Essays in Anarchism and Religion

(Frankie) #1

70 Essays in Anarchism and Religion: Volume 1



  1. See Ramon Sarró, ‘Kongo en Lisboa: un ensayo sobre la reu-
    bicación y extraversión religiosa’, Introducción a los Estudios
    Africanos, ed. by Yolanda Aixelá et al., (Barcelona: CEIBA, 2009),
    115–129. Despite this temporal framing, the Lower Congo region
    bears a long history of prophetic movements with a political im-
    pact, which are recurrently remembered by the followers of these
    contemporary movements. For instance, one transversal historical
    reference is Dona Beatriz Kimpa Vita, a late 17th century prophetess
    who promoted an Afro-centered re-reading of Christianity known
    as Antonianism. See John Thornton, The Kongolese Saint Anthony:
    Dona Beatriz Kimpa Vita and the Antonian Movement, 1684–1706
    (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1998).

  2. See e.g. Martial Sinda, Le Messianisme Congolais et ses Incidences
    Politiques. Kimbanguisme, Matsouanisme, Autres Mouvements
    (Paris: Payot, 1972).

  3. As one of the reviewers of this text rightly pointed out, these tra-
    ditions of leadership in the Bakongo culture bear an interesting par-
    adox, namely when we consider the ‘acephalousness’ of the Bakongo
    segmentary system, where the idea of the collective is primary. Within
    this framework, Christian theology was not so much responsible for
    the introduction of hierarchy and individuality, but instead worked
    along this paradox, combining logics of leadership and egalitarian
    communitarianism.

  4. Ruy Blanes, ‘Extraordinary Times: Charismatic Repertoires in
    Contemporary African Prophetism’, in Ecstasies and Institutions:
    The Anthropology of Religious Charisma, ed. by Charles Lindholm
    (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2013), 147–168.

  5. Denis Tull, ‘Troubled State-Building in the DR Congo: The
    Challenge from the Margins’, The Journal of Modern African Studies
    48, 4 (2010), 643–661.

  6. See Bertram Turner and Thomas Kirsch (eds.), Permutations of
    Order: Religion and Law as Contested Sovereignties (Aldershot:
    Ashgate, 2008).

  7. On hierarchy and totalization, see Knut Rio and Olaf Smedal
    (eds.), Hierarchy. Persistence and Transformation in Social Formations
    (Oxford and New York: Berghahn, 2009).

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