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Existential anthropology is an approach inspired by existential and phenomenological thought to further our understanding of the human condition. Its ethnographic methodology emphasizes embodied experience and focuses on what is at stake for people amid the contingencies, struggles, and uncertainties of everyday life. While anthropological research on religion abounds, there has been little systematic attention to the ways anthropology and religious studies might benefit from better consideration of one another or from the adoption of a shared existential perspective.Between Life and Thought gathers leading anthropologists and religion scholars, including some of existential anthropology’s most recognized advocates and thoughtful critics. The collection opens with a comprehensive introduction to phenomenology and existentialism in anthropology and religious studies and concludes with an analysis of how existential anthropology might address the long-standing problem of constructivism and perennialism in religious studies. The chapters altogether present existential anthropology as an especially generative paradigm with which to rethink and remake both anthropology and the academic study of religion.A timely and significant intervention across multiple areas of research, Between Life and Thought is an invaluable source for critically exploring the prospects, as well as the limits, of an anthropological approach to religion grounded in experiential ethnography and existential thought.
Don Seeman is an associate professor in the Department of Religion and the Tam Institute for Jewish Studies at Emory University.Devaka Premawardhana is an associate professor in the Department of Religion and current occupant of a Winship Distinguished Research chair at Emory University.
Introduction: Religion, Phenomenological Anthropology, and the Existential Turn Devaka Premawardhana1. Existential Anthropology and Religious Studies: A Personal Account Michael Jackson2. Eye and Mind Revisited: The Work of Art in Ethnography Paul Stoller3. Blood, Flesh, and Emotions: An Anthropologist and Her Fieldwork in Meatpacking Plants Kristy Nabhan-Warren4. Recesses of the Ordinary: Michael Jackson’s Reinvention of Philosophical Anthropology Tyler Roberts5. Ruta Graveolens: Open and Closed Bodies in a Bahian Town Mattijs van de Port6. Destiny as a Relationship and a Theory Samuli Schielke7. Worlds Colliding? Transnational Religion in Phenomenological Perspective Kim E. Knibbe8. The Plain Sense of Things: Time, History, and the Dream Aditya Malik9. Boundary Situations: An Existential Account of Wounded Healing Sónia Silva10. Sartre’s Jews and Jackson’s Witches: What (Who) Is Real in Existential Anthropology? Don SeemanAfterword: "Not Ethnology but Ethnosophy!"Michael LambekContributor BiographiesIndex