Ethnography and Theology
Ethnography and Theology
Ethnography and Theology
n the spring of 2009, Practical Matters, with the assistance of the Initiative in Religious Practices & Practical Theology, held a consultation in Atlanta on the theme of Ethnography and
Theology. This consultation illustrated the extent to which this topic represents an overlap
and convergence of a number of different commitments, methods, and disciplinary frameworks.
We think it is important to represent the complex texture of this conversation for the readers and
viewers of this issue. To that end, we offer the following short pieces from four scholars whose
perspectives reflect some of the diverse disciplines, commitments, and methods animating the intersections of ethnography and theology:
On Some Relations Between Theology and Ethnography, by Don E. Saliers
The Limits of Ethnography: Notes from the Field, by Joyce Burkhalter Flueckiger
The Limits of Theology: Notes from a Theographer, by Dianne M. Stewart Diakit
Does Anthropology Need to Get Religion? Critical Notes on an Unrequited Love, by Don
Seeman
As conversation starters, these four pieces serve as an invitation to you, our readers, to add your
voices to this emerging conversation. Your responses, comments, and questions will be made
available to other readers through an online discussion forum moderated by Practical Matters staff
and archived as part of Issue 3.
Practical Matters, Spring 2010, Issue 3, pp. 1-14. The Author 2010. Published by Emory University. All rights
reserved.
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stances of much ethnographic research/data, the consequences of the time limits of ethnographic
research, the limits of discourse (including the ability to articulate nonverbal knowledge), and
finally, the limits of translation.
Presumably, the goal of an ethnographer is to understand the social, political, religious/ritual
and imaginative worlds within which the persons s/he is working with live. To fully understand the
world of the goddess Gangamma and her worshippers and ritual practitioners requires an ethnographer both to imagine and to try to articulate a world in which the goddess has agency, a goddess
whose needs can be fulfilled through human ritual and devotion. An ethnographer working with
this goddess tradition does not him/herself have to
accept that the goddess has agency; but in order to
understand the tradition and community that lives
within it, it is incumbent upon the ethnographer to
try to imagine a world in which she does. Perhaps
this empathetic imagination is what religious studies and theology can contribute most significantly
to ethnography.
An ethnographer cannot be at all places all the
time; hence, often, particular meetings with particular actors as well as statements by those actors
feel (or are) serendipitous. For example, in 1992,
the first year I attended Gangammas annual festival, women were serving her in her temple. The
next year I learned that the women attendants
had been evicted and replaced by Brahmin (male) The Matangi guise of the goddess taking a lunch break
priests. This was a major shift; and yet if I had not Exhausted from hours of walking in the heat of sumpersonally witnessed this transition, I would have mer, he (now more the male whos taken the guise
likely assumed that the goddess had always been than fully the goddess) is being fed cooling yogurt rice
served by Brahmin men and would have missed by his wife.
the beginning of a middle-class transformation of Photo by Joyce Burkhalter Flueckiger
the temple and its rituals. Because we had seen this
transition from middle- and low-caste female attendants to Brahmin male attendants, we were able
to speak to its participants about their experience of it; but it was not a topic that those remaining
at the temple brought up themselves.
Another example of serendipity: I asked a sweeper woman at the guesthouse where I was
staying whether or not she was afraid of this particular goddess, Gangamma, who is known to be
ugram (excessive, with high demands), as many men I had spoken to seemed to be. The woman
answered, No. She has shakti [female spiritual power] and we [women] have shakti, so were not
afraid. But men, they dont have shakti; so they are afraid. This unexpected comment has helped
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to frame the work I have written about this goddess traditionthat is, that there is a gendered
experience of the goddess. But I often wonder what would have been the propelling question and
framework of my writing had I not met this woman and heard this comment, which was a contextualization cue for an indigenous understanding of the tradition and which caused me to hear and
see other comments and rituals through a particular interpretive lens.
To return to the photographs: the question of what effect a goddess-father may have on his
young daughter may not have occurred to me in quite this way had I not been present at the lunchbreak in which the two interacted (which I had not seen during two previous festivals). A good
ethnographer puts him/herself in situations in which s/he will hear and pay attention to comments
and images like thisif not this one, then others. Nevertheless, serendipityincluding invitations
extended and accepted, cups of tea (and potential conversation) shared or declined, unexpected
meetings, and seemingly offhand or casual questions and commentsconstitutes both the joys and
benefits, as well as a potential limit, of ethnographic research.
