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The 1904–05 Welsh Revival: Modernization, Technologies, and Techniques of the Self
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 July 2009
Extract
Surveying the short history of pentecostalism in 1925, Frank Bartelman—a consummate “insider historian”—reckoned that although the Azusa Street revival had become “full grown” in Los Angeles, California, it was “rocked in the cradle of little Wales.” In pentecostal historiography much ink has been spilled connecting the causal dots of precedence. From whence did the movement come? Los Angeles? India? Topeka, Kansas? Historians of pentecostalism are cognizant of the 1904–05 Welsh revival; they readily acknowledged that it in some way influenced the Apostolic Faith Mission in Los Angeles. My goal here is not necessarily to argue one way or another but rather to resurrect from the dustbin of history a significant event that deserves its own due. This is a story, argues historian Rhodri Hayward, that “has been largely forgotten.”
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References
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124. Although much of the revival was conducted in Welsh, a fair amount was not. In fact, participants often prided themselves on the revival's bilingualism. So as not to make an already long article even longer, I have elected not to elaborate on the relationship of the Welsh language to British modernization, for the use of Welsh can be, and was, read in contradictory ways. On the one hand, it symbolically and literally connected Welsh participants to their ancestral past. And in this sense, Welsh might be interpreted as backward-looking and antimodem. On the other hand, the use of Welsh, in a bilingual setting, may illumine a profound nationalism, a nationalism able to adapt to the forces of transnational modernization. Indeed, as historian Keith Robbins has argued,
In the last half of the nineteenth century … the place of the two languages in the life of Wales was fraught with ambiguity. If we take ‘Anglicization’ simply to mean a steady advance in familiarity with English language, then it was certainly happening. It is difficult, however, to capture the manifold subtleties in this evolving situation. Statements about an ability to speak two languages are not very helpful as a guide to actual use (Robbins, Keith, Nineteenth-Century Britain: Integration and Diversity [Oxford: Clarendon, 1988], 32).Google Scholar
Robbins sees “no conflict between integration and diversity.” Perhaps Benedict Anderson is correct in his Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origin and Spread of Nationalism, rev. ed. (New York: Verso, 1991), that “English elbowed Gaelic out of most of Ireland” (72). But not Wales, not at the turn of the century. Anderson's oft-cited discussion of vernacular language and secularized nationalism in Imagined Communities provides little guidance here, where a revival in Welsh instead renewed sacred imagined communities.
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134. Stephen Kern's own version of the banal secularization thesis in this regard is typical. He argues, “Modern technology … collapsed the vault of heaven. Never before the age of the wireless and airplane did the heavens seem to be so close or so accessible—a place of passage for human communication and for human bodies in man-made machines. The omnipresence and penetrating capacity of wireless waves rivaled miraculous action and reversed the direction of divine intervention. Planes invaded the kingdom of heaven, and their exhaust fumes profaned the realm of the spirit. Upwards still the direction of growth and life, but in this period it lost much of its sacred aspect” (Kern, , Culture of Time and Space, 317).Google Scholar
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