The Politics of Religious Change on the Upper Guinea Coast
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Ramon Sarró
About this book
Winner of the 2009 Amaury Talbot Prize for African Anthropology.
The Politics of Religious Change on the Upper Guinea Coast offers an in-depth analysis of an iconoclastic religious movement initiated by a Muslim preacher among coastal Baga farmers in the French colonial period.
With an ethnographic approach that listens as carefully to those who suffered iconoclastic violence as to those who wanted to 'get rid of custom', this work discusses the extent to which iconoclasm produces a rupture of religious knowledge and identity, and analyses its relevance in the making of modern nations and citizens.
The book will appeal to a wide range of readers, particularly those with an interest in the anthropology of religion, iconoclasm, the history and anthropology of West Africa, or the politics of heritage.
Topics
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Frontmatter
i -
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Contents
v -
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List of maps and photographs
viii -
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Acknowledgements
ix -
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About the author
xii -
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Glossary
xiii -
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1 Introduction: cassava fields, sacred woods
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2 Rivers and motorways
22 -
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3 Between a rock and a hard place: coastal mangroves in pre-colonial times
49 -
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4 Chiefs, customs and territory: the legacy of french rule
73 -
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5 Running and hiding: the end of colonialism and the arrival of the iconoclasts
99 -
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6 Mande tricksters and transformations: from iconoclastic preachers to iconoclastic politicians
122 -
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7 Surviving iconoclasm
148 -
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8 Harlem city and the ancestral village: youth and the politics of culture today
169 -
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9 Conclusion: iconoclasm undone
192 -
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Appendix
204 -
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Notes
205 -
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Bibliography
219 -
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Index
234