology: A Love/Hate RelationshipMissiology: An International Review, 1978
- Ideologies : Commitment and PartisanshipL'Homme, 1978
- Social Theory and the Study of Christian Missions in AfricaAfrica, 1974
- The Christian Missionary, Agent of SecularizationAnthropological Quarterly, 1970