Spirit(s) in Motion: Pentecostalism, Pluralism, and Everyday Life
Issue: Vol 17 No. 1 (2018) Special Issue: Pentecostalism in the Lusophone World
Journal: PentecoStudies
Subject Areas: Religious Studies
DOI: 10.1558/ptcs.34762
Abstract:
Despite its rituals of rupture and discourse of discontinuity, Pentecostalism does not always succeed in dislodging church participants from their pre-existing religious worlds. This paper connects the eclectic, everyday engagements of rank-and-file Pentecostals to a variety of concepts deployed in studies of religious pluralism (e.g. syncretism, hybridity, polyontology, bricolage, and especially the recently theorized butinage). Drawing on empirical evidence from Mozambique, while also glancing comparatively at Brazil, this paper aims to help open new questions regarding Pentecostal religious identity by arguing for the presence of pluralistic impulses within Pentecostalism itself.
Author: Devaka Premawardhana
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