getCITED   
  Home     Search     Add Content     Reports     Help  
Edit Publication | Edit Contributors | Delete Publication | Edit References | Edit Citations
Add to Bookstack | Show Bookstack | Change Bookstack

Privatizing the millenium. New protestant ethics and the spirits of capitalism in Africa, and elsewhere

Post a Comment
CONTRIBUTORS:
  Author Comaroff, Jean and John
JOURNAL:
  afrika spectrum, 35(3), 293 - 312.
YEAR: 2000
PUB TYPE: Journal Article
SUBJECT(S): Africa south of Sahara, world order, neoliberalism, protestant ethics, Max Weber's sociology
DISCIPLINE: Sociology
HTTP:
LANGUAGE: English
PUB ID: 103-419-898 (Last edited on 2005/09/19 04:39:32 GMT-6)
SPONSOR(S):
 
ABSTRACT:
The authors examine - following Max Weber - the new religious spirit that seems to accompany the rise of global capitalism. The paradox of simultaneous homogenization and difference, the increase in both wealth and poverty, and the rise of new forms of chauvinism and exclusion amidst a discourse of laissez faire are some widely remarked features of this "new world order". Less often noted is the exuberant spread, at a time of hyper-rationalization, of prosperity-gospels and fee-for-service religions, of occult practices and pyramid schemes; i.e. of the enchantments of a distinctly neoliberal economy, whose increasingly inscrutable speculations seem to conjure novel specters in their wake. The authors seek to interrogate the reasons and new aspects of these events. With specific reference to examples from postcolonial Africa, the authors explore the characteristic ways in which neoprotestant movements try to encourage an age-old messianic spirit with the singular signs and values of neoliberal enterprise.
STATISTICS
Click on # to view
 Citations   1 
 References  
 Comments  
 Quality      0/0.00 
 Interest      0/0.00 
 View(er)s   3/136 
Quality
  N/A
High
  7
  6
  5
  4
  3
  2
  1
Low
Interest
  N/A
High
  7
  6
  5
  4
  3
  2
  1
Low
Prev | Next

    ABOUT getCITED   |    CONTACT US   |    USER INFO   |    PREFERENCES   |    PRIVACY   |    LOG IN   
Comments? Suggestions? Send them to feedback@getCITED.org.

Copyright © 2000-2006 getCITED Inc. All Rights Reserved.