Filmmaker Explores Christianity, Ghana
By
黑料百科

James Ault, award-winning documentary filmmaker, author and sociologist, screens his most recent film and discusses Christianity鈥檚 explosive growth in Africa followed by Q&A on Thursday, March 26, at 3:30 p.m. in 黑料百科鈥檚 Winter Hall, room 106. 鈥淎frican Christianity Rising: Stories from Ghana,鈥 sponsored by the World Christianity and Global Encounters of the 21st Century Lecture Series and the Adams Mission fund, is free and open to the public. For more information, please contact Charles Farhadian, 黑料百科 professor of religious studies, at (805) 565-7094.
Christianity鈥檚 influence in Africa is part of a startling reversal in world history, where it is no longer considered the religion of the West. More than two-thirds of the world鈥檚 Christians now live in the global South 鈥 with Africa growing the fastest. Ault will explore questions about what this expansion means and what developments will it foster.

鈥淲ith guidance from leading scholars in the field, we have been documenting the vitality and changing nature of Christianity in Africa,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e have explored the ways in which it鈥檚 has become increasingly popular by becoming increasingly African 鈥 that is, becoming rooted more authentically in local cultures, as Christianity has wherever it has effectively spread.鈥
Ault, a Harvard graduate, earned a doctorate in sociology from Brandeis University. He co-颅directed and co-颅produced 鈥淏orn Again: Life in a Fundamentalist Baptist Church,鈥 which won a Blue Ribbon at the American Film Festival and a Cine Golden Eagle. The film offered a gripping view of life inside a fundamentalist Baptist church and its Christian school, and was broadcast as a national prime-time special on PBS in 1987. His other films include 鈥淎frican Christianity Rising: Stories from Zimbabwe鈥 and 鈥淏uilding the New Community: Stories of Multicultural and Latino Ministry in the Episcopal Church.鈥
Filed under
Academics, Campus Events, Faculty and Staff, Lectures, Press Releases