The Anthropology of Christianity

Front Cover
Fenella Cannell
Duke University Press, Nov 7, 2006 - Religion - 373 pages
This collection provides vivid ethnographic explorations of particular, local Christianities as they are experienced by different groups around the world. At the same time, the contributors, all anthropologists, rethink the vexed relationship between anthropology and Christianity. As Fenella Cannell contends in her powerful introduction, Christianity is the critical “repressed” of anthropology. To a great extent, anthropology first defined itself as a rational, empirically based enterprise quite different from theology. The theology it repudiated was, for the most part, Christian. Cannell asserts that anthropological theory carries within it ideas profoundly shaped by this rejection. Because of this, anthropology has been less successful in considering Christianity as an ethnographic object than it has in considering other religions. This collection is designed to advance a more subtle and less self-limiting anthropological study of Christianity.

The contributors examine the contours of Christianity among diverse groups: Catholics in India, the Philippines, and Bolivia, and Seventh-Day Adventists in Madagascar; the Swedish branch of Word of Life, a charismatic church based in the United States; and Protestants in Amazonia, Melanesia, and Indonesia. Highlighting the wide variation in what it means to be Christian, the contributors reveal vastly different understandings and valuations of conversion, orthodoxy, Scripture, the inspired word, ritual, gifts, and the concept of heaven. In the process they bring to light how local Christian practices and beliefs are affected by encounters with colonialism and modernity, by the opposition between Catholicism and Protestantism, and by the proximity of other religions and belief systems. Together the contributors show that it not sufficient for anthropologists to assume that they know in advance what the Christian experience is; each local variation must be encountered on its own terms.

Contributors. Cecilia Busby, Fenella Cannell, Simon Coleman, Peter Gow, Olivia Harris, Webb Keane, Eva Keller, David Mosse, Danilyn Rutherford, Christina Toren, Harvey Whitehouse

 

Contents

The Eternal Return of Conversion Christianity as Contested Domain in Highland Bolivia
13
Renewable Icons Concepts of Religious Power in a Fishing Village in South India
39
Possession and Confession Affliction and Sacred Power in Colonial and Contemporary Catholic South India
61
Reading as Gift and Writing as Theft
96
Materializing the Self Words and Gifts in the Construction of Charismatic Protestant Identity
The Effectiveness of Ritual
3
Forgetting Conversion The Summer Institute of Linguistics Mission in the Piro Lived World
11
The Bible Meets the Idol Writing and Conversion in Biak Irian Jaya Indonesia
12
Scripture Study as Normal Science SeventhDay Adventist Practice on the East Coast of Madagascar
45
Appropriated and Monolithic Christianity in Melanesia
67
Anxious Transcendence
80
References
97
Contributors
5
Index
7
Copyright

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About the author (2006)

Fenella Cannell is Lecturer in Anthropology at the London School of Economics. She is the author of Power and Intimacy in the Christian Philippines.

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