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IL BHARATANATYAM CRISTIANO: Una Forma D'inculturazione Del Cristianesimo Attraverso La Danza-Teatro Indiana
UNIVERSITÀ DEGLI STUDI DI MILANO BICOCCA DOTTORATO DI RICERCA IN ANTROPOLOGIA DELLA CONTEMPORANEITÀ: ETNOGRAFIA DELLE DIVERSITÀ E DELLE DIVERGENZE CULTURALI XXVII CICLO IL BHARATANATYAM CRISTIANO: Una forma d'inculturazione del cristianesimo attraverso la danza-teatro indiana Coordinatore del dottorato: Prof. UGO FABIETTI Tutor: Prof. UGO FABIETTI Candidata: M. CATERINA MORTILLARO Matr.722714 Anno accademico 2014-2015 1 Sommario RINGRAZIAMENTI ................................................................................................... 4 INTRODUZIONE ....................................................................................................... 6 Motivazioni, aspetti teorici e metodologia della ricerca........................................................... 6 Contenuti della trattazione ..................................................................................................... 15 CAPITOLO PRIMO .................................................................................................. 21 IL BHARATANATYAM E L’INDUISMO: TRA ARTE, ESPERIENZA RELIGIOSA E RITO ..................................................................................................... 21 1.1 Bharatanatyam e religione ................................................................................................ 21 1.2 Il Natyashastra: origini mitiche del natya e sua valenza educativa e rituale .................... 26 1.3 La danza come forma di meditazione e preghiera ............................................................ 30 -
The Missionary Magazine for 1902
0 March, 1902: FLT 5L r1 , ' ';', P9INTN't'• EDITORI AL. The Outlook — Holding the Winds -In Every. Country = Front the Fields L- In China - Under the _ I ' Law —in Othet longues =Death ,of a Worker — The :Annual Offering — Increase in. Home '. Funds ' ,The Haskell Home . raining School --:- GoOd Circulations— Our Mexican Health' Journal 90 ', •\ , (Illustrated)Doing Good.— The Simplicity of His Greatness , , GENERAL ARTICLES. 'The Anglo-Chinese" Academy (Illustrated) ' ;103'. Calcutta, India . , . - . '. ' ' 104, Natal (Illustrated) . ,, 105 ' Belgium ' ....' .. ' 108 Tidings frOni Helsingfors, Finland ('illustrated) 109 Medical Missionary Students in Foreign Fields 111- -The Message in 'Japan (Illustrated) ' 112 Kolozsvar, Hungary- • .,- . , ,. 114 e, . Our:Literatbre in AuStralia (Illustrated) - 115 Missionary Onportunities in Chicago ' . ' , , , 116 From Southern Russia Through ,Asia Minor (Illustrated) , 118 The Work 'Among the Mexicans of Atizona (illustrated) ' 121 ' .. We$ Coast Mission Field, Smith America (Illustrated) ,. 122. RenOtt from EurOpe (Illustrated) . 124. ilARCH STUDY' OF THE FIELD" ,' ' ' . ' \ 126- .- 'INCIDENTS' IN THE 'MISSION STORY.'.„ ," , ..t, iliSitionary, . Heroine 7,Telitgu Missionaries 127 CILIMPse* OF UNENTERED FIELDS.: ' ' The Herthit Kingdom = The Island of Guam —.Micronesia 129-, BUR MISSIONARY SANITARIUMS., --,' , The Bittie Creek Sanitarium and Hospital —.The Nevi England .Snnitariun —, Portland (Oregon) ' Sanitarium — Lone ' Star ' Sanitarium, Texas — Egypt :— Calcutta Sanitarluni —Jeritsalem, -
Christian Missions in the Telugu Country F.P
THE TELUQU 'COUNTRY r^i 64 \ 1 I /, I :.P;0. OLit-l 5X7' CORNELL UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES ITHACA. N. Y. 14853 JOHN M. OLIN LIBRARY BV 3280.T4H62 Christian missions in the Telugu country f.P 3 1924 oil 177 197 PARAGON BOOK GALLERY, LTD. "The Oriental Book Store of America" 14 East 38th Street. New York, N.Y. 10016 Tel: (212) 532-4920 Cornell University Library The original of tliis book is in tine Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31 92401 1 1771 97 TELUGU GIRLS AT S. EBBA S, JIADRAS. CHRISTIAN MISSIONS IN THE TELUGU COUNTRY BV G. HIBBERT-WARE, M.A. Fellow of the Punjab University MISSIONARY AT KALASAPAD. TELUGU COUNTRY ILLUSTRATED PUBLISHED BY 15 TUFTON