Frederick, Marla F. 2015. Colored Television: American Religion Gone Global. Palo Alto: Stanford University Press. Publisher’s Description: The presence of …
Pentecostalism
Medina and Alfaro (eds), “Pentecostals and Charismatics in Latin America and Latino Communities”
Medina, Néstor and Sammy Alfaro, eds. 2015. Pentecostals and Charismatics in Latin America and Latino Communities. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. …
Lauterbach, “Religious Entrepreneurs in Ghana”
Lauterbach, Karen. 2015. Religious Entrepreneurs in Ghana. In Cultural Entrepreneurship in Africa, Ute Röschenthaler and Dorothea Schulz, eds. New York: …
Deacon, “Driving the Devil Out”
Deacon, Gregory. 2015. Driving the Devil Out: Kenya’s Born-Again Election. Journal of Religion in Africa 45(2): 200-220. Abstract: Neo-Pentecostal or …
Fer and Malogne-Fer, “Femmes et Pentecotismes”
Fer, Yannick and Gwendoline Malogne-Fer (eds). 2015. Femmes et Pentecotismes: Enjeux d’autorite et rapports de genre. Geneve: Labor et Fides. …
Echtler and Ukah (eds), “Bourdieu in Africa”
Echtler, Magnus and Asonzeh Ukah, eds. 2015. Bourdieu in Africa: Exploring the Dynamics of Religious Fields. Leiden: Brill. Publisher’s Description: …
Blanton, Anderson. 2015. Hittin’ the Prayer Bones: Materiality of Spirit in the Pentecostal South
Reviewed by James S. Bielo (Miami University). Come and listen in to the radio station, Where the mighty hosts of heaven sing, Turn your radio on, turn your radio on, Turn your radio on, turn your radio on…
So sings John Hartford on his 1971 cover of the 1938 southern Gospel standard.
Robbins, “Religious Pluralism and Values Pluralism”
Robbins, Joel. 2015 [2014]. Religious Pluralism and Values Pluralism: Ritual and the Management of Intercultural Diversity. Debates do NER 2(26): …
Ikeuchim, “Back to the Present”
Ikeuchim, Suma. 2015. Back to the Present: The ‘Temporal Tandem’ of Migration and Conversion among Pentecostal Nikkei Brazilians in Japan. …
Wariboko, Nimi. 2014. Nigerian Pentecostalism
Reviewed by Jörg Haustein (SOAS, University of London). Wariboko’s book is an important contribution to the by now substantial array of studies on Nigerian Pentecostalism, and yet it is one of a kind. Instead of providing another historical, political, or socio-economic analysis of the “Pentecostal explosion”
