Of Rice and Men

Climate Change, Religion, and Personhood among the Diola of Guinea-Bissau

Authors

  • Joanna Davidson Boston University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/jsrnc.v6i3.363

Keywords:

agrarian culture, gender, masculinity, environmental change, political ecology, West Africa

Abstract

When Diola Christians participated in their male initiation rites despite missionary objections, the argument was framed in theological terms. But Diola actions regarding this and other religious practices can only be understood within the wider frame of ecological changes that have challenged not only their agrarian livelihoods but their very conceptions of personhood and processes of socialization. Given the decline in rain, Diola males can no longer ‘become men’ in the rice paddies. By drawing out connections among Diola agrarian culture, ideals of masculinity, current environmental conditions, and missionary pressures, I argue that this incident—and, by implication, religious change more broadly—must be appreciated not only for its theological signi?cance within Diola agrarian culture, but as enmeshed in contemporary dynamics of climate change.

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Published

2012-11-15

How to Cite

Davidson, J. (2012). Of Rice and Men: Climate Change, Religion, and Personhood among the Diola of Guinea-Bissau. Journal for the Study of Religion, Nature and Culture, 6(3), 363-381. https://doi.org/10.1558/jsrnc.v6i3.363