Becoming “business class”: Educated youth and Pentecostal change in eastern Uganda

Benjamin William Jones*, Robert Oluka, Stella Aguti, Jimmy Ezra Okello, Sarah Amongin

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articlepeer-review

Abstract

Our paper looks at the lives of educated young men in a Pentecostal church in eastern Uganda. The way young men conduct themselves, how they dress, how they speak in church, whether or not they are good with technology, help to define their claims to an educated identity. Youth leaders are valued for the liveliness they bring to church, for the ways they innovate in areas of praise and worship. At the same time, they are often criticised for the way they orient schemes and initiatives to their own advantage, for not being transparent and for ‘confusing’ others. We adapt Henrik Vigh’s concept of social navigation to show how educated young men become ‘political navigators’ in church. They mix ambitions for personal growth with their contributions to a modern, lively and dynamic church, and in so doing help to make it more ‘business class’.
Original languageEnglish
JournalCompare
ISSN0305-7925
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2024

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