Name Jacob Olupona | ||
![]() | ||
Awards Guggenheim Fellowship for Humanities, US & Canada Books African Religions: A Very Sh, African Spirituality, City of 201 Gods: Ile‑Ife in T, Kingship - Religion - and Ritua, In my father's parsonag |
World Christianity: An Agenda for the 21st Century | Dr. Jacob K. Olupona
Jacob K. Olupona is Professor of African Religious Traditions and Chair of the Committee on African studies at the Harvard Divinity School with a joint appointment as Professor of African and African American Studies in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences at Harvard University.
Contents
- World Christianity An Agenda for the 21st Century Dr Jacob K Olupona
- Religion at the Crossroads in Nigeria
- Biography
- Works
- Articles by Jacob K Olupona
- References
Religion at the Crossroads in Nigeria
Biography
Jacob K. Olupona is a scholar of indigenous African religions who came to Harvard after serving as a professor at the University of California, Davis.
He is working on a study of the religious practices of the estimated one million Africans who have emigrated to the United States over the last 40 years, examining in particular several populations that remain relatively invisible in the American religious landscape: "reverse missionaries" who have come to the U.S. to establish churches, African Pentecostals in American congregations, American branches of independent African churches, and indigenous African religious communities in the U.S. His earlier research includes African spirituality and ritual practices, spirit possession, Pentecostalism, Yoruba festivals, animal symbolism, icons, phenomenology, and religious pluralism in Africa and the Americas.
In his forthcoming book Ile-Ife: The City of 201 Gods, he examines the modern urban mixing of ritual, royalty, gender, class, and power, and how the structure, content, and meaning of religious beliefs and practices permeate daily life.
He has authored or edited seven other books, including Kingship, Religion and Rituals in a Nigerian Community: A Phenomenological Study of Ondo Yoruba Festivals, which has beern used for ethnographic research among Yoruba-speaking communities.
Olupona has received grants from the Guggenheim Foundation, the American Philosophical Society, the Ford Foundation, the Davis Humanities Institute, the Rockefeller Foundation, the Wenner-Gren Foundation, and the Getty Foundation. He has served on the editorial boards of three journals and as president of the African Association for the Study of Religion. In 2000, Olupona received an honorary doctorate in divinity from the University of Edinburgh in Scotland.
Jacob K. Olupona received his BA from the University of Nigeria and his MA and PhD from Boston University.