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Blanton, Anderson

WORK TITLE: Hittin’ the Prayer Bones
WORK NOTES:
PSEUDONYM(S):
BIRTHDATE:
WEBSITE:
CITY: New Haven
STATE: CT
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https://www.uncpress.org/book/9781469623979/hittin-the-prayer-bones/ * http://ism.yale.edu/people/anderson-blanton

RESEARCHER NOTES:

LC control no.: n 2015008992
LCCN Permalink: https://lccn.loc.gov/n2015008992
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PERSONAL

Male.

EDUCATION:

Columbia University, Ph.D.

ADDRESS

  • Office - Yale Institute of Sacred Music, 409 Prospect St., New Haven, CT 06511.

CAREER

Cultural anthropologist, scholar, researcher, educator, and writer. Yale University Institute of Sacred Music, New Haven, CT, lecturer in religion and visual culture; previously at Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity, Gottingen, Germany, research scholar, beginning 2014. Also was a postdoctoral fellow at the Center for the Study of the American South, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.

AVOCATIONS:

Gardening and woodworking with traditional hand tools.

WRITINGS

  • Hittin' the Prayer Bones: Materialities of Spirit in the Pentecostal South, University of north Carolina Press (Chapel Hill, NC), 2015

SIDELIGHTS

Anderson Blanton is a cultural anthropologist whose primary interest is the Christian religion and technology. While working at the Max Planck Institute in Germany, Anderson conducted research on the Far East Broadcasting Company (FEBC), a powerful radio station devoted to Christian missionary efforts in Asia. FEBC, which is headquartered in Manila, distributed thousands of small radio sets engineered to received only missionary broadcasts.

In his book titled Hittin’ the Prayer Bones: Materialities of Spirit in the Pentecostal South, Blanton focuses on how sound reproduction technologies and other material cultural are intertwined with prayer, faith, and healing in charismatic Christian worship in southern Appalachia. The book’s title phrase, “Hittin’ the Prayer Bones,” is a common phrase among charismatic Christian worshipers in southern Appalachia. As Blanton writes in the introduction to Hittin’ the Prayer Bones: “Evoking a long history of Christian devotional exercises, the phrase viscerally describes the important act of falling upon one’s knees in the performance of prayer.” Blanton goes on to later note in the introduction: The book “attends to that particular of the sacred produced through ‘hittin’ the prayer bones’ and other material and technological conduits of the Holly Ghost.”

According to Blanton, since the 1940s  material objects called spirit-matter have been essential in the Pentecostal community, from radios used to broadcast prayer to faith cloths with supposed curative powers sent through the postal system. These material objects, argues Blanton, are essential aspects to how the Pentecostal community has understood and performed their faith. Drawing from visits with church congregations, radio preachers, and more than three decades of recorded charismatic worship, Blanton analyzes how Pentecostals perceive, practice, and articulate their ideas about divine realms and healing as well as the Holy Spirit’s presence.

Blanton begins with a chapter focusing on the prayer and preaching on the radio in terms of divine healing. Next he examines the idea of prayer cloths and their importance to Pentecostals. Chapter Three focuses on the vocal performance of Pentecostal preaching. Blanton closes Hittin’ the Prayer Bones with an examination of both the vocal and material aspects of Pentecostal faith and belief. For example, he discusses the laying on of hands by radio preachers as though the radio signals are transmitting divine power to listeners. Hittin’ the Prayer Bones includes sermon transcripts and key textual artifacts.

Hittin’ the Prayer Bones is a rewarding book, indispensable for scholars of Pentecostalism and religion in the American South,” wrote Journal of Southern History contributor Phillip Luke Sinitiere.  Calling the book “an exemplary case of a new form of materialist approach to religion being developed in the anthropology of religion and religious studies,” Bruno Reinhardt, writing for the Los Angeles Times Web blog titled Marginalia Review of Books, went on to note: “Hittin’ the Prayer Bones is fundamentally an ethnography of the contemporary, helping us to understand the proliferation of temporalities and agentive possibilities unleashed from the ecological encounters of humans and machines, religious or otherwise.”

