Becoming Rasta : Origins of Rastafari Identity in Jamaica /
Price, Charles
Becoming Rasta : Origins of Rastafari Identity in Jamaica / Charles Price. - 1 online resource
restricted access http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_16ec
So much has been written about the Rastafari, yet we know so little about why and how people join the Rastafari movement. Although popular understandings evoke images of dreadlocks, reggae, and marijuana, Rastafarians were persecuted in their country, becoming a people seeking social justice. Yet new adherents continued to convert to Rastafari despite facing adverse reactions from their fellow citizens and from their British rulers.Charles Price draws on in-depth interviews to reveal the personal experiences of those who adopted the religion in the 1950s to 1970s, one generation past the movement's emergence . By talking with these Rastafari elders, he seeks to understand why and how Jamaicans became Rastafari in spite of rampant discrimination, and what sustains them in their faith and identity.Utilizing new conceptual frameworks, Price explores the identity development of Rastafari, demonstrating how shifts in the movement's identity-from social pariah to exemplar of Blackness-have led some of the elder Rastafari to adopt, embrace, and internalize Rastafari and blackness as central to their concept of self.
Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.
In English.
9780814767467 9780814768464
10.18574/nyu/9780814767467.001.0001 doi
Black people--Race identity--Jamaica.
Identification (Religion).
Rastafari movement--Jamaica.
SOCIAL SCIENCE / Sociology of Religion.
BL2532.R37 / P75 2016
299.676097292
Becoming Rasta : Origins of Rastafari Identity in Jamaica / Charles Price. - 1 online resource
restricted access http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_16ec
So much has been written about the Rastafari, yet we know so little about why and how people join the Rastafari movement. Although popular understandings evoke images of dreadlocks, reggae, and marijuana, Rastafarians were persecuted in their country, becoming a people seeking social justice. Yet new adherents continued to convert to Rastafari despite facing adverse reactions from their fellow citizens and from their British rulers.Charles Price draws on in-depth interviews to reveal the personal experiences of those who adopted the religion in the 1950s to 1970s, one generation past the movement's emergence . By talking with these Rastafari elders, he seeks to understand why and how Jamaicans became Rastafari in spite of rampant discrimination, and what sustains them in their faith and identity.Utilizing new conceptual frameworks, Price explores the identity development of Rastafari, demonstrating how shifts in the movement's identity-from social pariah to exemplar of Blackness-have led some of the elder Rastafari to adopt, embrace, and internalize Rastafari and blackness as central to their concept of self.
Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.
In English.
9780814767467 9780814768464
10.18574/nyu/9780814767467.001.0001 doi
Black people--Race identity--Jamaica.
Identification (Religion).
Rastafari movement--Jamaica.
SOCIAL SCIENCE / Sociology of Religion.
BL2532.R37 / P75 2016
299.676097292

