In this work, Anderson Blanton illuminates how prayer, faith, and
healing are intertwined with technologies of sound reproduction and
material culture in the charismatic Christian worship of southern
Appalachia. From the radios used to broadcast prayer to the
curative faith cloths circulated through the postal system,
material objects known as spirit-matter have become essential since
the 1940s, Blanton argues, to the Pentecostal community's
understanding and performances of faith.
Hittin' the Prayer Bones draws on Blanton's extensive site
visits with church congregations, radio preachers and their
listeners inside and outside the broadcasting studios, and more
than thirty years of recorded charismatic worship made available to
him by a small Christian radio station. In documenting the
transformation and consecration of everyday objects through
performances of communal worship, healing prayer, and chanted
preaching, Blanton frames his ethnographic research in the
historiography of faith healing and prayer, as well as theoretical
models of materiality and transcendence. At the same time, his work
affectingly conveys the feelings of horror, healing, and humor that
are unleashed in practitioners as they experience, in their own
words, the sacred, healing presence of the Holy Ghost.