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Is African Christianity a religious marketplace now dominated by only two big players, the Catholic Church and Pentecostals?
Since independence in 1963, Kenya has been a personalised patronage state, run by a corrupt elite for its own benefit. Under the bland label 'Kenyan Christianity', several different if overlapping realities can be distinguished, and it is these which this book investigates, relating them to the country's politics and public life.
Paints a clear and coherent picture of the evolution of erotic ideas and their imaginary and formal expressions in modern French writing. This book retraces the formative matrix of French tradition by engaging with classic sources; and the modern variations on these perennial problematics are then pursued in ten chapters.
This study examines the role of Christianity in Liberia under the corrupt rule of Samuel K. Doe (1980-90). Paul Gifford argues that the Church encouraged obedience and acceptance of the status quo and thus served to entrench Doe's power and promote US objectives in the region.
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