2021
DOI: 10.1017/s0010417521000128
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Reconnecting Language and Materiality in Christian Reading: A Comparative Analysis of Two Groups of Protestant Women

Abstract: What do Christians do when they read? How can Christian reading be understood anthropologically? Anthropologists of Christianity have offered many ethnographic descriptions of the interplay among people, words, and material objects across Christian groups, but descriptions of Christian reading have often posited an androgynous reader. In response to this we begin from the observation that while reading cannot be done without words, it also cannot be done without a body. We propose that an analytic approach of … Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…Rateaver’s theological views could be interpreted as providing an alternative to scholarship on “pure” Christian theological reflection or dematerialized piety. As Halvorson and Hovland (2021) have argued, clarifying who it is that seeks to ideologically maintain “purified” forms of Christianity is important; its pursuit relies on time for reflection and relative political and economic security, all characteristic historically of white masculine trajectories of institutional privilege.…”
Section: Conclusion: Toward Conscientious Ancestral Citesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Rateaver’s theological views could be interpreted as providing an alternative to scholarship on “pure” Christian theological reflection or dematerialized piety. As Halvorson and Hovland (2021) have argued, clarifying who it is that seeks to ideologically maintain “purified” forms of Christianity is important; its pursuit relies on time for reflection and relative political and economic security, all characteristic historically of white masculine trajectories of institutional privilege.…”
Section: Conclusion: Toward Conscientious Ancestral Citesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Over the past couple of decades, anthropologists have analyzed Protestant language use as the manifestation of a specific language ideology that prizes disembodied individual sincerity and immediacy. Yet, as Britt Halvorson and I have explored, this only seems to account for some instances of Protestant language use while leaving out others, such as many instances of language use by Protestant women (Halvorson and Hovland, 2021). For example, in the instance of Dons speaking outside the church in July 1911, this moment of language use seems to go far beyond concerns with interiorized sincerity.…”
Section: A Triangular Conversation: Me Dons and Wittgensteinmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the second part, I follow one value—the value of movement—in a historical example: the writings of a group of Lutheran women in 1880s and 1890s Norway. While I am usually drawn to describing these Protestant women within a semiotic language-and-bodies framework (Halvorson and Hovland, 2021; Hovland, 2020) that in many ways is an extension of poststructuralist virtue ethics, I will in this article experiment with working along interfaces instead. Working along the interfaces within the “family” of “ethical values” as well as the interfaces between different theoretical approaches, I will explore how this example shows that ethical values move in multiple ways through the social, material worlds of Christianity: people realize values, people produce values, and people work on values.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%