Blood Ground: Colonialism, Missions, and the Contest for Christianity in the Caoe Colony and Britain, 1799-1853McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP, 2002 - 499 pages In Blood Ground Elizabeth Elbourne looks at the relationship between the Khoekhoe, the British empire, and the London Missionary Society in the early nineteenth century, a time of intense conflict in which different groups competed to mobilize Christianity for their own political ends. She explores the social history of the early missionary movement as well the political impact of British evangelicals, arguing that religious change in southern Africa can only be understood in the material context of ethnic conflict and bitter struggles over land and labour. In doing so she reintegrates the history of religion into the mainstream historical narrative of South Africa, offering a view of Christianity not as a monolithic system but as a language subject to interpretation and highly politicized conflicts over meaning. |
From inside the book
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Page 5
... sense he was a witness to " success , " in evangelical terms , beyond his expectations , as Christianity , already influential among at least some Khoekhoe , was taken up by many more in the early nineteenth century . Yet , although the ...
... sense he was a witness to " success , " in evangelical terms , beyond his expectations , as Christianity , already influential among at least some Khoekhoe , was taken up by many more in the early nineteenth century . Yet , although the ...
Page 6
... sense , this seems a metaphor for the endlessly destructive and violent relationships between “ black ” and “ white ” in the nineteenth - century Cape Colony , of which Christianity was an integral part . Those rela- tionships never ...
... sense , this seems a metaphor for the endlessly destructive and violent relationships between “ black ” and “ white ” in the nineteenth - century Cape Colony , of which Christianity was an integral part . Those rela- tionships never ...
Page 20
... sense.13 Of fur- ther interest in Skinner's approach is his focus on the way in which a new ideology becomes conventional in the concrete circumstances of particular power relationships . As he has argued , the ideological suc- cess of ...
... sense.13 Of fur- ther interest in Skinner's approach is his focus on the way in which a new ideology becomes conventional in the concrete circumstances of particular power relationships . As he has argued , the ideological suc- cess of ...
Page 22
... sense of shared interaction . The relationship between Khoekhoe and the LMS had ripple effects throughout British , African , and Cape colo- nial societies , just as it was forged in the fire of intense social and polit- ical change in ...
... sense of shared interaction . The relationship between Khoekhoe and the LMS had ripple effects throughout British , African , and Cape colo- nial societies , just as it was forged in the fire of intense social and polit- ical change in ...
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Contents
Terms of Encounter GraaffReinet the Khoekhoe and the South African LMS at the Turn of the Nineteenth Century | 70 |
War Conversion and the Politics of Interpretation | 110 |
Khoisan Uses of Christianity | 154 |
The Rise and Fall of Bethelsdorp Radicalism under the British 180617 | 196 |
The Political Uses of Africa Remade The Passage of Ordinance 50 | 232 |
On Probation As Free Citizens Poverty and Politics in the 1830s | 258 |
Rethinking Liberalism | 292 |
Our Church for Ourselves | 310 |
Rebellion and Its Aftermath | 344 |
Conclusions? | 376 |
Notes | 380 |
Bibliography | 450 |
Other editions - View all
Blood Ground: Colonialism, Missions, and the Contest for Christianity in the ... Elizabeth Elbourne No preview available - 2008 |
Blood Ground: Colonialism, Missions, and the Contest for Christianity in the ... Elizabeth Elbourne No preview available - 2002 |
Common terms and phrases
Andries Anglican argued believed Bethelsdorp Britain British Buxton Calderwood Cape Colony Cape Town cattle Christianity church civilization claimed colonists Comaroff commando congregations conversion culture Cuyler Dag Verhaal debate despite Dutch early Eastern Cape economic eighteenth century Elphick England European evangelical example farm farmers Frontier Zone Genadendal Giliomee Graaff-Reinet Grahamstown Griqua groups Hankey Haweis heathen History Hottentots Ibid imperial inhabitants James Read James Read Jr John Philip Kat River settlement Kemp's Khoekhoe Khoisan Kicherer Kicherer's Kitchingman labour land landdrost letter living LMS directors LMS missionaries LMS-SA London London Missionary Society Malherbe Maqoma Mfengu millenarian ministers mission stations missionary activity Missionary Society Moffat Moravian nation Newton-King nineteenth century Nonetheless nonwhite Ordinance 50 Philipton political preaching Read's rebellion rebels religion religious Report Ross sionary slave Smit social South Africa southern Africa Stockenstrom Stoffels Theopolis tion Uitenhage University Press vagrancy Van der Kemp white settlers William Xhosa
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Page 1 - During supper Jesus took bread, and having said the blessing he broke it and gave it to the disciples with the words: 'Take this and eat; this is my body.