Journey from the Rainbow Bridge Separated Christian Socialities in an Indigenous Truku Village of Taiwan
Date
2018
Authors
Chang, Ying-Cheng
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Canberra, ACT : The Australian National University
Abstract
‘Christianity’, one of the world’s major religions, refers
to the general cosmological understanding centred on the belief
in Jesus as the saviour, son of God, and the Bible, yet its
nature is heterogeneous. Historically, Christianity has developed
distinct forms and spread worldwide through a process of
missionary activity. This ethnography charts the impact of the
denominations of Presbyterianism and Pentecostalism in an
indigenous village examining how adherents have become oriented
by Christianity in different ways as they strive to become good
Christians living in modern society.
This ethnography focuses on a marginalized Austronesian-speaking
Taiwanese group, the Truku, who face challenges stemming from
their relatively powerless social circumstances. As they have
sought ways to cope with the impacts of their colonised status,
the Truku people have converted to Christianity: Presbyterianism,
then Pentecostalism. These conversions have led the Truku to
develop distinct attitudes and approaches to life prompting
members to lead largely separate lives despite their shared Truku
heritage.
My overall argument traces the bifurcation of this formerly
homogenous village into two radically divergent religious
communities, and shows how the practitioners of these different
Christianities have entered into differing processes of social
change. I document how, in relation to their distinct worldviews,
adherents variously cope with conflicting cosmologies,
socioeconomic tensions, as well as a range of other difficulties
in their lives. The findings of this research suggest that
Christianity reconfigures understandings of the social
constraints and forms of power that local adherents confront in
the world. Through reshaping the principles of power,
practitioners feel themselves no longer to be marginal or
powerless, but become central conduits through which power flows.
The reconfiguration of their differing worldviews orients
practitioners onto divergent trajectories as good modern
subjects, in ways shaped by their specific understandings, and
practices of being good Christians.
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Keywords
Christianity, Indigenous Taiwanese, Presbyterianism, Pentecostalism, comparative ethnography, religion
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Thesis (PhD)
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