"Compelling . . . a thought-provoking addition to scholarship on religion, history, and culture."Publishers Weekly
"So, although Before Religion understandably comes well after many of the works that helped to establish this field of study, it is likely the best way into the literature on religion for the newcomer (and thus Nongbris work has the effect of helping to constitute this focus as a legitimate specialty). While hardly being a textbook, its shorter chapters and command over a wide literature, coupled with his many practical historical examples, makes it very useful in a variety of class settings (whether undergraduate or graduate)."Russell T. McCutcheon, Numen
"A significant contribution . . . a clear and carefully written book."Naomi Goldenberg, Critical Religion
"Nongbri writes with admirable clarity, and with the historians grasp of detail, to encapsulate both recent innovations in theorizing religion and the religions, and the persistence of unexamined assumptions that fail to grasp recent contextualization of religion as European and modern. Nongbris concise account within a single volume is a valuable resource for research and teaching."Jenny Daggers, Liverpool Hope University
"Recent scholarship exposing the modern origin of religion has awaited a treatise precisely like this: a wide-ranging yet careful exploration of the prehistory of the powerful idea. Written with clarity, ease, and grace, it is exceedingly informative and provocative."Tomoko Masuzawa, author of The Invention of World Religions: Or, How European Universalism Was Preserved in the Language of Pluralism
"This book provides a wonderfully clear and concise account of our modern notion of religion. Written with erudition and insight, it challenges us to rethink everything we have thought about religions, past and present."Peter Harrison, The University of Queensland
"This lucid, broad and well-documented book focuses on the crucial periods of late antiquity and early modernity. In it, Brent Nongbri makes a convincing case for a more careful and self-conscious use of the term religion. A remarkable synthesis."Guy G. Stroumsa, author of A New Science: the Discovery of Religion in the Age of Reason
"In this brief but challenging book Brent Nongbri defamiliarizes the notion of religion as commonly used. Even if one does not agree with all of his conclusions, the study of 'religion,' be it in antiquity or today, will never be the same after the standards set by his book."Jan Bremmer, University of Groningen
"Inevitably, we use our own concepts to make sense of the past; failing to realize this, however, is an indictment of our work. Luckily, Brent Nongbris genealogy of the concept religion will help keep scholars honest by making it tougher for them to portray their modern interpretations as disinterested descriptions."Russell T. McCutcheon, author of Manufacturing Religion: The Discourse on Sui Generis Religion and the Politics of Nostalgia