This article argues for belief, suggesting that the reason why anthropologists might have moved against belief is their persistent attachment to a linguistic model of religion that sees the job of the anthropologist of religion as being one of translation. In such a model, the absence of the word 'belief' signals the absence of the process. We argue for the enduring utility of belief, not as a linguistic category, but as a description of experiential processes at the heart of religion. Using examples from popular Catholicism and Mormonism, we contend that such processes are rooted in the body. Through bodily practice and performance, religion is generated as an immanent force in the world - people come to believe
Anthropologists have long been troubled by belief. Perhaps the best illustration of their uneasiness...
The Bible as we know it has been in existence for almost 2000 years. Over 50% of the world\u27s pop...
The following text is taken from the publisher's website. "Anthropology and Christian Theology have...
Anthropologists have challenged ‘the generally unquestioned assumption that adherents of a given rel...
In popular thought about the meaning of religion, as well as established debates in anthropology, re...
In this article, I examine anthropological conceptions of religious belief by concentrating on the p...
Anthropological insights are not produced or constructed through reasoned discourse alone. Often the...
Anthropological insights are not produced or constructed through reasoned discourse alone. Often the...
Anthropological writings abound in allusions to belief. Ethnographers have been accustomed to say, f...
This article considers an uncanny feeling experienced during fieldwork in Malta, and examines indige...
Following a longstanding Christian missionary tradition (Douglas 1984), early anthropologists classi...
As an anthropologist who studies the religious beliefs and practices of others, I have long pondere...
Following a reflection triggered by a fieldwork episode, this paper discusses issues of faith, belie...
Scholars who identify themselves as anthropologists of religion attempt to work across the disciplin...
International audienceThe author argues, that anthropology often interprets religious beliefs as sha...
Anthropologists have long been troubled by belief. Perhaps the best illustration of their uneasiness...
The Bible as we know it has been in existence for almost 2000 years. Over 50% of the world\u27s pop...
The following text is taken from the publisher's website. "Anthropology and Christian Theology have...
Anthropologists have challenged ‘the generally unquestioned assumption that adherents of a given rel...
In popular thought about the meaning of religion, as well as established debates in anthropology, re...
In this article, I examine anthropological conceptions of religious belief by concentrating on the p...
Anthropological insights are not produced or constructed through reasoned discourse alone. Often the...
Anthropological insights are not produced or constructed through reasoned discourse alone. Often the...
Anthropological writings abound in allusions to belief. Ethnographers have been accustomed to say, f...
This article considers an uncanny feeling experienced during fieldwork in Malta, and examines indige...
Following a longstanding Christian missionary tradition (Douglas 1984), early anthropologists classi...
As an anthropologist who studies the religious beliefs and practices of others, I have long pondere...
Following a reflection triggered by a fieldwork episode, this paper discusses issues of faith, belie...
Scholars who identify themselves as anthropologists of religion attempt to work across the disciplin...
International audienceThe author argues, that anthropology often interprets religious beliefs as sha...
Anthropologists have long been troubled by belief. Perhaps the best illustration of their uneasiness...
The Bible as we know it has been in existence for almost 2000 years. Over 50% of the world\u27s pop...
The following text is taken from the publisher's website. "Anthropology and Christian Theology have...