Kyle Byron is a PhD candidate in the Department for the Study of Religion at University of Toronto in the area of Religion, Culture, Politics. He is currently a curator at New Directions in the Anthropology of Christianity. His research interests include the anthropology of religion/secularism/Christianity, American religious history, religion, gender, and sexuality, and the politics of religious revival. His dissertation focuses on the practice of street preaching in the United States and Canada. Drawing on archival and ethnographic methods, this research develops an understanding of religious revival not as an event, but as a question—or problem-space—in which Christians, their critics, and the scholars that study them develop different understandings of history, agency, and the nature of religion and secularism. His most recent publication, “Weapons for Witnessing: American Street Preaching and the Rhythms of War,” explores how the rhythms of infrastructure and U.S. military strategy shape the practice of street preaching.