Ritual and Memory
Toward a Comparative Anthropology of Religion
Tweedehands producten
-
Op zoek naar tweedehands producten...
Beschrijving
Ethnographers of religion have created a vast record of religious behavior from small-scale non-literate societies to globally distributed religions in urban settings. This work features a range of ethnographers who grapple critically with Harvey Whitehouse's theory of two divergent modes of religiosity.
Harvey Whitehouse
is Professor of Anthropology and Director of Postgraduate Studies in the Faculty of Humanities at Queen's University Belfast. A specialist in Melanesian religion, he carried out two years of field research on a 'cargo cult' in New Britain, Papua New Guinea in the late eighties. In recent years, he has focused his energies on the development of collaborative programmes of research on cognition and culture. He is currently the principal grant holder of a British Academy Networks Project on 'modes of religiosity' and in 2003 was appointed to a British Academy Research Readership. He is also co-editor, with Luther H. Martin, of the AltaMira 'Cognitive Science of Religion Series.' His previous books include
Inside the Cult: religious innovation and transmission in Papua New Guinea
(1995),
Arguments and Icons: divergent modes of religiosity
, (2000),
The Debated Mind: evolutionary psychology versus ethnography
(2001), and
Modes of Religiosity: a cognitive theory of religious transmission
(2004).
James Laidlaw
studied social anthropology at King's College Cambridge, with Caroline Humphrey as supervisor for his doctoral fieldwork in western India, between 1984 and 1990. Now University Lecturer in Social Anthropology and Fellow of King's College, Cambridge. More recent fieldwork has been in Taiwan and Inner Mongolia. Publications include
The Archetypal Actions of Ritual
(1994, with Caroline Humphrey),
Riches and Renunciation
(1995), and
The Essential Edmund Leach
(2000, with Stephen Hugh-Jones).