BIOCRIT
BOOKS

  • Blanton, Anderson, Hittin’ the Prayer Bones: Materialities of Spirit in the Pentecostal South, University of North Carolina Press (Chapel Hill, NC), 2015.

PERIODICALS

  • Journal of Southern History, February, 2017,  Phillip Luke Sinitiere, review of Hittin’ the Prayer Bones, p. 208.

ONLINE

  • Marginalia Review of Books, http://marginalia.lareviewofbooks.org/ (May 9, 2016), Bruno Reinhard, treview of Hittin the Prayer Bones.

  • Max Planck Society Website, https://www.mpg.de/en/ (August 28, 2017), brief author profile.

  • Reverberations, http://forums.ssrc.org/ndsp/ (August 28, 2017), brief author profile.

  • Yale University Institute of Sacred Music Web site, http://ism.yale.edu/ (August 28, 2017), author faculty profile.*

  • Hittin' the Prayer Bones: Materialities of Spirit in the Pentecostal South University of north Carolina Press (Chapel Hill, NC), 2015
1. Hittin the prayer bones : materialities of spirit in the pentecostal south LCCN 2015002752 Type of material Book Personal name Blanton, Anderson. Main title Hittin the prayer bones : materialities of spirit in the pentecostal south / Anderson Blanton. Edition 1 [edition]. Published/Produced Chapel Hill NC : University of North Carolina Press, 2015. Description xxii, 253 pages ; 24 cm ISBN 9781469623979 (pbk : alk. paper) CALL NUMBER BR1644.5.U6 B56 2015 Copy 1 Request in Jefferson or Adams Building Reading Rooms
  • Yale University - http://ism.yale.edu/people/anderson-blanton

    Anderson Blanton
    Anderson Blanton's picture
    Lecturer in Religion and Visual Culture
    anderson.blanton@yale.edu
    Anderson H. Blanton returns to the ISM for a second year. Previously, he was at the Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity (Göttingen, Germany), where he was a research scholar since 2014. He has a Ph.D. in cultural anthropology from Columbia University. His book project, Toying with the Sacred: A Cultural History of Christian Playthings, explores the history of pedagogical techniques and technologies in the American Sunday school.

    Faculty Type:
    Visiting Faculty & Fellows

  • MMG - http://www.mmg.mpg.de/departments/religious-diversity/scientific-staff/dr-anderson-blanton/

    Dr. Anderson Blanton

    Dr. Anderson Blanton
    Anthropology

    email: ablan(at)live.unc.edu

    During his tenure as a postdoctoral scholar at the MPI, Anderson conducted ethnographic and archival research on the Far East Broadcasting Company (FEBC), the most powerful radio station ever constructed for the purposes of Christian missionization. With transmission equipment reclaimed from U.S. military engagements in the Pacific during WWII, this station blanketed Asia with gospel broadcasts originating from the FEBC headquarters in Manila. A crucial aspect of this technology of missionization included the distribution of thousands of ‘portable missionaries,’ or small mahogany radio sets that were strategically engineered only to receive the missionary broadcast.

    After completing his doctoral work with distinction in the Department of Anthropology at Columbia University, Anderson was awarded a research grant in conjunction with the Social Science Research Council’s “New Directions in the Study of Prayer” research initiative (2012-2014). As part of this two-year project, he curated a collection of objects and theoretical reflections on the Materiality of Prayer (http://forums.ssrc.org/ndsp/category/materiality/). Combining theories of technology and material culture with ethnographic description, this collection demonstrates the way religious experience in the late modern world has been profoundly organized and augmented by media technologies and devotional objects. In addition to his work on technologies of missionization and the question of materiality, Anderson enjoys woodworking with traditional hand tools.

  • SSRC - http://forums.ssrc.org/ndsp/author/anderson-blanton/

    Anderson Blanton

    Anderson Blanton
    Anderson Blanton is a postdoctoral fellow at the Center for the Study of the American South (UNC, Chapel Hill). Through ethnographic and archival research, his work explores the relationship between experiences of divine presence and the material objects and media technologies employed during the performance of both individual and communal prayer. His dissertation,Until the Stones Cry Out: Materiality, Technology and Faith in the Pentecostal Tradition, was recently awarded the mark of distinction in the Department of Anthropology at Columbia University, and will soon be published with the University of North Carolina Press (2014). In addition to his work on the materiality of religious presence, he also enjoys gardening and woodworking with traditional hand tools.

