Frontier Zones and the Study of Religion

Publication date

2018

Authors

Meyer, BirgitISNI 0000000114624381

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

Abstract

This article focuses on the concept of the frontier zone as a central critical term in Chidester's oeuvre. Understood as a site where difference is articulated, encountered, and governed, the frontier zone is a productive, insight-generating notion. Its usefulness pertains not only to the study of colonial settings in which scholarly knowledge about religion in Africa took shape via the introduction of religion as a category, but also to the study of religious plurality in contemporary European cities, which is here proposed to approach as new postcolonial frontier zones.

Keywords

David Chidester, frontier zone, anthropology and religious studies, plurality, translation, materiality, surrealism

Citation

Meyer, B 2018, 'Frontier Zones and the Study of Religion', Journal for the study of religion, vol. 31, no. 2, pp. 57-78. https://doi.org/10.17159/2413-3027/2018/v31n2a3