Spirits and Letters: Reading, Writing and Charisma in African Christianity

Front Cover
Berghahn Books, 2011 - Language Arts & Disciplines - 288 pages
"This book has opened the internal communication system of so-called Spirit-filled churches for academic scrutiny. We can now begin to ask how and why are the Holy Spirit and internal communication becoming the principal tools for control, domination, or democracy in them." - Pneuma

"For those interested in the social life of the bible and other written materials, this book is sure to surprise...The surprise value of Kirsch's work lies in the broad sweep from fine-grained descriptions of individuals' bibles to far-reaching theoretical critiques of the anthropology of literary practices and bureaucracy." - Social Anthropology/Anthropologie sociale

"From relative obscurity, the study of Christianity has grown into a major academic field, to which this book makes an important and timely contribution. It is the first book-length study of literacy practices among African Christians." - JRAI

"Developing new theoretical perspectives out of sensitive historical and ethnographic research on practices of reading and writing in the Spirit Apostolic Church, this well written and accessible study offers anthropology at its best. Cautioning against simplistic understandings of literacy and textuality that still underpin much work on Christianity, his work offers a substantial intervention into broader debates about religion, media and materiality." - Birgit Meyer, Faculty of Social Sciences, Vrije Universiteit

"the primary aim of the author lies...in challenging the presuppositions made in the study of African religion - and in this he has admirably succeeded" - H-Net Reviews

"...Kirsch...provides an excellent introduction, contextualizing his material and his aim of explaining the relationship between 'charisma' and 'institution' in the Spirit Apostolic Church." - Choice

"The examination of literacy practices presented in this book enables - and hopefully will engender - much thought in a variety of ethnographic domains." - Ethos

"[The author] demonstrates in this book an extraordinary command of several scholarly literatures and takes up questions that have vexed the social sciences since at least the time of Max Weber. In particular, Kirsch wishes to understand how something as fundamental to the 'religions of the Book' as literacy could be so often overlooked in current anthropological discussions of Christianity in favor of electronic and other media.. Kirsch has produced an impressive monograph here, one that ought to be read by Africanist anthropologists, religious studies scholars and by others interested in understanding the meaningful qualities of literacy for all 'peoples of the Book'." - Journal of Religion in Africa

From inside the book

Contents

CharismaSpiritOrality InstitutionLetterLiteracy
8
Spirit and Letter in African Christianity
15
The Fieldwork
21
1
33
Passages Configurations Traces
53
Schooled Literacy Schooled Religion
71
1
81
Literate Cultures in a Material World
85
Setting Texts in Motion
145
21
154
Missions in Writing
155
Enablements to Literacy
169
Offices and the Dispersion of Charisma
183
22
196
Positions of Writers Positions in Writings
201
Outlines for the Future Documents of the Immediate
213

10
92
Indices to the Scriptural
95
The Fringes of Christianity
105
Thoughts about Religions of the Book
117
Texts Readers Spirit
125
15
136
Evanescence and the Necessity of Intermediation
137
Bureaucracy Inbetween
227
Epilogue
243
33
247
41
259
74
269
Copyright

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About the author (2011)

Thomas G. Kirsch is professor for Social and Cultural Anthropology at the University of Konstanz. He received his Ph.D. in anthropology from the European University Viadrina in Frankfurt (Oder) in 2002 and taught at the Department of Anthropology and Philosophy in Halle (Saale) and at the Department of Anthropology at Goldsmiths College, University of London, before coming to the University of Konstanz in 2009. Between 1993 and 2001, he conducted extensive ethnographic fieldwork in Zambia. He has published a book on African Christianity in Zambia and articles in some of the major refereed journals for anthropology and sociology in Germany. Other articles were published in the journals American Anthropologist (2004), Visual Anthropology (2006) and American Ethnologist (2007). Since 2003, he has also conducted fieldwork and published on issues of human safety, security and crime prevention in South Africa.

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