  • Hittn' the prayer bones - https://books.google.com/books?id=FFy0CAAAQBAJ&printsec=frontcover&source=gbs_ge_summary_r&cad=0#v=onepage&q&f=true

    INTRODUCTION, pg. 1

Hittin' the Prayer Bones: Materiality of Spirit in
the Pentecostal South
Phillip Luke Sinitiere
Journal of Southern History.
83.1 (Feb. 2017): p208.
COPYRIGHT 2017 Southern Historical Association
http://www.uga.edu/~sha
Full Text: 
Hittin' the Prayer Bones: Materiality of Spirit in the Pentecostal South. By Anderson Blanton. (Chapel Hill: University
of North Carolina Press, 2015. Pp. xiv, 222. Paper, $27.95, ISBN 978-1-4696-2397-9.)
Hittin' the Prayer Bones: Materiality of Spirit in the Pentecostal South is a provocative and exciting ethnographic
contribution to the broader fields of American religion, Pentecostalism, and southern studies. Anthropologist Anderson
Blanton considers how technology, oral communication, material objects, and bodily movements intersect with the
spiritual, transcendent categories with which Pentecostals engage the world. He analyzes what Pentecostals see, feel,
hear, practice, and perform and thus articulates how this captivating religious movement expresses ideas about unseen
realms, divine healing, and the presence of the Holy Spirit. The book's main title--Hittin' the Prayer Bones--comes
from Pentecostals in southern Appalachia, the geographical focus of Blanton's research. It is, Blanton describes, "a
percussive genuflection that literally sounds an embodied technique of divine communication" where "the Holy Ghost
is materialized within the space of charismatic worship" (p. 1).
The opening chapter addresses the auditory transmission of divine healing through the material medium of prayers and
preaching on the radio. Transcribed radio sermons, the literal voice of Appalachian radio preachers rendered in
vernacular form (such as power pronounced as par), punctuate the chapter's analysis of charismatic healing history (p.
20). Blanton connects this practice to the pioneering work of Oral Roberts who popularized divine healing across radio
waves in the mid-twentieth century. Blanton documents how the listeners' "tactile contact with the radio loudspeaker
became a prosthetic extension" of the preacher's voice and ultimately transmitted divine healing (p. 23).
The second chapter assesses prayer cloths, a literal snipped section of cloth typically several inches long by several
inches wide, most often associated with figures such as A. A. Allen and Oral Roberts. Blanton explains how for
Pentecostals the material dimension of a prayer cloth rendered the Holy Spirit's work visible through the application of
oil, the vocalization of prayers directed toward the cloth's use for healing or protection, and the activation of the cloth's
power by placing it on the skin. Blanton innovatively observes that the cut cloth, as it circulated in Pentecostal circles,
symbolized "the notion of portability and itinerancy" central to the movement's spiritual improvisation (p. 65).
Chapter 3 explains what Blanton calls "the anointed poetics of breath," a phrase for the vocal performance of
Pentecostal preaching (p. 115). The preacher's open mouth, a "hollow cavity of linguistic potentiality," is his site of
investigation (p. 156). Blanton links sound, voice, and sonic expression to the microphone and listening audience to
explain how Appalachian Pentecostal radio preachers invested meaning in the spoken and performed word through
laughing, smiling, or speaking in tongues.
The book's final chapter analyzes prayer--what Pentecostals call "standin' in the gap"--as both vocal and material
aspects of faith and belief. In the studio, Blanton observed southern Pentecostals lay hands on one another during
prayer as if to extend the Holy Spirit's reach through radio signals and send divine power through speakers. This
practice capitalized on Oral Roberts's "point of contact," the notion of invisible transmission of divine power through
material objects and a core belief in Pentecostal experience (p. 22).
8/13/2017 General OneFile - Saved Articles
http://go.galegroup.com/ps/marklist.do?actionCmd=GET_MARK_LIST&userGroupName=schlager&inPS=true&prodId=ITOF&ts=1502684051142 2/2
In sum, dense yet readable prose embodies Blanton's thick description of southern Pentecostalism. His finely textured
study couples ethnographic observation with a unique collection of documentary materials, including cassette tapes of
radio programs and sermons, printed publications from Pentecostal ministries, and material objects (such as prayer
cloths, microphones, and Bibles). Three "interludes" between the book's four chapters print sermon transcripts, key
textual artifacts for Blanton's rich analysis. Eight images from Blanton's research enhance understanding of
Pentecostalism's historical record. Hittin' the Prayer Bones is a rewarding book, indispensable for scholars of
Pentecostalism and religion in the American South.
Phillip Luke Sinitiere
College of Biblical Studies
Source Citation   (MLA 8th
Edition)
Sinitiere, Phillip Luke. "Hittin' the Prayer Bones: Materiality of Spirit in the Pentecostal South." Journal of Southern
History, vol. 83, no. 1, 2017, p. 208+. General OneFile, go.galegroup.com/ps/i.do?
p=ITOF&sw=w&u=schlager&v=2.1&id=GALE%7CA481354182&it=r&asid=4c8f09e399c06244754271511aa096bc.
Accessed 14 Aug. 2017.
Gale Document Number: GALE|A481354182

