“The Anthropology of Christianity is a very fine and stimulating set of essays, framed elegantly by a terrific introductory piece by Fenella Cannell and a thoughtful, thought-provoking, and stylish essay by Webb Keane. One of the collection’s great virtues is that the essays are quite diverse in the interpretive directions they pursue even as they unanimously, and quite compellingly, make the case for rethinking the anthropology of Christianity.”-Donald Brenneis, University of California, Santa Cruz “The anthropology of Christianity comes of age in this book. Fenella Cannell’s astute depiction of the paradoxes of religious transcendence and her acute analysis of the obstacles in shifting Christianity from predecessor, opponent, or silent partner of social science to full object of anthropological inquiry find fruition in eleven exemplary studies of local formations of Christianity from around the world. No student of religion will want to miss this timely work.”-Michael Lambek, editor of A Reader in the Anthropology of Religion “The Anthropology of Christianity is a remarkable collection of consistently insightful discussions and analyses, and merits shelf space alongside classics in the anthropology of religion. However, it would be something of an intellectual tragedy if the book were consigned solely to anthropologists who specialise in religion. This volume demands attention not just for what it says about Christianity, but also for what it illuminates about the nature of anthropology itself. As such, it deserves to be read widely within the discipline. . . .” - Philip M. Fountain (Asia Pacific Journal of Anthropology) “This is an excellent volume of essays that vividly demonstrates the vitality of this growing area of anthropological research and writing.” - Paul-Francois Tremlett (Culture & Religion) “It is a rare book that not only contributes to existing scholarship but succeeds in removing a serious blind spot from that scholarship, and Fenella Cannell’s edited volume The Anthropology of Christianity does just that. . . . This volume is poised to become required reading for anyone interested in the variation of Christian practice and belief, the relationship between Christianity and modernity, and the intellectual-cum-theological history of anthropological thought. . . . This is a marvelous collection that should inspire readers not only to rethink Christianity but also to reckon with the vestiges of theology that remain in our disciplines.” - Deirdre de la Cruz (Journal of Asian Studies) “Theoretically provocative and ethnographically rich, this book will deeply and positively influence the development of its title subject. In her introductory chapter, Cannell writes, ‘For many anthropologists, it seems that, unless special circumstances bring it into view, Christianity is still an occluded object’ (11). To anthropology’s benefit, this is becoming less and less the case thanks to works like this one.” - Matt Tomlinson (Anthropological Quarterly)