''In this important, thoroughly researched contribution Reuben Loffman offers a wealth of new insights... No one interested in the history of the Katanga, or for that matter of the Congo, can afford to ignore this path-breaking addition to the extant literature.''
-Rene Lemarchand, Emeritus Professor, University of Florida, USA
''Drawing on his painstaking local research, Loffman sheds new light on how one Congolese community experienced a tumultuous period of social, political and religious change in a study that will be of lasting value to scholars of Central Africa.''
-Miles Larmer, Professor of African History, University of Oxford, UK
''By prompting us to rethink patterns of state hegemony and Church-state relations in the Belgian Congo, Loffman demonstrates that even in an age of global history, there is still much to be gained from painstaking monographs informed by a deep understanding of local dynamics andethno-historical contexts. This is an impressive debut.''
-Giacomo Macola, Reader in History, University of Kent, UK
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"Loffman's first monograph is a welcome addition to the history of Church and state relations in colonial Congo. This book contributes to ongoing academic debates on the region's pasts while shedding much-needed light on some of its neglected historiographic corners. ... Loffman's thoroughly documented monograph is a precious contribution to its field and will certainly stimulate future intellectual debates on colonial Central Africa. ... this monograph promises to stimulate, enrich and further our knowledge of Central Africa's recent political history." (Benoît Henriet, BMGN - Low Countries Historical Review, Vol. 135, 2020)
"Loffman's and Morier-Genoud's monographs offer impressive and much-needed contributions to historiography on the Catholic Church and religious politics in twentieth-century Africa, moving us beyond simplistic tropes of Church-State collaboration or resistance." (J. J. Carney, Journal of Ecclesiastical History, Vol. 71 (4), October, 2020)
"Loffman's and Morier-Genoud's monographs offer impressive and much-needed contributions to historiography on the Catholic Church and religious politics in twentieth-century Africa, moving us beyond simplistic tropes of Church-State collaboration or resistance." (J. J. Carney, Journal of Ecclesiastical History, Vol. 71 (4), October, 2020)