Sinitiere, Phillip Luke. "Hittin' the Prayer Bones: Materiality of Spirit in the Pentecostal South." Journal of Southern History, vol. 83, no. 1, 2017, p. 208+. General OneFile, go.galegroup.com/ps/i.do? p=ITOF&sw=w&u=schlager&v=2.1&id=GALE%7CA481354182&it=r. Accessed 14 Aug. 2017.
  • Marginalia
    http://marginalia.lareviewofbooks.org/faith-motion-techniques-technologies-prayer-appalachians-beyond-bruno-reinhardt/

    Word count: 3673

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    Faith in Motion: Techniques and Technologies of Prayer in the Appalachians and Beyond – By Bruno Reinhardt
    MAY 9, 2016
    Bruno Reinhardt on Anderson Blanton’s Hittin’ the Prayer Bones

    Anderson Blanton, Hittin’ the Prayer Bones: Materiality of Spirit in the Pentecostal South, University of North Carolina Press, 2015, 236pp., $27.95
    Anderson Blanton, Hittin’ the Prayer Bones: Materiality of Spirit in the Pentecostal South, University of North Carolina Press, 2015, 236pp., $27.95
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    In his 1964 classic Understanding Media, Marshall McLuhan argued that increasing mediatization has transformed the modern human being into “an organism that now wears its brain outside its skull and its nerves outside its hide.” According to McLuhan’s well-known theory, changes in communication technology have not only increased the reach and speed of information, but also literally reshaped our sensorial apparatuses through prosthetic augmentation: visual media become extensions of the eyes and imagination, radios and telephones become long-distance ears, and electric media become extensions of our very central nervous system and its capacity to manage, store, and retrieve information. Since then, innovations like the New Media, with a saturating influence in our daily lives, have corroborated McLuhan’s predictions about the blurring of the divide between flesh and technology, reality and mediality. His “extensionist” approach has also been conceptually refined by a number of academics dedicated to investigating the entanglements between technology, cognition, and the body in different domains of social life and from multiple disciplinary angles. It is only very recently, however, that this scholarly tide has reached religious studies and the anthropology of religion.

    The reasons for such delay in the study of technology and religion are literally intuitive. It has become part of our secular common sense and indeed sensibility that religion can only be the other of technological modernity, an attempt to hold on to meaning, providence, miracles, and unified values and truths in a world that has been “disenchanted” by instrumental reason and the scientific objectification and control of Nature. A possible alternative to this reactive way of relating religion to technological modernity is a sort of pact between the two, as condensed in the Deistic notion of God-the-watchmaker, which emerges after the Newtonian revolution. According to this still influential crypto-Protestant position, which echoes today through arguments like “intelligent design,” Nature has been produced by divine fiat as a self-feeding and replicating mechanism. To question this axiom by portraying God as an interventionist agent would be to undermine his own omnipotence. The necessary entailment of divine sovereign transcendence would be therefore its withdrawal from the world’s kinematics.

