Results 61 to 70 of about 447 (93)
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Evangelical indigenous radio stations in Colombia: Between the promotion of social change and religious indoctrination

Global Media and Communication, 2020
This article refutes dominant views that define evangelical indigenous media as intrinsic tools for religious indoctrination. The case of the Colombian Misak community shows that evangelical radio stations can contribute to community building. However, the degree of the positive or negative contribution of evangelical media depends on the dominance of ...
Diego Mauricio Cortes
exaly   +2 more sources

Give the Winds a Mighty Voice: Evangelical Culture as Radio Ecology

Journal of Radio and Audio Media, 2014
The Evangelical movement in the United States arose as an interpretive community in the late 19th century when the penny press permitted mass dissemination of shared media texts. Network radio in the early and mid-20th century then furnished an ecology for Evangelicals to share real-time media rituals and be socially integrated into a broadly coherent ...
Mark Ward
exaly   +2 more sources

Evangelical radio and the rise of the electronic church, 1921–1948

Journal of Broadcasting and Electronic Media, 1988
Evangelicals in the U.S. used radio extensively between the wars to preach their old‐fashioned gospel and to enhance their social status in the expanding industrial nation. They were among the earliest station owners and operators and, despite restrictive network and regulatory policies, built audiences through creative and entertaining programming ...
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Evangelical Radio

2015
Tina Fetner   +2 more
exaly   +2 more sources

An Approach to Seventh-day Adventist Radio Evangelism in Ghana

2023
Since Ghana gained independence from colonial rule, religious broadcasting has undergone self- and governmental censorship. Post-independence governments have either clamped down on the activities of church organizations by disagreeing with them or have intimidated them in numerous ways to tone down some aspects of their activities that the government ...
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Global Radio Broadcasting and the Dynamics of American Evangelicalism

Journal of American Studies, 2017
During the middle decades of the twentieth century, American evangelicals broadened their global outlook and operations, becoming the largest private radio broadcasters in the world. As they expanded overseas after World War II, American evangelicals encountered a world in crisis due to the Cold War, population growth, and processes of decolonization ...
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An "African" Gospel: American Evangelical Radio in West Africa, 1954-1970

New Global Studies, 2007
During the second half of the twentieth century, Christianity underwent an epochal transformation from a predominantly Western religion to a world religion largely defined by non-Western adherents in Africa, Asia, and Latin America. Broadcast media, spearheaded by American evangelical missionaries, played an important role in the globalization of ...
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“We Have Heard the Joyful Sound”: Charles E. Fuller's Radio Broadcast and the Rise of Modern Evangelicalism

Religion and American Culture: A Journal of Interpretation, 1999
The message that Grace Fuller had awaited for years arrived at her cabin in the San Bernardino mountains. Here, she sought relief from the Southern California heat that aggravated her tuberculosis, for which there was no easy treatment in 1916. Her husband, Charles, had gone to church alone in Los Angeles to hear Paul Rader, the boxer-turned-evangelist.
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