In the ‘New Angola’ top-down governing and post-war reconstruction project, ‘New Luanda’ has emerged as a powerful social imaginary. It represents an aspiration, projecting desired ways of life, shaping developmental narratives, and forming the matrix for the moral and sociopolitical horizon of the desired future city, and more broadly, for Angolan citizens. This article approaches ‘New Luanda’ from the Pentecostal perspective and includes Pentecostalism as an important part of the ‘New Luanda’ imaginaire. Beyond the Christian movement, this article frames Pentecostalism as both an urban practice and an urban formation, suggesting the heuristic potential of the analytical Pentecostalism-Urbanity-State governance triangle for studying social change and non-compliant socio-spiritual worlds in contemporary Angola. Pentecostalism is claimed to be one of the social formations, next to various social movements active in contemporary Luanda, that exercise particular forms of compliance or disruption and rebellion against dominating and imposed governing structures in Angola. As such, Pentecostalism becomes an exemplary study case of a resistance practice towards the state’s governing policies. This article claims that Pentecostalism should be analyzed as an embodiment of the grass-root ideals of social discord, rebellion, and local anti-hegemonic governance modes in Angola. It is based on ethnographic fieldwork with two Pentecostal churches, the Bom Deus Church and the Assembly of God of Maculusso, conducted in Angola and beyond (Cape Vert, Brazil, the UK, and Portugal), between 2013 and 2023.
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