    Anderson Blanton’s ethnography Hittin’ the Prayer Bones differs from both of these positions. It is an attempt to take seriously the possibility of a divinely suffused cosmos in the age of mechanical and digital reproduction. It is an experiment on the elasticity of religious imaginations and their ways of feeling and dwelling in a world that has been thoroughly crafted and mediated by technology and yet remains pregnant with divine presence. The book is based upon two years of ethnographic research among Pentecostal Christians in southern Appalachia, the eastern portion of the so-called American Bible Belt. Although much has been written about Pentecostals, both in this particular site and elsewhere around the globe, Blanton’s empirical focus is innovative. His primary research groups are not conventional church congregations — which lie closer to the classic long-term, in-depth relation anthropologists have fostered with religious communities for many decades — but charismatic radio preachers, their in-studio congregations, and listeners dispersed around what these broadcasters call “the radioland,” an imagined community ranging from Western North Carolina to eastern Tennessee, southern West Virginia, and eastern Kentucky. Blanton’s empirical oscillation between the emission and reception of mediatized Pentecostal messages is complemented by a historical perspective, which surveys Pentecostal engagements with technology in the United States, especially through evangelist Oral Robert’s pioneering “radio ministry” and his systematic use of the postal network as a prayer circuit.

    Hittin’ the Prayer Bones explores four central topics: the “prostheses of prayer”, the production and circulation of prayer cloths, the pneumatic manifestations of charisma through the preaching voice, and the Pentecostal notion of “points of contact.” These explorations are intercalated by detailed transcriptions of sermons that speak to each of these themes. As a good ethnographer, Blanton writes through his fieldwork material. His prose borrows sensorial thickness from the worship scenes it analyzes. And yet, the globalized nature of many of the techniques and technologies of devotion evoked by the book allows his argument to unveil far-reaching patterns and to tackle questions of general relevance. I will refrain from revisiting his rich ethnographic data in detail and attain myself here to some of these broader issues.

    Pentecostal Christians are indeed a good counterpoint to the archetype of the religious technophobe mentioned above. Since its modern emergence in the early twentieth century, the Pentecostal movement has been especially prone to embrace new technologies in order to advance its evangelistic and missionary effort across the globe, from the telegraph to the telephone, from the radio to the TV and the internet. Moreover, Pentecostals have engaged with technology not only as a strategic means for distinctive religious ends. They have incorporated media as an intrinsic component of what Blanton calls their “apparatus of belief,” the set of practices and material attachments that mediates, conducts, and summons both human faith and divine agency at a sensorial level. In the Pentecostal case, such “abrupt space of coincidence between subject and object, spirit and matter” articulates highly organic and visceral matter, like prayerful knees or “prayer bones” hitting the floor, with a number of artifacts and technological extensions. It is epitomized by the phenomenon of “radio tactility,” intercessory prayers accompanied by utterances such as “Lay your hands on the radio as a point of contact and pray with us.”

    What if religion and technology are not only instrumentally connected, but might resonate with each other in their very being? In a context of increasingly mediatized religious presence in the public sphere, this question has gained relevance and occupied many contemporary scholars, from Jacques Derrida and Bernard Stiegler to Hent DeVries, Birgit Meyer, Jeremy Stolow, and others. I believe one of the virtues of Blanton’s particular approach is his situated focus on prayer, instead of religion per se, a category with an allegedly murky genealogy and semantics.

    According to anthropologist Marcel Mauss’s incomplete doctoral thesis On Prayer, prayer is a “fragment of a religion.” It is a privileged object of analysis for scholars of religion, as it condenses much broader doctrinal, moral, and cosmological frameworks of specific religious traditions while setting them in motion. I emphasize the “in motion” because prayer is primarily religion-in-action. It is an effort, maybe even a form of labor, what Mauss calls “an expenditure of physical and moral energy in order to produce certain results.” Mauss predicates prayer’s mental and linguistic components on its volitional core. After all, “to speak is both to act and to think: that is why prayer gives rise to belief and ritual at the same time.” By focusing on the will to pray, Mauss also recognizes the inevitably embodied nature of this practice: “Even when it is entirely mental, with no words spoken, with scarcely even a gesture, it [prayer] is still a voluntary movement or a attitude of the soul.” Later in his work, Mauss reflects more thoroughly on the potentialities of prayer’s repetitive patterns of expenditure, redefining it as a “body technique” among many others.