A second limiting characteristic of ethnography is its time-bounded nature. That is, ethnography catches traditions and persons in the particular time-frame of the scholars fieldwork. The
little girl pictured on her father-goddesss lap is now an English-medium middle school student,
and the education she is receiving may affect her experiences and articulations of gender and the
rituals she has witnessed yearly since the photograph was taken. Repeated returns to the field
over several years, cultivating an awareness for potential sites for change, and writing to leave
room for these potential changes are a few of the ways to account for the limits of time-bounded
fieldwork. To live in a community through seasonal and annual cycles also helps to mitigate other
kinds of constraints of time-bounded fieldwork; so that, for example, the ethnographer is aware of
the changing rhythms of days, weeks, months and seasons in a particular community and does not
over-generalize a phenomenon that may be season-specific (such as foods eaten or kinds of flowers
used in ritual).
One of the most significant limits of ethnography is the limit of discourse itself, both for
the members of an ethnographic community and for the ethnographer him/herself. Ethnographic
writing often attempts to bridge the gaps between experience and discourse. The body of the
goddess-husbands wife may know and experience gender in a particular way that the wife and the
community within which she lives do not have discursive ways of talking about. An awareness of
narrative, performative, and gestural repertoires and conversations around such experience help
an ethnographer to find words and indigenous expressions of that experience; but in the end, body
knowledge and discursive knowledge are difficult to translate one to the other.
This brings us to the limits of translation itself. Ethnography is a multi-level translation: of
experience to discourse; of indigenous/everyday discourse to academic discourse, often from one
language to another; and from description to analysis. Each level of translation is a creative, but
limited act, with potential pitfalls. The limits of ethnography and translation encourage, for those
of us engaged in this process, a generous dose of humility.
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approximates the content and form of what my graduate school colleague Sally Cuffee termed
theography as we struggled to name the novel steps womanist theologians were taking in their
alternative approaches and foci. Some of us were indeed emerging theographers whose encounters with Black womens lived religion brought us face-to-face with practices and experiences that
tested the limits of the conventional theological categories most familiar to us at the time.
An example from my own research experiences in Jamaica might serve to illustrate the limits
of theology as customarily conceived and the potential of theography to address the preoccupations of contextual theological (or theographic) reflection. Contextual theologies address social
location and offer analysis of the concrete historical horizons that shape the theological imagination and religious life of persons and communities. Among traditions with little emphasis on
theological writing, accessing these sources demands ethnographic encounters in landscapes of
lived religion. Where religion is lived and experienced, theologies are often embedded in other
kinesthetic and technological religious performances. When I conducted research among Revival/
Zion churches in Jamaica, I encountered two theological grammars at work. One embraced aspects
of orthodox Christian theology (biblical revelation, the Trinity, sin, redemption, Christology, and
eschatology) and cognate theological symbols and ideas that were often expressed through confessional statements and preaching. The other was folded into a system of practical beliefs2 and
corresponding ritual processes, including a religious epistemology informed by invisible sources
of divine revelation, constant communication and reciprocity between the visible and invisible
world domains, devotional activity involving a community of divinities (spirit messengers), individual attachment to a particular entity within the divine community, divination and spiritual readings, holistic approaches to health and healing, the sacralization of nature and all forms of creation,
spiritual bathing, and ritual offerings and sacrifice.
After attending any number of worship services at Holy Mount Zion Baptist Church, a Revival/
Zion congregation in Yallas, St. Thomas, I expected ministry services within the wider community,
especially among those in need or crisis, to emphasize scripture reading, prayer, and singing. However standard pastoral care and counseling practices included divination readings, spiritual bathing, revelatory experience guided by a divine community much larger than the Christian Trinity,
the use of spiritually charged and empowered religious objects, esoteric interpretations of scripture,
and animal sacrifice/food offerings to earthbound and air-bound spirits. The traditional theological
training I received had prepared me to assume that the performance of Christianity, most evident
in Sunday morning worship services at Holy Mount Zion, should constitute the starting point for
an elaboration of Revival/Zion theological ideas. Additionally, the conceptual frameworks at my
disposal for constructing theological categories presumed a post-Enlightenment Western Christian
as well as the academic theologian. I have also gleaned crucial insights about the limits of interpretive
and translational work from being studied, not just by the informants I encounter in the field, but also by
participating in focus groups and agreeing to be interviewed by other ethnographers for their research
projects.
2 Kola Abimbola, Yoruba Culture: A Philosophical Account (Birmingham, UK: IAP Publishers, 2006).
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cosmology and temporal orientation that contained no translational resources for apprehending the
characteristic theological bilingualism3 at the center of Jamaican Revival/Zionist faith and practice. Indeed ethnographic rather than theological instincts directed my attention to the full range
of Revival/Zion religious practices beyond church walls. The lessons learned from my discovery
of bilingualism as a core feature of the Revival/Zion traditions collective theological imagination
have transformed my approach to theologies and religious practices of the African diaspora.
