Transnational Transcendence
"The Many Who Dance in Me: Afro-Atlantic Ontology and the Problem with ’Transnationalism’"
Publication
, Chapter
Matory, J
2009
The spirit possession religions of West Africa and its American diaspora, like many religions, are inherently transnationalist in their conceptions of the person.
Duke Scholars
Publication Date
2009
Start / End Page
231 / 262
Citation
APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Matory, J. (2009). "The Many Who Dance in Me: Afro-Atlantic Ontology and the Problem with ’Transnationalism’". In T. Csordas (Ed.), Transnational Transcendence (pp. 231–262).
Matory, J. “"The Many Who Dance in Me: Afro-Atlantic Ontology and the Problem with ’Transnationalism’".” In Transnational Transcendence, edited by Thomas Csordas, 231–62, 2009.
Matory J. "The Many Who Dance in Me: Afro-Atlantic Ontology and the Problem with ’Transnationalism’". In: Csordas T, editor. Transnational Transcendence. 2009. p. 231–62.
Matory, J. “"The Many Who Dance in Me: Afro-Atlantic Ontology and the Problem with ’Transnationalism’".” Transnational Transcendence, edited by Thomas Csordas, 2009, pp. 231–62.
Matory J. "The Many Who Dance in Me: Afro-Atlantic Ontology and the Problem with ’Transnationalism’". In: Csordas T, editor. Transnational Transcendence. 2009. p. 231–262.
Publication Date
2009
Start / End Page
231 / 262