    An electronic prayer mat or rosary and this list of “Ten Apps and Gadgets to Help You Find Zen” can all be considered technological “extensions” of prayerful senses. But in order to understand their different values, attractions, and functions, one needs first to understand how particular consumers incorporate them into the field of expectations and proclivities nested in their prayer techniques. Putting it more conceptually, technological “affordances” (their inbuilt action possibilities) are always relational, thus arguments about the newness of techno-religion must be balanced with deeper knowledge about the kinematics of prayer these machines already find in place.

    By beginning with prayer, Blanton follows Mauss’s lead and starts amidst action, a place in which what-questions (what is religion, what is prayer, what is technology and media) are necessarily bound to how-questions: how should one invest one’s prayer expenditures, and how will expectations be fulfilled? As anthropologists have long known, this type of question is best answered jointly, with the help of our interlocutors, and Blanton indeed portrays Appalachian Pentecostals as often engaged in debates about how faith can “unleash” miracles and how to get prayers “through.” Consequently, the book integrates postal networks, microphones, and radio sets into a vast set of Pentecostal techniques of devotion, such as excited praise and worship, cacophonous “skein prayer” in tongues, testimonies, and inspired preaching. In a way, in order to gain traction, technological innovations like radio prayers must unveil a sort of arché-technicality of prayer in general, while also shifting it in terms of scale and introducing new tensions.

    The hybrid techno-religious apparatus orchestrated by Pentecostal radio preachers is highly transposable. Oral Roberts, for instance, borrowed this practice in the late 1940s from early Pentecostal healing evangelists, such as Aimee Semple McPherson, but he also legitimized it charismatically, by evoking mystical epiphanies in his testimonies. Moreover, the practice is deemed authentically Christian by Pentecostals simply because “it works,” producing new testimonies from in-studio audiences, which continue its mimetic transposition across vast territories. Blanton shows how, in the hands of Roberts, radio prayers become literally a method, conveyed through theological reasoning and rule-governed behaviors, summarized in manuals such as If you need Healing do these things. The result is a highly rationalized and yet still experimental mystical science, akin to what Michel de Certeau, in his study of early modern Catholic mystics, calls “propaedeutics of rupture.” This is not a religious tradition in a classic sense, with relatively clear-cut theological and institutional limits, but rather a number of techniques and technologies that are authenticated along their very practical circulation and journey of trial-and-error.

    What Blanton calls “radio tactility” is a way of transferring charismatic power (or “the Holy Ghost par”) through media as part of a true healing method. But this method also travels socially like the Holy Ghost, as a boundless and contagious flow that is both self-referential in its transcendental wholeness and affective in its immanent truth-effects. His argument dwells richly in this space of transmission and replication, the “healing line,” a continuous aggregation of human and non-human mediators thematized as “points of contact” and “stand-ins.” Those are cogs in a spiritual, technical, and technological kinematics able to compress time and space into a single flow of experience. This feeling of simultaneity despite geographical distance is enabled, paradoxically, by the Holy Spirit’s very unmediated and electricity-like force. By focusing on motion, Blanton’s narrative is able to trace, instead of simply capture, the inherent itinerancy of Pentecostal spirituality, which is actualized in history through tent revivals as much as through the haptic voice of radio preachers and prayer cloths circulating through postal networks. Blanton’s discussion of the “anointed poetics of breath” is strategic in this regard. Blanton examines in detail radio preachers’ breathing techniques as a charismatic infrastructure underpinning the semantic aspect of their sermons. In this way he locates in the non-possessive, circulating materiality of the voice as charismatic breath (pneuma) the organic basis that is ultimately “extended” by socio-technical innovations. Here, again, Blanton finds good company in Mauss, who has argued in his Manual of Ethnography that “Sounds, breath and gestures can be prayer, in the same way as words. The mythology of the voice is important.”

