Religion, reciprocity and restructuring family responsibility in the Ghanaian Pentecostal diaspora
Title | Religion, reciprocity and restructuring family responsibility in the Ghanaian Pentecostal diaspora |
Publication Type | Book Chapter |
Year of Publication | 2002 |
Authors | R.A. van Dijk |
Editor | D.F. Bryceson, and U. Vuorela |
Secondary Title | The transnational family : new European frontiers and global networks |
Pagination | 173 - 196 |
Date Published | 2002/// |
Publisher | Berg |
Place Published | Oxford [etc.] |
Publication Language | eng |
Keywords | Baptist Church, diaspora, family, Ghana, Ghanaians, immigrants, mobility, Netherlands, Pentecostalism |
Abstract | This chapter demonstrates how Ghanaian migrants in the Netherlands look to the Pentecostal Church for the deconstruction of Ghanaian traditions in favour of international mobility. The Pentecostal Church strongly identifies and propagates notions of individualism and the nuclear family. In this way traditional matrilineal social organization is displaced by more Western-style conjugality mediated by Pentecostalist beliefs. The author argues that the appeal of Pentecostalism is based on the opportunities it provides for bringing kinship obligations under the supervision of its individual members. Pentecostalism reformulates the hierarchical and obligatory gift-giving system upon which kinship relations are based. It subjects reciprocity to moral supervision while making it thoroughly multilocal. his is of particular significance in the diaspora where many migrants see themselves faced with the obligation to send money to relatives living n Ghana and elsewhere. Bibliogr., notes. [ASC Leiden abstract] |
IR handle/ Full text URL | http://hdl.handle.net/1887/9601 |
Citation Key | 1015 |