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Gender in Sarawak: Mission and Reception
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 March 2016
Extract
The interaction of gender and religion affects a developing as much as a developed church. A missionary church raises appropriate issues not merely as they affect those spreading the message, but as they affect the receivers, both immediately and in a later period of establishment. This paper deals with such matters as they appear in the history of the Anglican Church in Sarawak, where the missionary activity began in 1848.
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- Copyright © Ecclesiastical History Society 1998
References
1 Bunyon, Charles John, Memoires of Francis Thomas McDougall… and of Harriette his Wife (London, 1889), p. 21.Google Scholar
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5 McDougall, Harriette, Sketches of Our Life at Sarawak (London, 1882), p. 20 Google Scholar. Further information about the early attempts can be found in this book, and, with later developments, in Brian Taylor and Pamela Mildmay Heyward, The Kuching Anglican Schools (Kuching, 1973). For mission schools, not only Anglican, see Ooi Keat Gin, ‘Mission education in Sarawak during the period of Brooke rule, 1840–1946’, Sarawak Museum Journal [hereafter SMJ], 42, ns no. 63 (1991), pp. 283–373.
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20 With a new constitution, the members were called sisters from 1944.
21 Borneo Chronicle (Mar. 1958), p. 4.
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23 Sister Ena Florence to the author, Mar. 1994.
24 For further information see Rooney, John, Khabar Gembira (London and Kota Kinabalu, 1981)Google Scholar. Up-to-date details have been received from the Vicar General, Fr John Ha to the author, 2 April, 1 July 1996.
25 Rooney, Khabar Gembira, p. 87.
26 Brother Alfred Boon Kong to the author, 10 July 1996.
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