Tâm T. T. Ngô; Charles F. Keyes; Laurie J. Sears; Vicente Rafael MV - University of Washington Press (2019) Saatavuus: Tilaustuote Pehmeäkantinen kirja
Jayde Lin Roberts; Charles F. Keyes; Laurie J. Sears; Vicente Rafael MV - University of Washington Press (2016) Saatavuus: Tilaustuote Kovakantinen kirja
Timothy P. Daniels; Laurie J. Sears; Charles F. Keyes; Vicente Rafael MV - University of Washington Press (2017) Saatavuus: Tilaustuote Kovakantinen kirja
Timothy P. Daniels; Laurie J. Sears; Charles F. Keyes; Vicente Rafael MV - University of Washington Press (2017) Saatavuus: Tilaustuote Pehmeäkantinen kirja
Janet Steele; Laurie J. Sears; Vicente Rafael; Charles F. Keyes MV - University of Washington Press (2018) Saatavuus: Painos loppu Pehmeäkantinen kirja
Jayde Lin Roberts; Charles F. Keyes; Laurie J. Sears; Vicente Rafael MV - University of Washington Press (2019) Saatavuus: Tilaustuote Pehmeäkantinen kirja
Wasana Wongsurawat; Vicente Rafael; Laurie J. Sears; Charles F. Keyes MV - University of Washington Press (2019) Saatavuus: Tilaustuote Pehmeäkantinen kirja
Wasana Wongsurawat; Vicente Rafael; Laurie J. Sears; Charles F. Keyes MV - University of Washington Press (2019) Saatavuus: Tilaustuote Kovakantinen kirja
Pawel Pawlewski; Vicente J. Julián; Florentino Fdez Riverola; Emilio Corchado; Rafael Corchuelo; Javier Bajo; Corchado Rod Springer-Verlag Berlin and Heidelberg GmbH & Co. KG (2010) Saatavuus: Tilaustuote Pehmeäkantinen kirja
In the mid-1980s, a radio program with a compelling spiritual message was accidentally received by listeners in Vietnam’s remote northern highlands. The Protestant evangelical communication had been created in the Hmong language by the Far East Broadcasting Company specifically for war refugees in Laos. The Vietnamese Hmong related the content to their traditional expectation of salvation by a Hmong messiah-king who would lead them out of subjugation, and they appropriated the evangelical message for themselves.
Today, the New Way (Kev Cai Tshiab) has some three hundred thousand followers in Vietnam. Tam T. T. Ngo reveals the complex politics of religion and ethnic relations in contemporary Vietnam and illuminates the dynamic interplay between local and global forces, socialist and postsocialist state building, cold war and post–cold war antagonisms, Hmong transnationalism, and U.S.-led evangelical expansionism.
Series edited by: Charles F. Keyes, Laurie J. Sears, Vicente Rafael