HISTORIA DOMUS

 Explore religion and society in South Asia 
 through the expansive history of the Jesuits in the subcontinent. 

RINALD
D'SOUZA

Rinald D’Souza is a historian of religion and society in modern South Asia. He specialises on twentieth-century Christianity and the history of the Jesuits in India.

His current research explores the self-fashioning of Adivasi Jesuits through the missionary periodical press.

Historia Domus draws on the transnational and global character of the Society of Jesus to reveal its intertwining and influence within specific regional spaces — across time. How have these interconnections shaped religion and society in South Asia?

Historia Domus brings together a collaborative database that collates resources for research on the Jesuits, as well as on Christianity in South Asia.

ARCHIVES
RESEARCH CENTRES
PROJECTS
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Publications
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RESOURCES

Jesuit Provinces

PROVINCES

 

Jesuit Research

RESEARCH CENTRES

 

Jesuit Sources | Jesuit Archives

ARCHIVES

 

DIGITAL PROJECTS

 

Vocabulary for the Study of Jesuits

VOCABULARY

 

Jesuit Sources | Jesuit Publications

PUBLICATIONS

 

INSIGHTS ON RELIGION AND SOCIETY DRAWN FROM ACADEMIA, SPIRITUALITY AND POP CULTURE.

Ideas

From 20 May 2021 to 31 July 2022, the Jesuits celebrate the Ignatian Year marking 500 years since the conversion of Ignatius of Loyola and his spiritual journey from Pamplona to Manresa that eventually proved instrumental in the founding of the Society of Jesus. Here’s a Jesuit perspective to the Jubilee.

New scholarship on religion and society in South Asia,
engaging with the history of Christianity and the Jesuits.

The Lived Contestations of Adivasi Catholic Identity-Making

In the mid-nineteenth century movement towards Christianity in Chotanagpur in central India, the missionary Constant Lievens (1856-1893) played a pioneering role in the establishment of the Catholic Mission among the Adivasis (indigenous peoples). Through Lievens’ legal advocacy, Adivasis not only adopted a faith, but also began to reclaim their lands and their indigeneity. Drawing on ethnographic research around the intercessory prayer for the beati_cation of Lievens, this paper analyses the present-day lived contestations of Adivasi Catholic identity-making. The paper argues that Adivasi Catholic identities are lived in contestation and continuous negotiation with their present realities, while also borrowing from the legacies of their own past struggles and their intermediaries.