    Of course, the well-working hybrid machine I reconstituted above is not without tensions, and the second virtue of Blanton’s book I would like to stress is exactly his keen attention to the place of contingency in religious projects. We may say that prayer is always a technique, just like plowing, writing, or riding a bike. One of the evidences supporting this view is that religious subjects are often ranked in terms of prayer competency. Time, dedication, and practical knowledge matter, and prayer virtuosi are considered morally and spiritually closer to God, which shows that prayer is a practice whose performance carries internal goods. In her recent book When God Talks Back, anthropologist Tanya Luhrmann has explored in detail this pedagogical dimension of prayer, showing how evangelicals engage with “the art of hearing God” by actively and methodically tuning in their senses toward this possibility. Anthropologist Charles Hirschkind’s The Ethical Soundscape has explored the relation between media and religion by focusing exactly on the pedagogical convergences between technology and body techniques, in this case by exploring how recorded Islamic sermons are incorporated by Egyptian consumers’ devotional lives as tools for honing a pious sensorium.

    Blanton does recognize the centrality of the religious body as a self-developmental means to the effectiveness of radio prayers and travelling prayer cloths. And yet, maybe because of his focus on healing, thus intercessory expectations, he also shows how a pedagogical approach to prayer might miss the centrality of contingency to practices of faith. Indeed, his narrative makes clear the fact that prayer must be contingent in order to be prayer. Devoid of the risk of failing, it becomes “mechanical,” or even worse, “magical” and “demonic.” Mauss addresses this issue in On Prayer as the difference between prayer and “incantations,” beseeching and conjuring, evoking and invoking. Blanton recognizes a similar tension through Max Müller’s etymological connection between prayer and precariousness.

    When Pentecostals argue that their miracles are already there, given, as a sort of virtuality, but that faith is still needed to “unleash” them, they recognize the same space of alienation to which Müller refers. “Unleashing” miracles is not “producing” them, since the power of prayer rests entirely on active passivity, willful submission, or, again, expenditure. A similar tension affects the new media of prayer introduced by radio shows, since the automatism of technological extensions resonates positively with prayers’ own technical reliance on repetition, intensification, and flow, but these new media also expand the possibility of fetishization of simple conduits into the source of divine agency. Oral Roberts claimed that “points of contact” simply help praying subjects to “unleash their faith,” and yet radio sets are eventually portrayed by testimonies from Appalachians as literally shaking as the anointing of God is channeled through them. How arbitrary and unmotivated are these conduits vis-à-vis the power they help to unleash? There is no unambiguous answer, and Blanton illustrates with richness the tensions thriving in Pentecostals’ mystical sciences, always torn between an empiricist reliance on a “living God,” who backs what he says with deeds and evidences, and the precarious status of faith as “confidence in what we hope for and assurance about what we do not see” (Hebrews 11:1).

    By acknowledging this tension in the productivity of prayer, Hittin’ the Prayer Bones is able to argue that, for Pentecostals, “faith comes by touching” and is “like the clicking of a revolver’s hammer,” but also that such tactile and eventful experience of God is constantly tempered with communicational breakdowns. Misfires make prayer continue to be prayer. In consonance, they rarely lead to crises of faith, disappointment or unbelief, and are likely to even amplify converts’ prayer investments. Key to dwelling anthropologically in this complex existential space is a notion of faith that is both materially shaped, thus dispersed in the world as an apparatus, but also endowed with a particularly fleeting temporality: “faith is perpetually moving just beyond full perceptual grasp of the subject through postal networks, narrative circulations, and the compelling force of talk. Thus it is precisely in the deferred or disjointed space of getting ahead of the self that faith lives and moves and has its being, so to speak.”

    The final point I would like to make is about the sociality of prayer, a topic to which the book makes important contributions. But here there are also a few empty spots, which I would like to explore briefly. When Blanton shows that belief and faith are relatively external, since embedded in, intensified by, and circulated along material conduits, he is already recognizing that prayer is a social practice, one that is cultivated and transmitted amongst others. Such a perspective avoids a functionalist divide between “social structure” and “ritual,” and the necessity of a well-bounded moral community that precedes its practical weaving. This is what contemporary anthropologists would call the performativity of prayer. Another form of sociality addressed by the book is that of praying for others, people whom Pentecostal converts care for, who have their names and problems cited on the radio before anonymous people pray for them. “I wanna ask yous’ people out in the radioland to help us out,” says a pastor. During this practice, the radioland is assembled again in action, while cultivating their shared identity of brothers and sisters in Christ. Such generalized enactment of Christian kinship is modulated interestingly in the book by another phenomenon: the use of kinsfolks as privileged “stand-ins” for intercessory prayer, like praying for a sick mother “out in the radioland” by laying hands on her son’s bodily presence in the studio. These methods exemplify the relationality of prayer as an act of care. As much as the Holy Spirit participates sacramentally on Pentecostal flesh, their flesh can participate on each other with different degrees of closeness along the healing line.

