Critical Christianity

Translation and Denominational Conflict in Papua New Guinea

Courtney Handman author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:University of California Press

Published:16th Dec '14

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Critical Christianity cover

In Critical Christianity, Courtney Handman analyzes the complex and conflicting forms of sociality that Guhu-Samane Christians of rural Papua New Guinea privilege and celebrate as "the body of Christ." Within Guhu-Samane churches, processes of denominational schism - long relegated to the secular study of politics or identity - are moments of critique through which Christians constitute themselves and their social worlds. Far from being a practice of individualism, Protestantism offers local people ways to make social groups sacred units of critique. Bible translation, produced by members of the Summer Institute of Linguistics, is a crucial resource for these critical projects of religious formation. From early interaction with German Lutheran missionaries to engagements with the Summer Institute of Linguistics to the contemporary moment of conflict, Handman presents some of the many models of Christian sociality that are debated among Guhu-Samane Christians. Central to the study are Handman's rich analyses of the media through which this critical Christian sociality is practiced, including language, sound, bodily movement, and everyday objects. This original and thought-provoking book is essential reading for students and scholars of anthropology and religious studies.

"Handman offers a careful analysis of the doings and sayings of New Life Christians." -- L. Lindstrom CHOICE "Courtney Handman's Critical Christianity...display[s] some of the best work being done right now in the anthropology of Christianity." Marginalia, Los Angeles Review of Books "Critical Christianity deserves to be read widely beyond its immediate audience of scholars of language, Christianity, and Melanesia for the way it both opens up, and begins to answer, fresh questions about critique and sociality, translation and ritual semiosis, and intersections between anthropology and theology." Oceania "Handman provides an important new perspective on how Christianity might be considered not merely the object of critique but also a space for and means of social and cultural critique." American Anthropologist

ISBN: 9780520283763

Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 18mm

Weight: 454g

328 pages