Sowing the Sacred: Mexican Pentecostal Farmworkers in California
Autor Lloyd Daniel Barbaen Limba Engleză Paperback – 20 sep 2023
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780197748169
ISBN-10: 0197748163
Pagini: 376
Ilustrații: 34 figures
Dimensiuni: 157 x 236 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.55 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0197748163
Pagini: 376
Ilustrații: 34 figures
Dimensiuni: 157 x 236 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.55 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
A terrific glimpse into previously untold histories, Sowing the Sacred is a beautiful, moving, and an important work of scholarship on the material and spiritual lives of ethnic Mexican farmworkers and church leaders in California. Please read this book.
With a beautiful mix of photographs, oral histories, and archival research, Barba gracefully uncovers the tragic and resilient worlds of Mexican Pentecostal farmworkers as they labored in the fields, created sacred spaces, and lived dignified lives in the American West. Sowing the Sacred more than fills a significant gap in the literature on Latina/o religion and labor, it changes the field entirely. Simply put, this book is groundbreaking.
Sowing the Sacred impressively reframes the history of proletarian religion in California's harsh agribusiness. Lloyd Barba deftly demonstrates how subaltern Pentecostal farmworkers sacralized the very soil and water of their labor and fired the imaginations of key Chicano/a Movement leaders.
Sowing the Sacred successfully places the sacred stories and laboring bodies of Apostólicos front and center, offering the reader not just a window into the past, but entirely new sets of lenses through which to examine, uncover, and admire the fruit of a completely different kind of "labor" that left a permanent mark on U.S. and Mexican history.
Sowing the Sacred: Mexican Pentecostal Farmworkers in California by Lloyd Daniel Barba is a beautifully told and rigorously researched history of a subaltern religious denomination in California's agricultural farmlands.
Sowing the Sacred is more than a history of Mexican Pentecostal farmworkers in California. It is an excavation, unearthing a religious tradition that's been buried beneath social prejudice and scholarly neglect.
An important contribution Sowing the Sacred gives us is the way it adds to the historical texture of the United States' design of labor laws and practices regarding farmworkers and capitalistic production of the fields.
Barba's prose is lovely. The book is not beach reading, but for a volume that seamlessly blends so many distinct disciplines-religion, ethnicity, immigration, agriculture, and economic history-it is remarkably fluid.
Sowing the Sacred is written in a captivating yet easy flowing tone. The particular threads that Barba weaves into the book develop organically, as the story unfolds. The book would be of interest to scholars and students of North American religions, Latine and Latin American religions, and migration and religion.
Lloyd Daniel Barba's Sowing the Sacred is a rich historical analysis that can be approached from multiple different historical contexts. As a work of religious history, for instance, Barba illuminates much about Mexican Pentecostalism in the mid-twentieth century. Historians interested in Mexican immigration and farm labor--perhaps more numerous in the profession than scholars of Pentecostalism--will also find much to admire in Barba's fine book.
With a beautiful mix of photographs, oral histories, and archival research, Barba gracefully uncovers the tragic and resilient worlds of Mexican Pentecostal farmworkers as they labored in the fields, created sacred spaces, and lived dignified lives in the American West. Sowing the Sacred more than fills a significant gap in the literature on Latina/o religion and labor, it changes the field entirely. Simply put, this book is groundbreaking.
Sowing the Sacred impressively reframes the history of proletarian religion in California's harsh agribusiness. Lloyd Barba deftly demonstrates how subaltern Pentecostal farmworkers sacralized the very soil and water of their labor and fired the imaginations of key Chicano/a Movement leaders.
Sowing the Sacred successfully places the sacred stories and laboring bodies of Apostólicos front and center, offering the reader not just a window into the past, but entirely new sets of lenses through which to examine, uncover, and admire the fruit of a completely different kind of "labor" that left a permanent mark on U.S. and Mexican history.
Sowing the Sacred: Mexican Pentecostal Farmworkers in California by Lloyd Daniel Barba is a beautifully told and rigorously researched history of a subaltern religious denomination in California's agricultural farmlands.
Sowing the Sacred is more than a history of Mexican Pentecostal farmworkers in California. It is an excavation, unearthing a religious tradition that's been buried beneath social prejudice and scholarly neglect.
An important contribution Sowing the Sacred gives us is the way it adds to the historical texture of the United States' design of labor laws and practices regarding farmworkers and capitalistic production of the fields.
Barba's prose is lovely. The book is not beach reading, but for a volume that seamlessly blends so many distinct disciplines-religion, ethnicity, immigration, agriculture, and economic history-it is remarkably fluid.
Sowing the Sacred is written in a captivating yet easy flowing tone. The particular threads that Barba weaves into the book develop organically, as the story unfolds. The book would be of interest to scholars and students of North American religions, Latine and Latin American religions, and migration and religion.
Lloyd Daniel Barba's Sowing the Sacred is a rich historical analysis that can be approached from multiple different historical contexts. As a work of religious history, for instance, Barba illuminates much about Mexican Pentecostalism in the mid-twentieth century. Historians interested in Mexican immigration and farm labor--perhaps more numerous in the profession than scholars of Pentecostalism--will also find much to admire in Barba's fine book.
Notă biografică
Lloyd Daniel Barba is Assistant Professor of Religion and Core Faculty in Latinx and Latin American Studies at Amherst College. He is the co-editor of Oneness Pentecostalism: Race, Gender and Culture (2023), and editor of Latin American and U.S. Latinx Religion in North America (2023). His scholarship on Pentecostalism, Catholicism, the Sanctuary Movement, and material religion has been published in journals such as Journal of the American Academy of Religion, American Religion, Perspectivas, and MAVCOR and various edited volumes. including The Oxford Handbook on Latinx Christianity, Faith and Power: Latino Religious Politics since 1945, and Protestant Aesthetics and the Arts, to name a few. He serves on the council of the American Society of Church History and co-chairs the History of Christianity Unit of the American Academy of Religion.