God changes people: modes of authentication in Evangelical conversion narratives

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Abstract

One of the distinguishing characteristics of Evangelicalism is the conversion story. In this article we focus on the conversion stories of interviewees within the setting of several related Evangelical television programs broadcast in the Netherlands since the 1980s. We argue that the conversion story is construed through a particular view on and practice of authenticity. Thus we see that, in the televised conversion story, modes of authentication are at work in what we analytically distinguish as frames, narratives, and strategies of authentication. We argue that the idea of an authentic transformation has changed from a more fundamentalist mode of authentication, emphasizing the subjection of the self to a particular religious narrative, to a more expressive mode of authentication that emphasizes the exploration of the inner, unique self of the interviewee.

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Klaver, M., Roeland, J., Versteeg, P., Stoffels, H., & Mulligen, R. van. (2017). God changes people: modes of authentication in Evangelical conversion narratives. Journal of Contemporary Religion, 32(2), 237–251. https://doi.org/10.1080/13537903.2017.1298905

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