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| Title: | Negotiating culture: Christianity and the Ogo society in Amasiri, Nigeria |
| Authors: | Obinna, Elijah Oko |
| Supervisor(s): | Adogame, Afe Koepping, Elizabeth |
| Issue Date: | 1-Jul-2011 |
| Publisher: | The University of Edinburgh |
| Abstract: | There have been two key difficulties concerning the study of indigenous rituals,
religious conversion and change among the Igbo of South-eastern Nigeria, both
before and after the missionary upsurge of the mid-nineteenth Century. First is the
inadequate awareness or lack of reflexivity by some scholars regarding the resilience
of the Igbo indigenous religions. Second is the neglect of oral sources and the overdependence
on missionary archives. This thesis draws on field research on the
Presbyterian Church of Nigeria (PCN) and the Ogo society in Amasiri. The research
method follows a triangulation research design which incorporates an ethnographic
methodology. This involves participant observation and interviews, thus allowing for
a set of guidelines that connect theoretical paradigms to strategies of inquiry and
methods for collecting empirical data. Within the Amasiri clan it is expected that
every male will be initiated into the Ogo society as a means of attaining manhood as
well as incorporation into the adult group. Refusal to be initiated into the society
amounts to ostracisation and a loss of social relevance. The thesis examines the
establishment, growth and impact of Christianity among the Amasiri clan in its
different phases (colonial and post-colonial eras) - 1927-2008. It demonstrates the
interaction between Amasiri indigenous religions and Christianity, in order to show
how and to what extent the Ogo society has endured over time. The thesis analyses
specific beliefs and ritual practices of the Ogo society and Christianity, paying close
attention to the resultant tensions as well as the dynamic of acquired and lived
religious identities. In view of the complex patterns of interaction between
Christianity and the Ogo society, the thesis explores the following questions: What
makes the Ogo society an integral part of the socio-religious life of Amasiri and what
powers and identity does it confer on initiates? How are these predominantly
indigenous cultural features, expressed within Christian spirituality? What effect
does the construction and negotiation of religious identities have on the interaction
and co-existence of Christians and members of the Ogo society? Furthermore, three
themes were central to this research: the first is the gender dynamic of initiation
processes into the Ogo society. The second is the pattern of religious change, identity
and politics of Christianity and indigenous cultures. The third is analysing the need
for and limits on effective dialogue between Christians and members of the Ogo
society. The thesis raises a crucial question, whether religious conversion is partial or
total repudiation of indigenous cultures. These analyses propose a viable means of
negotiation between Christianity and the Ogo society in Amasiri. It sets the stage for
a dialogue between Christianity and the Ogo society, a dialogue that takes the
indigenous context seriously. |
| Sponsor(s): | University of Edinburgh, School of Divinity |
| Keywords: | Amasiri, Nigeria cultures identity gender conversion ritual |
| URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/1842/5463 |
| Appears in Collections: | Divinity thesis and dissertation collection
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