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Competitive Spirits - Latin America's New Religious Economy (Paperback, New Ed)
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Competitive Spirits - Latin America's New Religious Economy (Paperback, New Ed)
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For over four centuries the Catholic Church enjoyed a religious
monopoly in Latin America in which potential rivals were repressed
or outlawed. Latin Americans were born Catholic and the only real
choice they had was whether to actively practice the faith. Taking
advantage of the legal disestablishment of the Catholic Church
between the late 1800s and the early 1900s, Pentecostals almost
single-handedly built a new pluralist religious economy. By the
1950s, many Latin Americans were free to choose from among the
hundreds of available religious "products," a dizzying array of
religious options that range from the African-Brazilian religion of
Umbanda to the New Age group known as the Vegetable Union.
R. Andrew Chesnut shows how the development of religious pluralism
over the past half-century has radically transformed the "spiritual
economy" of Latin America. In order to thrive in this new religious
economy, says Chesnut, Latin American spiritual "firms" must
develop an attractive product and know how to market it to popular
consumers. Three religious groups, he demonstrates, have proven to
be the most skilled competitors in the new unregulated religious
economy. Protestant Pentecostalism, the Catholic Charismatic
Renewal, and African diaspora religions such as Brazilian Candomble
and Haitian Vodou have emerged as the most profitable religious
producers. Chesnut explores the general effects of a free market,
such as introduction of consumer taste and product specialization,
and shows how they have played out in the Latin American context.
He notes, for example, that women make up the majority of the
religious consumer market, and explores how the three groups have
developed tosatisfy women's tastes and preferences. Moving beyond
the Pentecostal boom and the rise and fall of liberation theology,
Chesnut provides a fascinating portrait of the Latin American
religious landscape.
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