STREET, WESTMINSTER, S.W. 1912 NOTE The present volume is issued as a companion volume to the four similar books on Indian and Burmese Missions which the S.P.G. has recently published. Its object is to give a general account of all Christian Missions in the Telugu country and to give in greater detail a sketch of the particular work which the S.P.G. helps to support. The Society is greatly indebted to Mr. Hibbert-Ware for the writing of this book, which we trust may be the means of extending interest in a part of India where Christian missionary work is spreading more rapidly than in almost any other part. Mr. Hibbert-Ware, who went out to India as a missionary in 1898, is a Fellow of the Punjab University and was for some time Principal of S. -
Responding to Violence in the Homeland: Identity and Transnational Activism Within the Indian Christian Diaspora
1 RESPONDING TO VIOLENCE IN THE HOMELAND: IDENTITY AND TRANSNATIONAL ACTIVISM WITHIN THE INDIAN CHRISTIAN DIASPORA A dissertation presented By Autumn L. Mathias to The Department of Sociology & Anthropology In partial fulfillment for the requirements of the degree of Doctor of Philosophy In the field of Sociology Northeastern University Boston, Massachusetts October 2017 2 RESPONDING TO VIOLENCE IN THE HOMELAND: IDENTITY AND TRANSNATIONAL ACTIVISM WITHIN THE INDIAN CHRISTIAN DIASPORA A dissertation presented By Autumn L. Mathias ABSTRACT OF DISSERTATION Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Sociology in the College of Social Sciences and Humanities of Northeastern University October 2017 3 ABSTRACT Within the last twenty years, instances of violence against Christian minorities in India have drawn international attention. The rise of the Hindu nationalist movement and concordant political shifts are often cited as precipitating factors to what many deem as systematic religious persecution. However, few sociological studies have investigated how Indian Christians in diaspora have reacted to these significant events. To explore this topic, I employed a qualitative, phenomenological approach including in-depth interviews with forty-seven individuals residing in the United States and Canada, participant observation at six events, and a review of diasporic and India-based media. Throughout this dissertation, I advance the argument that diaspora Indian Christians’ perceptions of and responses to persecution are connected in a nuanced way to translocational positionality. More specifically, remembrances of persecution events, perceptions of the causes of these events, types of transnational responses, motivations for spiritual and/or political forms of activism, and engagement in ecumenical and/or interreligious networks are inherently linked and best understood within an integrated theoretical framework including translocational positionality, transnational social fields, memory, and the social ecological model. -
Role of Syrian Christian Community and Its Hindu
ROLE OF SYRIAN CHRISTIAN COMMUNITY AND ITS HINDU ASSIMILATION PRESENTED IN THE NOVEL “The God of Small Things” *Prapurna Inaganti (Lecturer Vignan Junior college) Nizampet Hyderabad **Dr. Manish Srivastava Supervisor Professor Department of English & Foreign Languages GGV, Bilaspur (C.G) India ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Arundhati Roy was born on 24th Nov, 1961. She is a child born of a marriage between a Christian lady from Kerala and a Bengali Hindu tea – grower. Her primary education was at corpus Christie, the school run by her mother Mary Roy. She doesn‟t want to discuss her father as she just refers to him as an acquaintance. Arundhati Roy was the first resident Indian to win the booker prize in 1997, India‟s 50th year of independence The God of Small Things, although one of the best seller faced legal objections. Arundhati Roy‟s novel The God of Small Things was translated into Malayalam, and the royalty amount which she received was given for the encouragement of Dalit literature. She also involved herself in projects like Narmada Bachao Andolan. She conveyed her feelings in various articles like Lies, dam lies and statistics, The greater common good and The end of imagination. She has also written a book the Algebra of infinite justice which is a collection of speeches and discourses of Roy from July 1998 to October 2001. She is married to Pradeep Kishen, a film director after her divorce from her first husband Gerard. Refereed (Peer Reviewed) Journal www.ijellh.com 566 Da Cunha. She has written on various themes of social activism. -
