The Anthropology of Religious Conversion
By (Author) Andrew Buckser
Edited by Stephen D. Glazier
Contributions by Robert T. Anderson
Contributions by Diane Austin-Broos
Contributions by Thomas K. Brown
Contributions by Simon Coleman
Contributions by Maria Pia Di Bella
Contributions by Charles Farhadian
Contributions by Roger Ivar Lohmann
Contributions by Marcela Mendoza
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
18th August 2003
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Spirituality and religious experience
291.42
Paperback
256
Width 150mm, Height 228mm, Spine 14mm
336g
This text paints a picture of conversion far more complex than its customary image in anthropology and religious studies. Conversion is very seldom simply a sudden moment of insight or inspiration, it is a change both of individual consciousness and of social belonging, of mental attitude and of physical experience, whose unfolding depends both on its cultural setting and on the distinct individuals who undergo it. The book explores religious conversion in a variety of cultural settings and considers how anthropological approaches can help us understand the phenomenon. Fourteen case studies span historical and geographical contexts, including the contemporary United States, modern and medieval Europe, and non-western societies in South Asia, Melanesia and South America. They discuss conversion to Christianity, Judaism, Hinduism, Islam and Spiritualism. Combining ethnographic description with theoretical analysis, the authors consider the nature and meaning of conversion, its social and political dimensions and its relationship to individual religious experience.
This is a most welcome book. In it anthropologists, Christian and non-Christian, do deep, sympathetic studies of religious conversion, both individual and corporate, to Christianity, Judaism, Hinduism, Spiritism, and Rastafarianism. The do what anthropologists do bestgive us thick descriptions of conversion from the perspectives of converts themselves. . . In these penetrating studies, the authors show us by way of ethnographic detail the complex intertwining of personal, social, cultural, and spiritual factors that are involved. * International Bulletin of Mission Research *
A good cross-section of the "new" anthropological writings on religious change. -- 2007 * Reviews in Anthropology *
A very interesting range of comparisons . . . . Succeeds admirably in its goal of offering nuanced ethnographies of conversion as a multileveled social process. * Journal of Anthropological Research *
Andrew Buckser is an assistant professor of anthropology at Purdue University. Stephen D. Glazier is a professor of anthropology at the University of Nebraska, Lincoln.