Review of Nathaniel Roberts’ To Be Cared For: The Power of Conversion and the Foreignness of Belonging in an Indian Slum

This article focuses on Roberts’ argument that the religiosity of urban Tamil Dalits, or “slum religion,” transcends Hindu or Christian affiliation. Roberts’ ethnography challenges the dominant discourse surrounding Pentecostal Christianity which asserts that conversion is inevitably divisive, split...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of Hindu-Christian studies
Main Author: Kent, Eliza F. 1966- (Author)
Contributors: Roberts, Nathaniel 1970- (Bibliographic antecedent)
Format: Electronic Review
Language:English
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Published: Univ. 2019
In: Journal of Hindu-Christian studies
Review of:To be cared for (New Delhi : Navayana Publishing, 2016) (Kent, Eliza F.)
RelBib Classification:AG Religious life; material religion
BK Hinduism, Jainism, Sikhism
CC Christianity and Non-Christian religion; Inter-religious relations
CH Christianity and Society
KBM Asia
KDG Free church
Further subjects:B Book review
Online Access: Presumably Free Access
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Description
Summary:This article focuses on Roberts’ argument that the religiosity of urban Tamil Dalits, or “slum religion,” transcends Hindu or Christian affiliation. Roberts’ ethnography challenges the dominant discourse surrounding Pentecostal Christianity which asserts that conversion is inevitably divisive, splitting families and communities and even individuals in harmful ways that justify its tight legal regulation. To the contrary, Roberts’ fieldwork reveals how the deeply pragmatic nature of Dalit religion allows for significant individual variation and dynamism without inordinate contentiousness. To Be Cared For also contributes to scholarship on women and religion in India, sensitively illustrating the tensions and strains within urban Dalit women’s lives that the collective ritual forms of Pentecostal Christianity help to assuage.
ISSN:2164-6279
Reference:Kommentar in "Response to Sarbeswar Sahoo and Eliza Kent (2019)"
Contains:Enthalten in: Journal of Hindu-Christian studies
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.7825/2164-6279.1728