The “Biographical Lives” of Missionary Barend Schuurman

This article engages with the genre of missionary biography through the lens of the life of Dutch missionary Barend Schuurman and the biographical commemorations of him. Missionary Barend Schuurman worked in East Java from 1922 until he died as a prisoner of the Japanese during World War II. After h...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Busschers, Iris 1988- (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
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Published: Brill 2017
In: Social sciences and missions
Year: 2017, Volume: 30, Issue: 1/2, Pages: 95-118
Further subjects:B biographie missionnaire mission et décolonisation nouvelle histoire impériale réseaux missionnaires transnationalisme
B missionary biography mission and decolonisation new imperial histories missionary networks transnationalism
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Summary:This article engages with the genre of missionary biography through the lens of the life of Dutch missionary Barend Schuurman and the biographical commemorations of him. Missionary Barend Schuurman worked in East Java from 1922 until he died as a prisoner of the Japanese during World War II. After his death, and during the years of the Indonesian War of Independence, Schuurman rose to prominence as one of the few missionaries who had tried to bring Christianity to the population in East Java from an ‘insider’ perspective. Bringing in questions about the spatial and temporal contexts in Barend Schuurman’s biography, this article seeks, first, to destabilise heroic missionary narratives by drawing attention to the entangled belongings present in Schuurman’s work. Secondly, the article highlights how changing contemporary concerns in Dutch mission influenced Schuurman’s rise to fame within the nationally and transnationally constituted genre of missionary biography.
ISSN:1874-8945
Contains:In: Social sciences and missions
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.1163/18748945-03001006