Pentecostalism, gerontocratic rule and democratization in Malawi : the changing position of the young in political culture

TitlePentecostalism, gerontocratic rule and democratization in Malawi : the changing position of the young in political culture
Publication TypeBook Chapter
Year of Publication1999
AuthorsR.A. van Dijk
EditorJ. Haynes
Secondary TitleReligion, globalization and political culture in the Third World
Pagination164 - 188
Date Published1999///
PublisherSt. Martin's Press
Place PublishedNew York
Publication Languageeng
KeywordsBaptist Church, democracy, democratization, generations, Malawi, Pentecostalism
Abstract

This chapter explores the relationship between the father-metaphor, gerontocratic power, democratization and religion in the context of changing political culture in Malawi. It argues that democratization in Malawi signalled a change in the nature of the dominant gerontocratic power relations associated with Chewa political traditions, and gave the young an opportunity to escape from their tightly circumscribed sociopolitical space in what for thirty years had been a highly supervised society. It further argues that religion, in particular 'born-again' (often Pentecostal) Christianity, played a significant role in changing the meaning of the crucial root paradigm of gerontocracy in Malawian political culture. The chapter shows that the position adopted by religious youth groups in the 1990s was the outcome of a 'struggle for youth' that Malawian society had faced since colonial times and in which religion played a significant role. In so doing, it deconstructs the so-called 'conservative nature' of Christian fundamentalism-cum- Pentecostalism

Notes

Bibliogr.: p. 185-188. - Met noten

IR handle/ Full text URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1887/9698
Citation Key1044