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"Faith in Empire" is an innovative exploration of French colonial
rule in West Africa, conducted through the prism of religion and
religious policy. Elizabeth Foster examines the relationships among
French Catholic missionaries, colonial administrators, and Muslim,
animist, and Christian Africans in colonial Senegal between 1880
and 1940. In doing so she illuminates the nature of the
relationship between the French Third Republic and its colonies,
reveals competing French visions of how to approach Africans, and
demonstrates how disparate groups of French and African actors,
many of whom were unconnected with the colonial state, shaped
French colonial rule. Among other topics, the book provides
historical perspective on current French controversies over the
place of Islam in the Fifth Republic by exploring how Third
Republic officials wrestled with whether to apply the legal
separation of church and state to West African Muslims.
In the decades following the era of decolonization, global
Christianity experienced a seismic shift. While Catholicism and
Protestantism have declined in their historic European strongholds,
they have sustained explosive growth in Asia, Latin America, and
Africa. This demographic change has established Christians from the
Global South as an increasingly dominant presence in modern
Christian thought, culture, and politics. Decolonization and the
Remaking of Christianity unearths the roots of this development,
charting the metamorphosis of Christian practice and institutions
across five continents throughout the pivotal years of
decolonization. The essays in this collection illustrate the
diverse new ideas, rituals, and organizations created in the wake
of Western imperialism’s formal collapse and investigate how
religious leaders, politicians, theologians, and lay people debated
and shaped a new Christianity for a postcolonial world.
Contributors argue that the collapse of colonialism and broader
cultural challenges to Western power fostered new organizations,
theologies, and political engagements across the world, ultimately
setting Christianity on its current trajectory away from its
colonial heritage. These essays interrogate decolonization’s
varied and conflicting impacts on global Christianity, while also
providing a novel framework for rethinking decolonization’s
modern legacies. Taken together, this book charts the relationship
between decolonization and Christianity on a truly global scale.
Contributors: Joel Cabrita, Darcie Fontaine, Elizabeth A. Foster,
Udi Greenberg, David Kirkpatrick, Eric Morier-Genoud, Phi-Vân
Nguyen, Justin Reynolds, Sarah Shortall, Lydia Walker, Charlotte
Walker-Said, Albert Wu, Gene Zubovich.
Winner of the John Gilmary Shea Prize A groundbreaking history of
how Africans in the French Empire embraced both African
independence and their Catholic faith during the upheaval of
decolonization, leading to a fundamental reorientation of the
Catholic Church. African Catholic examines how French imperialists
and the Africans they ruled imagined the religious future of French
sub-Saharan Africa in the years just before and after
decolonization. The story encompasses the political transition to
independence, Catholic contributions to black intellectual
currents, and efforts to alter the church hierarchy to create an
authentically "African" church. Elizabeth Foster recreates a
Franco-African world forged by conquest, colonization, missions,
and conversions-one that still exists today. We meet missionaries
in Africa and their superiors in France, African Catholic students
abroad destined to become leaders in their home countries, African
Catholic intellectuals and young clergymen, along with French and
African lay activists. All of these men and women were preoccupied
with the future of France's colonies, the place of Catholicism in a
postcolonial Africa, and the struggle over their personal loyalties
to the Vatican, France, and the new African states. Having served
as the nuncio to France and the Vatican's liaison to UNESCO in the
1950s, Pope John XXIII understood as few others did the central
questions that arose in the postwar Franco-African Catholic world.
Was the church truly universal? Was Catholicism a conservative
pillar of order or a force to liberate subjugated and exploited
peoples? Could the church change with the times? He was thinking of
Africa on the eve of Vatican II, declaring in a radio address
shortly before the council opened, "Vis-a-vis the underdeveloped
countries, the church presents itself as it is and as it wants to
be: the church of all."
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