The Missionary, the Catechist and the Hunter
Foucault, Protestantism and Colonialism
Description
The Missionary, the Catechist and the Hunter examines the role of Protestantism in the Danish colonization of Greenland and shows how the process of colonization entails a process of subjectification where the identity of indigenous population is transformed.
Petterson convincingly argues that the Greenlandic intelligentsia, seeking to distance themselves from the local hunting lifestyle, created an abstract, and quintessentially Inuit, hunter identity in Greenlandic literature.
Author Bios
Christina Petterson, Ph.D. (2011), Macquarie University, Sydney is Research Associate at the University of Newcastle, Australia. She works in various fields, such as biblical studies, early European history and colonial history
More Info
Publication date: October 10, 2017
Table of Contents
Series Editor's Preface
Acknowledgements
Notes on Previously Published Material
INTRODUCTION
Approaching Christianity and Colonialism
SETTING THE SCENE: THE PRACTICE OF ORTHODOXY IN COLONIAL GREENLAND
Mary Magdalene and Habakuk: A Heresy Takes Place
Racialised and Gendered Heresies
COMPLICATING GOVERNMENTALITY: COLONIALISM, PROTESTANTISM, AND GREENLAND
Pastoral Power and Governmentality
Colonialism and Governmentality: Outlining the Issues
THE LUTHERAN PASTORATE IN THEORY AND PRACTICE
The Protestant Pastorate in Practice
Constructing Lutheran Society in Accordance with Natural Law
Catechism and Family
CATECHISTS IN THE MAKING: LABOUR, WRITING, AND GENDER
Writing, Gender, and Abstraction
The Introduction of Writing in Greenland
Cultivated Estrangement
THE ONTOLOGICAL STATUS OF THE HUNTER OR THE PRODUCTION OF NATURE
The Instruction of 1782 as Racialised Discourse
Race, Class, and Nature
The Discourse on the Hunter
REWRITTEN PASTS AND SCRIPTS FOR THE FUTURE: HEART OF LIGHT
The Colonial Condition of Heart of Light
Nationalising and Allegorising Greenland: National Allegory and the Global Community
Abject Masculinity
Indigenised Politics
CONCLUSION
BIBLIOGRAPHY
INDEX