This volume is a must-read for all students of religion and of anthropology for two different and complementary reasons. On the hand, the editors bring together two anthropological traditions, in an extremely relevant way for religionists: the tradition around "material culture" studies, and the tradition which looks towards a major rethinking of the relationships between human subjects and their surrounding material and spiritual worlds. Furthermore, the book is useful because of the ethnographic richness of each chapter, which grounds the theoretical debates in people's everyday lives, covering an amazing scope of cross-cultural settings and situations.' - Dr Ramon Sarro, Lecturer in the Institute of Social and Cultural Anthropology, University of Oxford