ABSTRACT

This book describes how anthropologists in the twentieth century went about documenting the religions of those independent peoples who still lived beyond the frontiers of the global economy and the world religions. It begins by examining the enormous popularity of the newly invented field of anthropology in the nineteenth century as a site of multiple intellectual developments. Its climax was Frazer’s Golden Bough, which is a pillar of modernity second only to Darwin’s Origin of Species. But its notion of religion was entirely speculative. When anthropologists went to see for themselves, they encountered formidable obstacles. How to access a people’s most profound understandings of the world and everything in it? Holding fast to the premise that ethnographers have no special powers of seeing inside other people’s brains, this book teaches students to proceed slowly, a step at a time, watching how people perform rituals great and small, asking questions that seem stupid to their hosts, and struggling to translate abstract terms in unrecorded languages. Using a handful of examples from different continents, the book shows the potential of an anthropological approach to religion.

chapter |2 pages

Introducing the Independent Thinkers

chapter Chapter 1|8 pages

“Such Turbulent Human Material”

part I|30 pages

Nineteenth-Century Beginnings

chapter Chapter 2|9 pages

The Mirror of Modernity

chapter Chapter 3|8 pages

The Phenomenon of The Golden Bough

chapter Chapter 4|11 pages

If I Was a Horse

part II|22 pages

Definitions

chapter Chapter 5|12 pages

The Essence of Religion

chapter Chapter 6|8 pages

On the Uselessness of Ritual

part III|38 pages

Religion and Science

chapter Chapter 7|12 pages

Einstein in the Outback

chapter Chapter 8|11 pages

Real Knowledge of Real Worlds

chapter Chapter 9|13 pages

Integrity of Science and Religion

part IV|24 pages

Dismissing Diversity

chapter Chapter 10|10 pages

Laying Tylor's Ghost

chapter Chapter 11|12 pages

Exorcising Freud

part V|18 pages

Looking for Meanings

chapter Chapter 12|7 pages

What's Only Natural

chapter Chapter 13|9 pages

Beginnings, Middles, and Ends

part VI|25 pages

Ritual and Rationality

chapter Chapter 14|14 pages

No One Believes in Things That Aren't There

chapter Chapter 15|9 pages

Being Reasonable

part VII|36 pages

Powers

chapter Chapter 16|7 pages

Invitations You Can't Refuse

chapter Chapter 17|8 pages

Nature Does Not Work Independently of Man

chapter |12 pages

Findings

chapter |7 pages

Postscript

Religion and Evolution