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Protestant Christian Missions, Race and Empire: The World Missionary Conference of 1910, Edinburgh, Scotland

Sanecki, Kim Caroline
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Abstract

This thesis explores prevailing and changing attitudes among Protestant Christians as manifested in the World Missionary Conference of 1910, held in Edinburgh, Scotland. It compares the conference to missionary literature to demonstrate how well it fit the context of the missionary endeavor during the Edwardian era. It examines the issues of race and empire in the thinking of conference participants. It pays particular attention to the position of West Africa and West Africans in conference deliberations. It suggests that the conference, which took place soon after the scramble for empire and just before World War I and the subsequent upsurge of nationalism and anti-colonialism, offers a valuable historical perspective on the uneven nature of globalizing Christianity.

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2006-07-25
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Henry Venn, Missions, Christianity, Indigenous Churches, Subaltern Voice, Foreign and Native Missionaries, Cross-cultural contacts, West Africa, World Missionary Conference, Edinburgh 1910, Paternalism, Empire, Race, John Mott, V. S. Azariah, Native Church, Protestant Ecumenism, Edwardian Era
Citation
Sanecki, Kim Caroline. "Protestant Christian Missions, Race and Empire: The World Missionary Conference of 1910, Edinburgh, Scotland." Thesis. Georgia State University, 2006. https://doi.org/10.57709/1059616
Embargo Lift Date
2012-01-26
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