In a world of swift and sweeping cultural transformations, few have seen changes as rapid and dramatic as those experienced by the Urapmin of Papua New Guinea in the last four decades. A remote people never directly ‘missionized, ‘ the Urapmin began in the 1960s to send young men to study with Baptist missionaries living among neighboring communities. By the late 1970s, the Urapmin had undergone a charismatic revival, abandoning their traditional religion for a Christianity intensely focused on human sinfulness and driven by a constant sense of millennial expectation. Exploring the Christian culture of the Urapmin, Joel Robbins shows how its preoccupations provide keys to understanding the nature of cultural change more generally. In so doing, he offers one of the richest available anthropological accounts of Christianity as a lived religion. Theoretically ambitious and engagingly written, his book opens a unique perspective on a Melanesian society, religious experience, and the very nature of rapid cultural change.
İçerik tablosu
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Prologue: A Heavy Christmas and a Pig Law for People
Introduction: Christianity and Cultural Change
PART ONE: THE MAKING OF A CHRISTIAN COMMUNITY
1. From Salt to the Law: Contact and the Early Colonial Period
2. Christianity and the Colonial Transformation of Regional Relations
3. Revival, Second-Stage Conversion, and the Localization of the Urapmin Church
PART TWO: LIVING IN SIN
4. Contemporary Urapmin in Millennial Time and Space
5. Willfulness, Lawfulness, and Urapmin Morality
6. Desire and Its Discontents: Free Time and Christian Morality
7. Rituals of Redemption and Technologies of the Self
8. Millennialism and the Contest of Values
Conclusion: Christianity, Cultural Change, and the Moral Life of the Hybrid
Notes
References
Index
Yazar hakkında
Joel Robbins is Associate Professor of Anthropology at the University of California, San Diego. He is coeditor of Money and Modernity: State and Local Currencies in Contemporary Melanesia (1999) and of the journal Anthropological Theory.