Search for dissertations about: "Mission history"
Showing result 1 - 5 of 32 swedish dissertations containing the words Mission history.
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1. Crocodiles, Masks and Madonnas : Catholic Mission Museums in German-Speaking Europe
Abstract : This dissertation examines mission museums established by Catholic mission congregations in Germany, Austria, and Switzerland from the 1890s onwards. The aim is to provide the first extensive study on these museums in a way that contributes to current blind spots in mission history, and the history of anthropology and museology. READ MORE
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2. Converging World Views : The European Expansion and Early-Nineteenth-Century Anglo-Swedish Contacts
Abstract : The nineteenth-century colonial project transformed conceptions of the globe in ways that reflect the increase in European power over the rest of the world. This study investigates a rather neglected aspect of this process: the development of new images of the world within Europe, and specifically in Britain and Sweden, during the first half of the century. READ MORE
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3. Ambivalent Friendship : Anglican Conflict Handling and Education for Peace in Jerusalem 1920-1948
Abstract : This thesis concerns a religious actor in the civil society in times of violent conflict. During the British Mandate period in Palestine, Jewish, Muslim and Christian children studied together at Anglican missionary schools. At this time Jerusalem bore all the imprints of ethnic and religious separation and division. READ MORE
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4. Back to the Motherland : Repatriation and Latvian Émigrés 1955-1958
Abstract : This thesis is about a remarkable experience lived through by Latvian émigrés in the mid-1950s. They were the targets of a Soviet repatriation campaign, operated by the KGB, which not only envisioned their repatriation to the Soviet Latvian homeland, but also anticipated the destruction of their émigré society as they knew it. READ MORE
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5. "We are in the Congo now" : Sweden and the trinity of peacekeeping during the Congo crisis 1960-1964
Abstract : his work examines the contemporaneous Swedish experience from participation in the United Nations operation in the Congo, ONUC, from 1960 to 1964. Inspired by Carl von Clausewitz’s understanding of war as a trinity consisting of three ‘nodes’: the political authority, the people and the military, this study focuses on the ONUC experience as described by the government in Sweden, leading Swedish news media and the Swedish battalions serving in the Congo. READ MORE