Skip to main content
University of California Press

About the Book

Religion: Material Dynamics is a lively resource for thinking about religious materiality and the material study of religion. Deconstructing and reconstructing religion as material categories, social formations, and mobile circulations, the book explores the making, ordering, and circulating of religious things. The book is divided into three sections: Part One revitalizes basic categories—animism and sacred, space and time—by situating them in their material production and testing their analytical viability. Part Two examines religious formations as configurations of power that operate in material cultures and cultural economies and are most clearly shown in the power relations of colonialism and imperialism. Part Three explores the material dynamics of circulation through case studies of religious mobility, change, and diffusion as intimate as the body and as vast as the oceans. Each chapter offers insightful orientations and surprising possibilities for studying material religion. Exploring the material dynamics of religion from poetics to politics, David Chidester provides an entry into the study of material religion that will be welcomed by students and specialists in religious studies, anthropology, and history.

About the Author

David Chidester is Emeritus Professor of Religious Studies at the University of Cape Town in South Africa. His recent books include Authentic Fakes: Religion and American Popular CultureWild Religion: Tracking the Sacred in South Africa, and Empire of Religion: Imperialism and Comparative Religion.

Table of Contents

Preface
Introduction: Material Dynamics

PART I CATEGORIES
1. Animism
2. Sacred
3. Space
4. Time
5. Incongruity

PART II FORMATIONS
6. Culture
7. Economy
8. Colonialism
9. Imperialism
10. Apartheid

PART III CIRCULATIONS
11. Shamans
12. Mobility
13. Popular
14. Touching
15. Oceans
Conclusion: Dynamic Materiality

Notes
Index

Reviews

" . . . Chidester’s analysis of the dynamic materiality of religion is a valuable corrective. In short, Religion demonstrates that all religion—no matter how world-denying—is material religion."
Nova Religio
"Although the book is in many ways a textbook, Chidester has conceived something far more imaginative than a standard introduction to the world’s religions. Instead, Chidester has chosen to critically analyze the emergence of “religion” as a category, not just once, but in multiple contexts and registers. Specifically, Chidester sets out to develop this critical approach to religion together with the themes and concerns of material culture. So the question becomes not just what religion is and how it is defined, but how the intellectual coordinates out of which “religion” emerges are organized by “material dynamics.” 
Reading Religion
" . . . reflect[s] a healthy shift in the study of religions."
Journal of Religion
"Chidester . . . successfully describe[s] the current state of the material turn in religious studies, which gives the book significant value."
Studies in Religion
"I would warmly recommend the book as a well-informed and creative resource for approaching the study of religion."
Religion
"[Chidester's] broad reading in global history and his deep understanding of the historiography of the academic study of religion will make this book very useful for students and scholars far beyond the modern era."
Journal of Contemporary Religion
"The book offers many interesting and important insights of how we creatively – and with a sense of humor – can think of and understand religion in its diversity as intertwined with materiality."
Anthropology Book Forum
"This book is a master course in the imagination of matter. Playful, smart, analogical, funny, David Chidester engages what Clifford Geertz once called a social history of the imagination. Rather than offer a synthesis of the 'new materialism' (as it has come to be called), Chidester suggests that Religious Studies has been doing the new materialism since its inception."—John Modern, Professor of Religious Studies, Franklin & Marshall College 

"As one might expect from David Chidester's scholarship, this book is another intelligent, creative approach to the study of religion. Certain elements that have been part of his work for years find their way here into a very mature working out of the components of the contemporary study of religion. Chidester advances a particular materiality of religion yet goes further by making materiality central to understanding the construction of religious systems themselves."—S. Brent Rodriguez-Plate, Visiting Associate Professor of Religious Studies, Hamilton College