A Study of Modern Messianic Cults (London: Mcgibbon and Kee, 1963); T
Notes INTRODUCTION 1. E.g., V. Lanternari, Religions of the Oppressed: A Study of Modern Messianic Cults (London: McGibbon and Kee, 1963); T. Hodgkin, Nationalism in Colonial Africa (London: Frederick Muller, 1956), chapter 3. 2. R. Horton, “African Conversion,” Africa 41 (1971), 85–108. 3. J. D. Y. Peel, “Religious Change among the Yoruba,” Africa 37 (1967), 292–306, and “Conversion and Tradition in Two African Societies: Ijebu and Buganda,” Past and Present 77 (1977), 108–41. 4. J. D. Y. Peel, Religious Encounter and the Making of the Yoruba (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2000). 5. See H. Whitehouse, Arguments and Icons: Divergent Modes of Religiosity (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000); and H. Whitehouse and J. Laidlaw, eds., Ritual and Memory: Toward a Comparative Anthropology of Religion (Walnut Creek: AltaMira Press, 2004). 6. M. Pelkmans, ed., Conversion after Socialism: Disruptions, Modernisms and Technologies of Faith in the Former Soviet Union (New York: Berghahn, 2009), being selected papers from a conference held at the Max Planck Institute Halle in April 2005. 7. T. G. Gbadamosi, The Growth of Islam among the Yoruba, 1841–1908 (London: Longman, 1978). It is worth noting that, though Gbadamosi is a Muslim himself, his study is bookended in Christian terms, since its start and end dates have no Muslim relevance but derive from mission activity and documentation. 8. See Rosalind I. J. Hackett, “The Academic Study of Religion in Nigeria,” Religion 18 (1988), 37–46. 9. For a recent work that usefully spans its trajectory up to the present, see Jens Kreinath, ed., The Anthropology of Islam Reader (London: Routledge, 2012).
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