James Bielo's Words upon the Word is a short, intelligent, and well-written analysis of what happens when Protestant Christians who live in the United States come together in small and medium-sized groups to read the bible . . .this book must be classified as a significant contribution to our understanding of Protestantism in the contemporary United States. -- James S. Bielo * Sociology of Religion *
An important methodological and theoretical advance in the study of Biblicism and the anthropology of Christianity. Bielos research is excellent, and he asks all the right questions. Words Upon the Word is on my very short list of essential readings for the study of the Bible's reception and use. -- Brian Malley,author of How the Bible Works: An Anthropological Study of Evangelical Biblicism
At long last, there is now a sustained analysis of how conservative Protestants collectively generate and disseminate scriptural interpretations. And it turns out that the process is rarely smooth and easy. Bielo's book shows how the Bible is a living documenta source of both discussion and debateamong conservative Christians. -- John P. Bartkowski,author of The Promise Keepers: Servants, Soldiers, and Godly Men
Words Upon the Word is a model of ethnographic reflexivity and methodological transparency. . .ethnographies like this one will remind everyone else that, to some extent, they may still be right. -- Omri Elisha,CUNY Queens College
Given the centrality of Bible study to American evangelical life, the relative dearth of scholarly investigation of Bible studies is striking. Anthropologist James Bielo has helped fill this significant lacuna. * Books & Culture *
Bielo examines the importance of bible study for evangelical belief, institutional life, and interaction with nonbelievers. In analyzing the vitality of these groups, Bielo also adds complexity to our understanding of the intellectual processes of biblical literalists... Bielo has created a useful analysis of an underrecognized (sic) civic activity and has illuminated the complexity of evangelical intellectual processes. * American Ethnologist *
Bielos use of discourse theory is among the best I have seen in terms of its clarity and coherence. Simply put, at every point in the book the reader knows exactly what Bielo is talking about, what its implications are, and how it relates to empirical evidence. The book is a pleasure to read... Overall, Bielos study offers important claims about evangelical Christian culture and biblicist practices supported by a first-rate ethnography and clear analysis. It is recommended for all students of U.S. religiosity, Christianity, and reading. * American Anthropologist *
The book advances scholarly understanding of an important practice that shapes the community, piety, and politics of many Americans each week. The book is also a model for sophisticated ethnographic work on religious practices. * Choice *
This is a very good introduction to and analysis of small Bible study in evangelical life...Bielo's analysis...provides readers with rich material. * Journal of Linguistic Anthropology *
What gives this book an edge beyond previous research is the extensive qualitative data it draws upon; it is a relatively short book based upon an impressive amount of fieldwork... The strengths of the work include its conciseness, readability, and rich but selective use of conversations extracted from Bielos vast ethnographic data. Wisely, each of the chapters draws evidence from one particular small groupa group whose meeting culture nicely highlights the theme he is exploringrather than extracting bits and pieces from his total data set of 19 groups... This text will, hopefully, attract more attention to the field of small group research, a large and diverse field ripe and waiting for further scholarly investigation. * Studies in Religion/Sciences Religieuses *