118Th Annual Report of the Board of World Missions Reformed Church in America
Hope College Hope College Digital Commons Annual Reports Board of World Missions 1950 118th Annual Report of the Board of World Missions Reformed Church in America Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.hope.edu/world_annual_report Part of the Archival Science Commons Recommended Citation Reformed Church in America, "118th Annual Report of the Board of World Missions" (1950). Annual Reports. 95. https://digitalcommons.hope.edu/world_annual_report/95 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Board of World Missions at Hope College Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Annual Reports by an authorized administrator of Hope College Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. ONE HUNDRED AND EIGHTEENTH 'pjHHtta/ tfiehtyd BOARD OF FOREIGN MISSIONS MEMBERS OF THE BOARD 1948-51 Rev. Paul H. Achtermann, German Valley, Illinois. Rev. William C: De Jong, Hull, Iowa. Rev. Harvey B. Hoffman, 291 Clinton Avenue, Hackensack, New Jersey. Rev. Joshua M. Hogenboom, 172 W. 26th Street, Holland, Michigan. Rev. Floyd V. Nagel, Guilderland Center, New York. Mr. Clifford P. Case, 120 Broadway, New York 5, New York. Mr. Lawrence R. Chambers, 63 St. Johns Avenue, Yonkers, New York. Mr. E. F. Sheppard, 25 Mountain Avenue, North Plainfield, New Jersey. Mrs. David Bogard, Little Falls, New Jersey. Mrs. Abraham De Young, Allegan, Michigan. Mrs. Chester A. Moore, 400 East 67th Street, New York 21, New York. Mrs. Henry W. Pietenpol, 709 Peace Street, Pella, Iowa. Mrs. Howard C. Schade, 43 Bedford Road, Tarrytown, New York. , 1949-52 Rev. Paul E. Ammerman, 41 Marwood Street, Albany 2, New York. -
Baptist Missi0nary Magazine
THE BAPTIST MISSI0NARY MAGAZINE. Vol. LXXIII.—JU LY, 1 8 9 3 . - N o . 7 . SEVENTY-NINTH ANNIVERSARY OF THE AMERICAN BAPTIST MISSIONARY UNION. D enver, Col., May 26, 1893. T h e sevent3r-ninth annual meeting of the American Baptist Missionary Union was lulled to order at ten o’clock a . m., in the First Baptist £hurch, by President Augustus *H. Strong. D. D., LL.. D., of New York. The congregation sang “ Jesus shall reign where’er the sun.” I The Scriptures, Psalm 2 and Revelation, chap. 5, were read by Rev. Robert jMcDonald of Massachusetts, and prayer was offered by Rev. A . K. Parker, D. D., of Illinois. President Strong then addressed the Union : — Fathers and Brethren : I count it a great and undeserved honor that I am called to preside over the meetings of the American Baptist Missionary Union. My predecessors in the chair have been men greatly revered and beloved, and I shrink from the attempt to follow them. Two things, however, give me encouragement. The first is that in becoming your President I enter into the heritage of many prayers, past and present, for the officers and servants of the Union. The second is that I know' I may rely upon your kind and cordial co-operation. Both the place and the time in which we meet should give us stimulus and hope. The star of Christ’s empire has been taking its way westward, and in this meeting the Missionary Union holds its first session in the Mountain States. Herein it asserts its claim to the boundless conti nent, and makes tributary to missions the invention, the commerce, the resources, of these rising commonwealths. -
American Baptist Foreign Mission Society 1920
