ABSTRACT

Religions in Practice provides a comprehensive and primarily theme-based overview for students of the anthropology of religion. Whilst covering traditional topics such as magic, witchcraft, and spiritual healing, the book addresses key contemporary subjects including migration, transnationalism, nationalism, secularism, and law. It offers an issues-oriented perspective on everyday religious behaviors and examines small-scale societies as well as major, established religions. Throughout the text Bowen engages with ongoing debates concerning the place of religion in public life. He successfully balances the presentation of theory and concepts with rich case study examples, integrating theoretical discussion with a wide range of cross-cultural ethnographic material.

This seventh edition has been updated throughout. The opening section now focuses more clearly on the question of what is ‘religion’ and on approaches to studying religion. There is more on materiality as well as a new final chapter on religious mobilizing and violence. Further resources are available via a comprehensive companion website.

part I|69 pages

Theories and authority

chapter 1|13 pages

Studying religion through practice

chapter 3|20 pages

Authority and centralization

chapter 4|18 pages

States, secularisms, and religions

part II|94 pages

Materialities and morality

chapter 5|17 pages

Meanings and materiality

chapter 6|15 pages

Material transformations in Catholicism

chapter 7|11 pages

Transatlantic religions

chapter 8|10 pages

Embodiment and materiality in healing

chapter 9|18 pages

Embodied harmfulness

chapter 10|22 pages

Boundaries: shaping time, space, and selves

part III|94 pages

Languages and movement

chapter 11|21 pages

Speech and grace in Protestantism

chapter 12|16 pages

Revelation and authority in Islam

chapter 13|18 pages

Virtual religion

chapter 14|19 pages

Migration and diaspora

chapter 15|19 pages

Religious mobilizing