Frontier Zones and the Study of Religion

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Abstract

This article focuses on the concept of the frontier zone as a central critical term in Chidester's oeuvre. Understood as a site where difference is articulated, encountered, and governed, the frontier zone is a productive, insight-generating notion. Its usefulness pertains not only to the study of colonial settings in which scholarly knowledge about religion in Africa took shape via the introduction of religion as a category, but also to the study of religious plurality in contemporary European cities, which is here proposed to approach as new postcolonial frontier zones.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)57-78
JournalJournal for the study of religion
Volume31
Issue number2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2018

Keywords

  • David Chidester
  • frontier zone
  • anthropology and religious studies
  • plurality
  • translation
  • materiality
  • surrealism

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