AMERICAN BAPTIST FOREIGN MISSION SOCIETY 1920 ONE-HUNDRED-SIXTH ANNUAL REPORT Pretented by the Board of Managers at the Annual Meeting held in Buffalo, New York, June 2 3 -2 9 , 1920 FOREIGN MISSION HEADQUARTERS 276 FIFTH AVENUE NEW YORK CONTENTS page PREFACE ............................................................................. 5 BY-LAWS ............................................................................ 7 OFFICERS AND BOARD OF MANAGERS . 9 GENERAL REPRESENTATIVES: STATE DIRECT ORS 10 GENERAL REVIEW OF THE YEAR . 11 I ntroduction ....................................................................................... 13 A Y e a r ok I nternational D isappointment 13 F o r e ig n M i s s i o n s a n d t h e P e a c e C o n f e r e n c e 14 M o r a l E f f e c t s o f t h e W a r ...................................................... 15 M a t e r i a l E f f e c t s o f t h e W a r 17 S e c r e t a r y F r a n k l i n ’ s R e t u r n f r o m F r a n c e 18 C o m m i t t e e o n W o r k i n F r a n c e a n d B e l g i u m 19 P r o p o s e d D e v e l o p m e n t o f W o r k i n E u r o p e 19 G e r m a n M i s s i o n s .......................................................................... -
CATHOLIC DIRECTORY « (T OF
CATHOLIC DIRECTORY « (t OF INDIA, FArtJ-STAXj I5u#/va A y y p c EY l o N' 1925 75th ANNUAL ISSUE OF THE MADRAS CATHOLIC DIRECTORY AND ANNUAL GENERAL REGISTER PUBLISHED BY THE CATHOLIC SUPPLY SOCIETY, MADRAS. PRINTED AT THE “ GOOD PASTOR ” PRESS, BROADWAY, MADRAS. file JHvinity Library to# Haven, Conn. M T ^ f ? C « 2 S i T iA 7 6 - , Nihil obstat. A. F. THEODORE, Censor Deputatus. Imprimatur: * J. AELEN, Archbishop o f Madras Madras, 17th December 1924. PREFACE. This, the Seventy-Fifth issue of the Catholic Directory of India, Burma and Ceylon, goes out under the happy auspices of a Blessing from the Visitor Apostolic to India. His Excellency the Most Revel. Alexis H. Lepicier, O.S.M., D D ., has very graciously blessed the Compiler and all those who have co-operated with him in bringing out the Directory. That this issue has merited in any special manner this courteous treat ment, is, to the Compiler, a matter of doubt, for he is fully aware that in spite of every effort at accuracy, errors and misprints have crept in. Yet, he feels sure that this Volume, like its, renowned predecessors, goes forth on its annual mission of usefulness and interest to a large number of Catholics of India, Burma and Ceylon. In the name of his Co-operators and in his own name, the Compiler thanks His Excellency the Visitor Apostolic for his very kind thought and Blessing. s It is a pleasant duty also to the Compiler to thank all those who have helped him in getting out this issue, though he has also to witzs/on confess that a few have failed in submitting >the usual sacred returns. -
The Impact of Islamization on the Christian Community in Pakistan
The Impact of Islamization on the Christian Community in Pakistan Patrick Sookhdeo School of Oriental and African Studies University of London Ph.D. 1999 ProQuest Number: 11010520 All rights reserved INFORMATION TO ALL USERS The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. In the unlikely event that the author did not send a com plete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. uest ProQuest 11010520 Published by ProQuest LLC(2018). Copyright of the Dissertation is held by the Author. All rights reserved. This work is protected against unauthorized copying under Title 17, United States C ode Microform Edition © ProQuest LLC. ProQuest LLC. 789 East Eisenhower Parkway P.O. Box 1346 Ann Arbor, Ml 48106- 1346 Abstract Christianity arrived in the area which is now Pakistan well before the advent of Islam, but was extinguished for a while by Muslim persecution, before being re-introduced by Western missionaries. The Pakistani Christian community of today numbers about three million people, who are mainly the descendants of mass conversions of Chuhra people about a century ago. Consequently the community has a low socio-economic status on average. Jinnah, the founder of Pakistan, apparently intended equality for all citizens, but there has been a range of other opinions as to the place of Islam in Pakistan and the status of non- Muslim minorities. The passing of the Objectives Resolution in 1949 began a process of Islamization, which included changes to the legislation and constitution and an increasing level of discrimination against Christians at many levels of society, significantly by zamindars and the police. -