    Generally, because it highlights the relation between technology and prayer, the book does not dwell systematically on these cases. In this sense, it still shares some of the limitations of most recent religion and media scholarship: an excessive fascination with questions of mediation (How can the transcendental immediacy of God persist along such long chains of material mediators?), which leaves relatively untouched questions of morality and belonging concerning media consumers. The radioland is described in the book’s introduction as a “nebulous space where the totality of the dispersed listening audience is imagined as a single community,” and rapidly disappears as a subject of anthropological inquiry. We do not learn much about how it is imagined, with which degree of efficacy, and, more importantly, how broadcasters and consumers relate this diffuse and mediatized body of Christ to more conventional, face-to-face modes of Christian relationality. Is the conventional church entirely substitutable for the electronic church? If not, how do they intercalate? And what kinds of pressures do they produce on each other? These questions would require a more thorough engagement with the particular biographies of believers, which are evoked in the book only fragmentarily, through in-studio testimonies. They would also give us some ethnographic hints about a more general issue concerning mediatized religion: its relation to trust, since, as we know, electronic preachers are famous as much for their public visibility as for the instabilities and moral perils that accompany their call and métier. I mention these absences not because they are vital to the book’s argument, but because it actually opens interesting avenues to rethink them.

    Hittin’ the Prayer Bones is nevertheless an exemplary case of a new form of materialist approach to religion being developed in the anthropology of religion and religious studies. This is not the materialism of Feuerbach or Marx, in which religion appears as spiritualized projections or representations of non-religious forces, but a form of recognizing the emergent entanglements between religious worldmaking and materiality. Compared to other scholars working within this paradigm, Blanton’s approach stands out as particularly “infrastructural.” By infrastructural I do not mean to evoke this notion’s classic theoretical sense, which opposes ideology to material structures; rather, I am thinking about his skillful exploration of zones of isomorphism between religion and material infrastructure. In other words, I am referring to infrastructure in the most conventional sense: the networked, environmental, self-effacing, and flow-like materiality of postal systems, wires, and antennas. Although Blanton never states this openly in the book, I was left with the impression that Pentecostal practices of faith and infrastructure organize the sensible similarly: primarily by setting forces that transcend them in motion while enabling relations in an ecological fashion. It is because they have isomorphic qualities that Pentecostal spirituality and infrastructure become concretely attached in various ways. Such a model of reasoning requires the capacity to “think through things” that anthropologist Claude Lévi-Strauss found among Amerindians, actualized in Blanton’s book through a form of narrativity that often draws from religious materiality sensuous qualities that are also found in the very kinematics of prayer. His discussion of travelling prayer cloths and the “texture of faith” epitomizes this method of thinking and writing. I found this approach extremely useful when it comes to Pentecostals, because it avoids attributing to them a naïve supernaturalism, as if they are simply unaware of the “true” comings and goings of matter. Pentecostals do not live in a parallel, “enchanted” world, nor do they mix “symbolic” immaterial entities, like God, with real artifacts. They dwell in our common world through specific moral and sensorial expectations and grasp divine agency as a modality of motion in it, one that is both actively constructed in terms of receptivity and factually real, like a house. Despite its focus on phenomena prone to be framed as “survivals” of a pre-modern mentality, such as spiritual healing, prayer, and inspired speech, and a geographical area that liberal America often sees as “backward,” Hittin’ the Prayer Bones is fundamentally an ethnography of the contemporary, helping us to understand the proliferation of temporalities and agentive possibilities unleashed from the ecological encounters of humans and machines, religious or otherwise.