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From about 1740 to 1850, evangelical Protestantism became a major
cultural force in virtually all areas of America. Emerging from
this religious movement was a rich vernacular literature of
conversion narratives and spiritual autobiographies-writings in
which believers described their own salvation in hopes of
converting others. In The Self and the Sacred, Rodger M. Payne
examines these neglected texts in depth, focusing particularly on
what they reveal about notions of selfhood and how those notions
were incorporated into Christian orthodoxy. As Payne explains,
conversion narratives point to a fascinating paradox that became
evident among evangelicals as they were confronted by the
disruptions and discontinuities marking their culture's passage
into modernity. On the one hand, these narratives asserted the
traditional Christian values of humility and self-effacement-an
annihilation of the self in the divine. On the other hand, they
created a discourse that allowed one to embrace the modern idea of
an autonomous self: only by speaking from personal experience could
a convert testify to the power of God. "Despite protests to the
contrary," Payne writes, "the central character of any conversion
account, spiritual diary, or spiritual autobiography was the
convert, not God." Using the theology of Jonathan Edwards as a key
example, Payne shows how Puritan piety encouraged the development
of autobiographical spiritual narratives. He goes on to explain the
ways in which the discourse of conversion functioned apart from the
control of the church and marked the growth of evangelicalism into
"a discursive community." Finally, he considers how the language of
conversion functioned as a "rhetorical space" in which believers
situated themselves individually within sacred space and time
before turning back to society with a renewed regard for others.
Drawing throughout on the insights of such theorists as Michel
Foucault and Victor Turner, Payne's penetrating analysis reveals
the early conversion accounts as mythic texts through which the
modern self emerged. The Author: Rodger M. Payne is associate
professor of religious studies at Louisiana State University. He is
editor-in-chief of The Journal of Southern Religion, an electronic
publication available on the World Wide Web.
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