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Nature Religion in America - From the Algonkian Indians to the New Age (Paperback, New edition)
Loot Price: R960
Discovery Miles 9 600
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Nature Religion in America - From the Algonkian Indians to the New Age (Paperback, New edition)
Series: Chicago History of American Religion CHAR
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Albanese's provocative, chronological view of the diverse and
changing American responses to nature proposes an
uninstitutionalized religion at the center of the American
experience. The author (Religion/U.C. at Santa Barbara) is as
delighted with her discovery of a nature religion as a prospector
who's hit pay dirt. Acknowledging at the outset that the spiritual
orientations of Americans and the Anglo-American Puritans stand as
a "classic study in religious difference," Albanese traces shifts
in the settlers' view of wilderness as spiritual testing ground. By
1776, what Albanese calls "republican religion" was proclaiming
nature as an ideal that mirrored American vigor and purity, with
Jefferson adapting the Enlightenment to proclaim that the "laws of
nature" entitled the republic to an equal station "among the powers
of the earth." The author charts the passage of nature religion
from the Doctrine of Manifest Destiny and the yahoo frontier hero
to the gentler Transcendentalists and early conservationists, and
shows how the "physical religion" of the homeopaths and
chiropractors of the 19th century prefigures today's healing
movements. Th Albanese, America's church is democratic, comfortable
with Mary Baker Eddy and Annie Dillard in the same pew, and
admitting as members anyone who has ever sought meaning, morality,
inspiration, and even justification for political aims in nature.
Well-written and researched, Albanese's work is vivid and original
cultural and intellectual history - but perhaps less-than-solid
theology, as she attempts to drive an unruly herd of Quakers,
mind-healers, hydropaths, Native Americans, Greens, and "the king
of the wild frontier" into the same corral. (Kirkus Reviews)
This ground-breaking study reveals an unorganized and previously
unacknowledged religion at the heart of American culture. Nature,
Albanese argues, has provided a compelling religious center
throughout American history.
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