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Antropólogos, missionários e imagens do continente africano - entrevista com Eric Morier-Genoud
Author(s) -
Éric Morier-Genoud,
Victor Miguel Castillo de Macedo,
Francieli Lisboa de Almeida
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
campos - revista de antropologia social
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2317-6830
pISSN - 1519-5538
DOI - 10.5380/cra.v21i1.70738
Subject(s) - queen (butterfly) , humanities , politics , art , cartography , geography , political science , law , hymenoptera , botany , biology
Eric Morier-Genoud é Senior Lecturer na Queen’s Belfast University, Reino Unido. Fundador e ex-editor-chefe da revista Social Sciences & Missions ele publicou no ano passado a  monografia Catholicism and the Making of Politics in Central Mozambique, 1940-1986 . Nesta entrevista, o professor Morier-Genoud, nos conta a respeito da sua trajetória acadêmica e dos itinerários que o levaram a se interessar por atividades missionárias no continente africano. Os objetos e contatos de pesquisa, permitiram a ele transitar entre a História e as Ciências Sociais ao longo de sua carreira. Suas indagações inovadoras oferecem pontos instigantes a respeito das relações entre colonialismo, ciência e religião. Assim, convidamos as leitoras e leitores a seguir as histórias de imagens de missionários africanos ou os dilemas deixados pela guerra civil em Moçambique, como modos de pensar histórias da antropologia.Palavras-chave: Antropologia da África; Antropologia das Missões; História da Antropologia; Moçambique.Eric Morier-Genoud is Senior Lecturer on Queen’s Belfast University, United Kingdom. Founder and former Editor-in-Chief of the Social Sciences & Missions Journal, he published last year the monograph Catholicism and the Making of Politics in Central Mozambique, 1940-1986. On this interview, professor Morier-Genoud, tells about his academic trajectory and the itineraries that led his interests for missionary activities on the African continent. The research objects and contacts allowed him to transit between History and Social Sciences throughout his career. His innovating questions  offer instigating points concerning the relations amongst colonialism, science and religion. Thus we invite the readers to follow the stories of African missionary images or the dilemmas left by the civil war in Mozambique, as ways of thinking about the histories of anthropology. Key words: African Anthropology; Missions Anthropology; History of Anthropology; Mozambique.

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