The Thing About ReligionMain MenuIntroduction to Religious ThingsGuide to the GalleriesBehind the Mask - MesoamericaCross My Heart, Hope to DieSacred Texts from ChinaLet There Be LightImportant TermsMichael Hsu8a3ef4932b27ce698c4ec20fba6bf5cefb1fa5f3Joanne Lee50d4ca288f17b17f98af75f4ebc6b7cb87058cfeKimberly Melgoza9a781379e949b57bd2d31e49d830a046802d55e5Nhat Ngoc66dcb86bd04ce0f71a271129eb00ca9b1ead4d4
Things help make religions in our multi-sensory world.
Even the most iconoclastic faith traditions rely on haptic encounters within a material environment.
We make religions based on beliefs and ideas, but we also make them with things--not just purposely crafted liturgical items but also ordinary things such as clothing and food, art, buildings, natural objects, historical artifacts, and human bodies, among others. (1) Such things become the objects of religions (2), which we use in purpose-built landscapes, in wildernesses, and at home. We see, touch, hear, smell, taste, perform, and negotiate our religions everywhere, every day.
This gallery contains four interrelated collections of Religious Things drawn from diverse cultures around the globe and across time. Each gallery has been curated by a different student expert. Curators researched and selected the items in their galleries in response to a particular problem or theme in the study of material religions, then composed an interpretative essay and a label for each item. Themes and terms (collectively authored) link objects among the four collections. A bibliography is attached to each gallery.
You can:
Choose a path and explore a gallery.
Search across galleries by following a theme word.
This virtual exhibition of Religious Things is an ongoing collaborative project that we hope will grow. April, 2021(1) Useful studies of material religions include: Colleen McDannell, Material Christianity: Religion and Popular Culture in America (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1995); David Morgan, Images at Work: The Material Culture of Enchantment (New York: Oxford University Press, 2018); Dick Houtman and Birgit Meyer, eds., Things: Religions and the Question of Materiality (New York: Fordham University Press, 2011). (2) Bill Brown, "Thing Theory," Critical Inquiry 38 (2001): 1-22.