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Nation Dance: Religion, Identity and Cultural Difference in the Caribbean

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Dealing with the ongoing interaction of rich and diverse cultural traditions from Cuba and Jamaica to Guyana and Surinam, Nation Dance addresses some of the major contemporary issues in the study of Caribbean religion and identity. The book's three sections move from a focus on spirituality and healing, to theology in social and political context, and on to questions of identity and diaspora.

The book begins with the voices of female practitioners and then offers a broad, interdisciplinary examination of Caribbean religion and culture. Afro-Caribbean religions, Hinduism, Judaism, Islam, and Christianity are all addressed, with specific reflections on Santería, Palo Monte, Vodou, Winti, Obeah, Kali Mai, Orisha work, Spiritual Baptist faith, Spiritualism, Rastafari, Confucianism, Congregationalism, Pentecostalism, Catholicism, and liberation theology. Some essays are based on fieldwork, archival research, and textual or linguistic analysis, while others are concerned with methodological or theoretical issues. Contributors include practitioners and scholars, some very established in the field, others with fresh, new approaches; all of them come from the region or have done extensive fieldwork or research there. In these essays the poetic vitality of the practitioner's voice meets the attentive commitment of the postcolonial scholar in a dance of "nations" across the waters.

224 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2001

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Patrick Taylor

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Profile Image for Safiya.
18 reviews
April 1, 2017
This collection of essays merely brushes the surface of the understanding the role of religion in the Caribbean. I was not keen on the composition of the essays and categorisation and feel their should have been far more connections between the islands especially those with the same colonisers. Each island is unique as is the interpretation of each spiritual relationship so surely there should have been less generalisation regarding communal religious experiences and more information about each unique history between the spiritual and physical landscape. Apart from Jamaica, there is always a strong focus on Jamaica, and not even a unique perspective at that.
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