Studies on Christianity in Asia have been weighed down by a double burden—the commonplace of Christianity as a passive minority and an invading foreign as well as the notions of religion and secularization derived from western experience. The following essays of Forum Kritika shed both burdens by focusing on the “lived religion” of different Christian groups and leaders on the margins of Southeast Asian societies because of religious faith as well as ethnicity, status or location. Their critical analysis shows how these actors interacted with other social and cultural traditions and problematized narratives of identity linked to the dominant sociocultural ethos. These negotiations, far from being private and divorced from the institutional,...
Drawing on a rich body of multimethod field research, this book examines the ways in which Indonesia...
This essay explores the relationship between Christianity and other world religions, and considers i...
The subject matter of this special issue is anything but new: religious diversity has already been w...
Combines empirical data and original analysis to give a uniquely detailed account of Christianity in...
This article is concerned with the diverse forms of Christianity as the religion spreads around Sout...
Though many have attempted to address the complexities of the encounter between Christianity and non...
The author argues that cultural diversity and religious pluralism present formidable challenges to t...
This paper explores the significance and profundity of the Asian heritage and how Christianity finds...
Southeast Asia or Southeastern Asia, with more than six hundred million populations, is home to mill...
The question of ethnicity, race and religion points towards the construction of identity both of one...
Master of Arts (MA)Center for Southeast Asian StudiesUniversity of Michiganhttps://deepblue.lib.umic...
This paper is an attempt of a Thai Buddhist to explore the history of Christianity, and understand C...
For a better part of the 20th century, scholars who studied religion held the opinion that religion ...
Indonesia is a multicultural and multireligious nation whose heterogeneity is codified in the state ...
In a recently published book, the present author argues that Asia is “the great laboratory of religi...
Drawing on a rich body of multimethod field research, this book examines the ways in which Indonesia...
This essay explores the relationship between Christianity and other world religions, and considers i...
The subject matter of this special issue is anything but new: religious diversity has already been w...
Combines empirical data and original analysis to give a uniquely detailed account of Christianity in...
This article is concerned with the diverse forms of Christianity as the religion spreads around Sout...
Though many have attempted to address the complexities of the encounter between Christianity and non...
The author argues that cultural diversity and religious pluralism present formidable challenges to t...
This paper explores the significance and profundity of the Asian heritage and how Christianity finds...
Southeast Asia or Southeastern Asia, with more than six hundred million populations, is home to mill...
The question of ethnicity, race and religion points towards the construction of identity both of one...
Master of Arts (MA)Center for Southeast Asian StudiesUniversity of Michiganhttps://deepblue.lib.umic...
This paper is an attempt of a Thai Buddhist to explore the history of Christianity, and understand C...
For a better part of the 20th century, scholars who studied religion held the opinion that religion ...
Indonesia is a multicultural and multireligious nation whose heterogeneity is codified in the state ...
In a recently published book, the present author argues that Asia is “the great laboratory of religi...
Drawing on a rich body of multimethod field research, this book examines the ways in which Indonesia...
This essay explores the relationship between Christianity and other world religions, and considers i...
The subject matter of this special issue is anything but new: religious diversity has already been w...