Lexington Books
Pages: 282
Trim: 6¼ x 9½
978-0-7391-9655-7 • Hardback • March 2016 • $123.00 • (£95.00)
978-0-7391-9657-1 • Paperback • August 2017 • $57.99 • (£45.00)
978-0-7391-9656-4 • eBook • March 2016 • $55.00 • (£42.00)
Martin Lindhardt is associate professor of cultural sociology at the University of Southern Denmark.
Introduction: New Ways of Being Pentecostal in Latin America, Martin Lindhardt
1. Latin American Charisma: The Pentecostalization of Christianity in the Region, Andrew Chesnut
2. Glocalization and Protestant and Catholic Contestations in the Brazilian Religious Economy, Stephen Hunt
3. Catholic Pentecostals—The Betwixt Identity and Increasing Influence of Catholic Charismatics in Guatemala, Jakob Egeris Thorsen
4. Time to Move On: Pentecostal Church Shifting and Religious Competition in Chile, Martin Lindhardt
5. Pentecostal Congregations and Religious Competition in Rural Mexico, Toomas Gross
6. Growing Up Pentecostal in Brazil: Parents, Children and the Transfer of Faith, George St. Clair
7. ‘We, the Youth, Need to be Effusive’: Pentecostal Youth Culture in Chile, Martin Lindhardt
8. To Serve or to Save: The Social Commitment of Chilean Evangelicals (1990-2014), Evguenia Fediakova
9. Pentecostal Conversion Careers, Generational Effects, and Political Involvement in Latin America, Henri Gooren
10. Toward a Pentecostal Hermeneutics of Social Engagement in Central America? Bridging the Church and the World in El Salvador and Guatemala, Virginia Garrard-Burnett
11. Speaking up against Abortion and Homosexuality: Pentecostalism and Politics in Contemporary Brazil, Maria das Dores Campos Machado
Afterword, David Martin and Bernice Martin
Over the past generation, Pentecostalism in Latin America has undergone fundamental shifts, as it adapts to hemispheric transformations in class dynamics, generational identities, popular culture, and politics. This important volume grapples deeply with these changes, pushing us to understand them in light of new theoretical insights about conversion, spiritual careers, and the relationship between religion and society. No scholar or journalist interested in Pentecostalism in Latin America will be able to ignore this book.— John Burdick, Syracuse University
This book, which shows how Pentecostalism contributes to the evolution of religious landscape and how it evolves itself, confirms the interest of rigorous analyses to overcome many clichés. [Translated from original French]
— Istina
Over the past generation, Pentecostalism in Latin America has undergone fundamental shifts, as it adapts to hemispheric transformations in class dynamics, generational identities, popular culture, and politics. This important volume grapples deeply with these changes, pushing us to understand them in light of new theoretical insights about conversion, spiritual careers, and the relationship between religion and society. No scholar or journalist interested in Pentecostalism in Latin America will be able to ignore this book.— John Burdick, Syracuse University
A much-needed exploration of new trends in the pluralization of Latin American religious practice. Lindhardt brings together an impressive array of scholars to explore new Pentecostal and Catholic identities, theological innovations, and the impact of second and third generation converts on their churches and society. The book is a must-read for understanding the complexities of the ongoing pentecostalization of religion in Latin America.— Timothy J. Steigenga, Florida Atlantic University