Christianity in India from Beginnings to the Present
OXFORD HISTORY OF THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH Edited by Henry and Owen Chadwick This page intentionally left blank Christianity in India From Beginnings to the Present ROBERT ERIC FRYKENBERG 1 3 Great Clarendon Street, Oxford ox26dp Oxford University Press is a department of the University of Oxford. It furthers the University’s objective of excellence in research, scholarship, and education by publishing worldwide in Oxford New York Auckland Cape Town Dar es Salaam Hong Kong Karachi Kuala Lumpur Madrid Melbourne Mexico City Nairobi New Delhi Shanghai Taipei Toronto With oYces in Argentina Austria Brazil Chile Czech Republic France Greece Guatemala Hungary Italy Japan Poland Portugal Singapore South Korea Switzerland Thailand Turkey Ukraine Vietnam Oxford is a registered trade mark of Oxford University Press in the UK and in certain other countries Published in the United States by Oxford University Press Inc., New York ß Robert Eric Frykenberg 2008 The moral rights of the author have been asserted Database right Oxford University Press (maker) First published 2008 All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, without the prior permission in writing of Oxford University Press, or as expressly permitted by law, or under terms agreed with the appropriate reprographics rights organization. Enquiries concerning reproduction outside the scope of the above should be sent to the Rights Department, Oxford University Press, at the address above You must not circulate this book in any other binding or cover and you must impose the same condition on any acquirer British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data Data available Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data Frykenberg, Robert Eric. -
American Baptist Foreign Mission Society 1927
AMBIR) SAH &A Pr/sr M / ssicW SoeJFTY, American Baptist Foreign Mission Society 1927 ONE - HUNDRED-THIRTEENTH ANNUAL REPORT Presented by the Board of Managers at the Annual Meeting held in Chicago, Illinois, May 3 1 to June 5, 1927 Foreign Mission Headquarters 276 Fifth Avenue New York • NEC* A •v'v 113-/ IG Printed in U. S. A. CONTENTS PAGE P R E F A C E ................................................................................................................................. 5 B Y - L A W S .......................................................................................................... 7 O F F I C E R S ................................................................................................................................. 11 GENERAL AGENT, STATE PROMOTION DIRECTORS ................. 12 GENERAL REVIEW OF THE Y E A R ............................................................ 1 3-62 I ntroduction ...................................................................................................................... 15 E v a n g e l is m a n d t h e W orld T u r m o i l .............................................................. 16 C o n d it io n s i n C h i n a .................................................................................................... 17 A S u m m a r y of t h e D e m a n d s o f C h i n a ......................................................... 18 A t t it u d e o f B a p t is t M is s io n B oard s .............................................................. 19 A S p e c ia l D e p u t a t io n to t h e F a r E a s t ......................................................... 20 * B a p t is t M is s io n s i n C h i n a ............................................................................ 21 E ffec ts of t h e S it u a t io n i n C h i n a o n B a p t is t M i s s i o n s ................