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Eurocentrism, Globalization, and Missions Eurocentrism, Globalization, and Missions
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Men, Women, and Modernization Men, Women, and Modernization
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Return to the Local Return to the Local
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Notes Notes
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Key Works Key Works
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18 Christian Mission in World History: Out of Sight, Out of Mind
Get accessSeija Jalagin (PhD, University of Oulu) is a Lecturer in the Department of History, Culture, and Communication Studies at the University of Oulu, Finland. Her research focuses on Protestant missions and, more recently, on forced migrations.
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Published:19 December 2022
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Abstract
This chapter discusses the role of Christian mission in global history from the seventeenth to the late twentieth century. Catholic and Protestant missions are addressed as transnational religion on the move, which have for the most part remained in the margins of world and global history studies as well as of mainstream church histories. Closer attention is paid to Eurocentrism and missions—recognizing the connections and effects that went beyond the intentions and domination of foreign missionaries and their Western supporters—as well as to imperialism, colonialism, and modernization, highlighting how missions paved the way for secular internationalism and transnationalism. The chapter suggests that more research is needed on local variations of missionary influence, particularly from a gender perspective. More intensive cooperation between researchers with different regional backgrounds, crossing the North/South and Western/non-Western divisions, would benefit the study of how local and global were mutually constitutive in mission history.
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