Suspended in 2025/26
AN390 Half Unit
Anthropology and Religion
This information is for the 2025/26 session.
Course Convenor
Dr Fenella Cannell
Availability
This course is available on the BA in Anthropology and Law, BA in Social Anthropology, BSc in Social Anthropology, Erasmus Reciprocal Programme of Study and Exchange Programme for Students from University of California, Berkeley. This course is freely available as an outside option to students on other programmes where regulations permit. It does not require permission. This course is freely available to General Course students. It does not require permission.
Requisites
Mutually exclusive courses:
This course cannot be taken with AN290 or AN301 at any time on the same degree programme.
Course content
This course covers selected topics in current approaches to classic and newer topics in the anthropology of religion. The guiding underlying approach will be to ask; what is the study of ‘religion’ for the social sciences, and what are the potentials and limitations of different answers to that question. We will also be asking where (if anywhere) religion is located as category, practice and experience for a range of interlocutors, and in different kinds of analytic writing. Classic topics from which sessions are chosen may include myth, ritual, belief and doubt, supernatural experience, ethical self-cultivation, asceticism, sacrifice, authority and charisma. Students will be introduced to debates concerning the ways in which ‘religion’ is said to influence or shape personal experience and collective public life in both western and non-western contexts. Students will explore some of the key concepts that inform contemporary understandings of religion as a force in the world, the history of these concepts, how they enter into various political and ethical projects, and the extent to which they predefine ‘religion’ as an object of anthropological study, as well as the question of where (if anywhere) boundaries lie between what we call 'religion' and other aspects of social life such as kinship or politics.Specific areas of focus may include: the relationship between ‘religion’ and ‘secularism’; conceptions of ‘religious freedom’; conversion; inter-religious conflict; religious solidarity; the ethnography of religious minorities; the anthropology of religious movements; and the history and consequences of different anthropological definitions of ‘religions'. Topics facilitating this project may include some of the following: shamanism; spirit mediumship; death rituals and ritual theory; magic and witchcraft; ‘spirituality’ and new religious movements; ghosts, spirits and ancestors, and 'aliens'; cosmology; faith-healing;life-cycle rituals, human-nonhuman relations; religion in disapora and social change; religion and ‘ethics’; problems of suffering and critical approaches to religion; violence and inequality;encounters with the divine and sacred, religion; capitalism and the fetish; religion, gender and the body; religion and development, implicit religion. Examples will be drawn both western and non-western contexts, and from both ‘salvation religions’ such as Hinduism, Judaism and Christianity, and other including so-called ‘animist’ contexts.
Teaching
10 hours of lectures and 10 hours of classes in the Autumn Term.
This course has a reading week in Week 6 of Autumn Term.
The contact hours listed above are the minimum expected.
Formative assessment
Essay (1500 words)
Students will have the opportunity to submit one formative essay of up to 1500 words during the course.
Students will be informed of their formative submission deadline by email by the end of Week 3 of term.
Indicative reading
Talal Asad 2009, Genealogies of Religion: Discipline and Reasons of Power in Christianity and Islam;
Tomoko Masuzawa 2005, The Invention of World Religions: Or, How European Universalism Was Preserved in the Language of Pluralism;
Hussein A. Agrama 2012, Questioning Secularism: Islam, Sovereignty, and the Rule of Law in Modern Egypt;
Mayanthi Fernando 2014, The Republic Unsettled: Muslim French and the Contradictions of Secularism;
Webb Keane 2007, Christian Moderns: Freedom and Fetish in the Mission Encounter;
W. F. Sullivan, E. S. Hurd, et al. (eds.) 2015, Politics of Religious Freedom;
Courtney Bender 2010, The New Metaphysicals: Spirituality and the American Religious Imagination;
Leigh Eric Schmidt 2000, Hearing Things: Religion, Illusion, and the American Enlightenment;
S. J. Tambiah 1992, Buddhism Betrayed?: Religion, Politics, and Violence in Sri Lanka;
Assessment
Exam (100%), duration: 480 Minutes in the January exam period
Key facts
Department: Anthropology
Course Study Period: Autumn Term
Unit value: Half unit
FHEQ Level: Level 6
CEFR Level: Null
Total students 2024/25: Unavailable
Average class size 2024/25: Unavailable
Capped 2024/25: NoCourse selection videos
Some departments have produced short videos to introduce their courses. Please refer to the course selection videos index page for further information.
Personal development skills
- Self-management
- Team working
- Problem solving
- Application of information skills
- Communication
- Specialist skills