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An Ordered Love - Sex Roles and Sexuality in Victorian Utopias--The Shakers, the Mormons, and the Oneida Community (Paperback, New edition)
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An Ordered Love - Sex Roles and Sexuality in Victorian Utopias--The Shakers, the Mormons, and the Oneida Community (Paperback, New edition)
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An Ordered Love is the first detailed study of sex roles in the
utopian communities that proposed alternatives to monogamous
marriage: The Shakers (1779-1890), the Mormons (1843-90), and the
Oneida Community (1848-79). The lives of men and women changed
substantially when they joined one of the utopian communities.
Louis J. Kern challenges the commonly held belief that Mormon
polygamy was uniformly downgrading to women and that Oneida
pantagamy and Shaker celibacy were liberating for them. Rather,
Kern asserts that changes in sexual behavior and roles for women
occurred in ideological environments that assumed women were
inferior and needed male guidance. An elemental distrust of women
denied the Victorian belief in their moral superiority, attacked
the sanctity of the maternal role, and institutionalized the
dominance of men over women. These utopias accepted the
revolutionary idea that the pleasure bond was the essence of
marriage. They provided their members with a highly developed
theological and ideological position that helped them cope with the
ambiguities and anxieties they felt during a difficult transitional
stage in social mores. Analysis of the theological doctrines of
these communities indicates how pervasive sexual questions were in
the minds of the utopians and how closely they were related to both
reform (social perfection) and salvation (individual perfection).
These communities saw sex as the point at which the demands of
individual selfishness and the social requirements of
self-sacrifice were in most open conflict. They did not offer their
members sexual license, but rather they established ideals of
sexual orderliness and moral stability and sought to provide a
refuge from the rampant sexual anxieties of Victorian culture. Kern
examines the critical importance of considerations of sexuality and
sexual behavior in these communities, recognizing their value as
indications of larger social and cultural tensions. Using the
insights of history, psychology, and sociology, he investigates the
relationships between the individual and society, ideology and
behavior, and thought and action as expressed in the sexual life of
these three communities. Previously unused manuscript sources on
the Oneida Community and Shaker journals and daybooks reveal
interesting and sometimes startling information on sexual behavior
and attitudes. |Focusing on the War of 1898, Louis Perez presents
both a critique of the conventional historiography and an alternate
history of the war that is informed by Cuban sources.
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