Christian Ritual and the Creation of British Slave Societies, 1650-1780

Christian Ritual and the Creation of British Slave Societies, 1650-1780

by Nicholas M. Beasley
Christian Ritual and the Creation of British Slave Societies, 1650-1780

Christian Ritual and the Creation of British Slave Societies, 1650-1780

by Nicholas M. Beasley

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Overview

This study offers a new and challenging look at Christian institutions and practices in Britain’s Caribbean and southern American colonies. Focusing on the plantation societies of Barbados, Jamaica, and South Carolina, Nicholas M. Beasley finds that the tradition of liturgical worship in these places was more vibrant and more deeply rooted in European Christianity than previously thought. In addition, Beasley argues, white colonists’ attachment to religious continuity was thoroughly racialized. Church customs, sacraments, and ceremonies were a means of regulating slavery and asserting whiteness.

Drawing on a mix of historical and anthropological methods, Beasley covers such topics as church architecture, pew seating customs, marriage, baptism, communion, and funerals. Colonists created an environment in sacred time and space that framed their rituals for maximum social impact, and they asserted privilege and power by privatizing some rituals and by meting out access to rituals to people of color. Throughout, Beasley is sensitive to how this culture of worship changed as each colony reacted to its own political, environmental, and demographic circumstances across time. Local factors influencing who partook in Christian rituals and how, when, and where these rituals took place could include the structure of the Anglican Church, which tended to be less hierarchical and centralized than at home in England; the level of tensions between Anglicans and Protestants; the persistence of African religious beliefs; and colonists’ attitudes toward free persons of color and elite slaves.

This book enriches an existing historiography that neglects the cultural power of liturgical Christianity in the early South and the British Caribbean and offers a new account of the translation of early modern English Christianity to early America.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780820336053
Publisher: University of Georgia Press
Publication date: 01/25/2010
Series: Race in the Atlantic World, 1700-1900 Series , #2
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 240
File size: 7 MB

About the Author

NICHOLAS M. BEASLEY is rector of the Church of the Resurrection in Greenwood, South Carolina.

Table of Contents


List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments

Chapter 1. Christian Ritual in British Slave Societies
Chapter 2. Ritual Time and Space in the British Plantation Colonies
Chapter 3. Marriage and Baptism in the British Plantation Colonies
Chapter 4. The Meanings of the Eucharist in the Plantation World
Chapter 5. Mortuary Ritual in the British Plantation Colonies
Chapter 6. Revolution, Evangelicalisms, and the Fragmentation of Anglo-America

Notes
Bibliography
Index

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