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Keywords: Indigenization
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EDITOR'S CHOICE
Indigenization without ‘Indigeneity’: Problematizing the Discourse of Indigenization of Social Work in China
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Tsering Dolkar Watermeyer and Miu Chung Yan
The British Journal of Social Work, Volume 52, Issue 3, April 2022, Pages 1511–1528, https://doi.org/10.1093/bjsw/bcab064
Published: 14 July 2021
... the terms of the Oxford University Press, Standard Journals Publication Model ( https://dbpia.nl.go.kr/journals/pages/open_access/funder_policies/chorus/standard_publication_model ) Abstract While acknowledging mutual alignment in their critique of social work’s dominant Eurocentric lens, indigenous...
Journal Article
Mozart and the Moravians
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Sarah Eyerly
in
Early Music
Early Music, Volume 47, Issue 2, May 2019, Pages 161–182, https://doi.org/10.1093/em/caz023
Published: 24 April 2019
... compositions such as ‘Ave verum corpus’, shedding light on the role of indigenous musicians in making such adaptations. Multi-lingual, transcultural musical creation like this involved a process of negotiation between missionaries and indigenous Christians. The complexity of these negotiations is suggested...
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The Quest for an “Indigenous Church”: German Missionaries, Chinese Christians, and the Indigenization Debates of the 1920s
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Albert Monshan Wu
The American Historical Review, Volume 122, Issue 1, 1 February 2017, Pages 85–114, https://doi.org/10.1093/ahr/122.1.85
Published: 31 January 2017
...Albert Monshan Wu Scholars of the history of Christianity have shown how these liberal attempts to foster an indigenous church in the 1920s ended largely in failure. As the historian Lian Xi argues, even though “important changes in missionary policy and theology” emanated from liberal missionary...
Journal Article
Culture, Paradigm, and Communication Theory: A Matter of Boundary or Commensurability?
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Georgette Wang
Communication Theory, Volume 24, Issue 4, November 2014, Pages 373–393, https://doi.org/10.1111/comt.12045
Published: 20 October 2014
... is not merely a matter of neglecting cultural, but paradigm differences as well. Geocultural theory is generally understood as the product of culture-specific, or the emic, approach to indigenizing communication research, versus universal theory that is the goal of culture-general, or the etic, approach ( Huang...