The letter and the spirit: Literacy and religious authority in the history of the Aladura movement in western Nigeria

The Yoruban word 'aladura', meaning 'one who prays', generally refers to a set of churches that formed a powerful religious movement among the Yoruba in western Nigeria during the first decades of this century. To date, there have been three main lines of interpretation which rec...

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Détails bibliographiques
Publié dans:Africa
Auteur principal: Probst, Peter (Auteur)
Type de support: Imprimé Article
Langue:Anglais
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Publié: Cambridge Univ. Press 1989
Dans: Africa
Sujets non-standardisés:B Peuple
B Église
B Association de personnes
B Éducation religieuse
B Tronc Ethnologie
B Alphabétisation
B Yorubas
B Communauté religieuse
B Sécularisation
B Nigeria
B Nigeria Christliche Kirche Éducation religieuse Religiöse Vereinigung Alphabétisation Religiöses Oberhaupt Sécularisation Ethnie / Peuple Yoruba (Volk)
B Guide religieux
Description
Résumé:The Yoruban word 'aladura', meaning 'one who prays', generally refers to a set of churches that formed a powerful religious movement among the Yoruba in western Nigeria during the first decades of this century. To date, there have been three main lines of interpretation which received general recognition: first, in the form of theological analysis; second, in a discussion of social protest; and finally, through the sociology of religion. In this article the author proposes to introduce another aspect of interpretation: how people perceived and experienced the written word in the specific context of the Christian colonial order and examination of whether and how this experience has influenced people's actions and religious behaviour. (DÜI-Sen)
ISSN:0001-9720
Contient:In: Africa