I am still committed to contextual theology with its emphasis upon liberationist and postcolonialist hermeneutics. However, the longer I remain at the crossroads of theology and ethnography
in this field of research, the more convinced I am that hidden and profound theological resources
of many Black religious communities can be best accessed through attention to repertoires of religious performances. Although such performances can include writing, they often do not. Thus
the theoretical tools and methods of ethnography have certainly helped me and other theological
scholars dealing with similar research concerns to overcome the constraints of theology. Whether
our approaches and resultant scholarship amount to an expansion of theological method and discourse or the beginnings of an alternative theographic tradition in religious studies is yet to be
decided.
3 This term is inspired by Tracey Huckss concept of ritual bilingualism. See especially p. 28 of her
article, I smoothed the Way, I Opened Doors: Women in the Yoruba-Orisha Tradition of Trinidad, in
Women and Religion in the African Diaspora, ed. Ruth Marie Griffith and Barbara Savage (Baltimore: The
Johns Hopkins University Press, 2009), 19-36.
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1 Clifford Geertz, Religion as a Cultural System, in The Interpretation of Cultures: Selected Essays (New
York: Basic Books, 1977), 87-125.
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or Buddhism and Hinduism. Matthew Engelkes recent book, A Problem of Presence: Beyond
Scripture in an African Church, is a good example of what can be accomplished when the same
researcher develops dual expertise in both ethnography and the intellectual history of a lived religious tradition.7
C. Because human experience cannot be reduced to a single analytic frame.
I would like to argue finally that religion, like art and literature, probably represents a fundamental register of human experience that deserves dedicated, non-reductionist study in its own
right, and that anthropology should view itself as one of the disciplines that can best contribute to
this project. Godfrey Lienhardts 1961 classic Divinity and Experience: The Religion of the Dinka
took the need to understand the lived experience of divinity among an African people seriously,
but it had precious few successors.8 In teaching my own graduate seminar on the ethnography
of religious experience, I have found many works that deal seriously with the ritual practice, cultural meanings or social organization of religious systems, but surprisingly few that seek to really
engage the worlds that emerge from religious perspectives in their own terms. This is not an argument for any particular form of analysis but for the insistence that religious experience deserves
attention alongside other kinds of anthropological concerns. Moreover, religious experience often
plays a special role in shaping the contours of the local moral worlds that anthropologists study.9
Recently, I participated in an interdisciplinary project that included the ethnographic study of a
homeless shelter specializing in care for families with children. Our task was to determine whether
religious practices or institutions contribute to the likelihood of unplanned pregnancy among poor
women, but we found something that surprised us. While there is little evidence that religious affiliation or church membership play a strong role in reproductive decision making, we did find that
a diffuse set of ideas about the nature of blessing and divine agency in reproduction contributed
to a broad resistance toward planning discourse among women we interviewed. This was not based
on any clear doctrinal rejection of either abortion or contraception, but on a vernacular concern
with the appropriate limits of instrumental decision making and control.10
While this analysis must stand or fall on the basis of the ethnographic data we have generated,
it is unlikely that we would have been sufficiently sensitive to this theme in our interviews were it
not for previous, anthropologically inflected textual research on the gendered poetics of blessing
7 Matthew Eric Engelke, A Problem of Presence: Beyond Scripture in an African Church (Berkeley:
University of California Press, 2007).
8 Godfrey Lienhardt, Divinity and Experience: The Religion of the Dinka (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1961).
9 For more on the concept of local moral worlds as I employ it, see Arthur Kleinman, Writing at the Margin:
Discourse between Anthropology and Medicine (University of California Press, 1995).
10 Don Seeman, Iman Roushdy-Hammady, Annie Hardison-Moody, Laurie M. Gaydos, Winnifred
Thompson, and Carol G. Hogue, Choosing Unintended Pregnancy: Womens Agency, Religion, and the
Discourse of Public Health, under submission.
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in biblical texts.11 In a modest way, I believe that attentiveness to theological and religious textual
sources has made me into a better ethnographer, just as anthropology has made me a better scholar
of religion. Studies in theology and comparative religion each have the capacity to attune us as
scholars to transcendent dimensions of being human, and to forms of agency and constraint that
are scarcely registered in more positivistic social science frames.
11 Don Seeman, Where is Sarah Your Wife? Cultural Poetics of Gender and Nationhood in the Hebrew
Bible, Harvard Theological Review 91(1998): 103-126.
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