2002
DOI: 10.1177/0037768602049001006
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Religion and the Awakening of Indigenous People in Latin America

Abstract: The “awakening” of the indigenous people of Latin America raises the following question: is it accompanied by a religious revitalization and a return to ancestral beliefs and rituals? Religion is, indeed, present in protests and visible movements such as those in Mexico or Ecuador, but religion does not appear to be the principal factor or the deepest source of these movements. Thus, alongside the rapid expansion of evangelicals (especially Pentecostals) among the indigenous communities, we also observe the hi… Show more

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Cited by 19 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…The negative view on evangelism began to change with the growth of Latin American Pentecostalism, 1 which facilitated the appropriation and indigenization of Protestantism especially but not exclusively by popular masses (González and González, 2008). More recently, various researchers have launched a new generation of scholarship on ‘positive Evangelicalism’ (Burdick, 2005; Gill, 2008; Gumucio, 2002; Smilde, 2004; Steigenga and Smilde, 2004). Without denying its conservative moral stance and recognizing its cultural and organizational diversity, this scholarship shows how Pentecostalism has helped lower classes to navigate the uncertainties and instability created by neo-liberal policies (Martin, 1998), facilitated grass-roots political mobilization (Smilde, 2004), forged new generations of indigenous leaders (Gumucio, 2002), and improved women’s participation in the public and private spheres (Steigenga and Smilde, 2004).…”
Section: The ‘Catholic Bias’ In Evangelical Media Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The negative view on evangelism began to change with the growth of Latin American Pentecostalism, 1 which facilitated the appropriation and indigenization of Protestantism especially but not exclusively by popular masses (González and González, 2008). More recently, various researchers have launched a new generation of scholarship on ‘positive Evangelicalism’ (Burdick, 2005; Gill, 2008; Gumucio, 2002; Smilde, 2004; Steigenga and Smilde, 2004). Without denying its conservative moral stance and recognizing its cultural and organizational diversity, this scholarship shows how Pentecostalism has helped lower classes to navigate the uncertainties and instability created by neo-liberal policies (Martin, 1998), facilitated grass-roots political mobilization (Smilde, 2004), forged new generations of indigenous leaders (Gumucio, 2002), and improved women’s participation in the public and private spheres (Steigenga and Smilde, 2004).…”
Section: The ‘Catholic Bias’ In Evangelical Media Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Historically, the intervention of US evangelical missionaries in Latin America, particularly in indigenous communities, has been polemic due to the promotion of individual empowerment, ideological affinity with the status quo, and disregard for community action (Andrade, 2010; Demera Vargas, 2007; Garrard, 2010; Gros, 1999; O’Neill, 2010; Orta, 2004; Stoll, 1982). In recent years, scholars have started providing more nuanced discussions of the social role of traditional and non-traditional evangelicalism, such as Pentecostalism (Burdick, 2005; González and González, 2008; Gumucio, 2002). This approach inspired this analysis on the Misak’s unlicensed evangelical radio stations Srю Wam (Good News in the Misak language, Nam Trick) and Pentecostal Estereo.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Habría que enfatizar, además, que la concentración en los aspectos económicos y políticos no debe marginar la importancia de las potentes transformaciones socio-culturales e identitarias en el origen. El auge evangélico a nivel mundial afectó también, en gran medida, a las poblaciones indígenas del continente americano (Gumucio, 2002). En el caso de los otavalos, tuvo un importante impacto en el desarrollo de la especialización empresarial, su activismo político y la articulación de las relaciones intra y extragrupales (Korovkin, 1998;Lalander, 2010).…”
Section: La Diáspora Comercial De Otavalounclassified
“…El auge de las iglesias evangélicas ha influido de manera crucial en las poblaciones indígenas de América Latina (Gros 1999;Gumucio 2002) y, en el caso de los otavalos, ha repercutido en las formas de articulación de la etnicidad, en las relaciones sociales y económicas y en los cambios políticos (Korovkin 1998;Lalander 2010). Hay que tener en cuenta además la persistencia de las divisiones étnicas y raciales en el origen (Colloredo-Mansfeld 1999) así como las transformaciones del significado de las categorizaciones identitarias a lo largo de las últimas décadas (Huarcaya 2010;Stolle-McAllister 2013).…”
Section: Contextualización De La Investigaciónunclassified