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Sacred Violence in Early America offers a sweeping reinterpretation
of the violence endemic to seventeenth-century English colonization
by reexamining some of the key moments of cultural and religious
encounter in North America. Susan Juster explores different forms
of sacred violence-blood sacrifice, holy war, malediction, and
iconoclasm-to uncover how European traditions of ritual violence
developed during the wars of the Reformation were introduced and
ultimately transformed in the New World. Juster's central argument
concerns the rethinking of the relationship between the material
and the spiritual worlds that began with the Reformation and
reached perhaps its fullest expression on the margins of empire.
The Reformation transformed the Christian landscape from an
environment rich in sounds, smells, images, and tactile encounters,
both divine and human, to an austere space of scriptural
contemplation and prayer. When English colonists encountered the
gods and rituals of the New World, they were forced to confront the
unresolved tensions between the material and spiritual within their
own religious practice. Accounts of native cannibalism, for
instance, prompted uneasy comparisons with the ongoing debate among
Reformers about whether Christ was bodily present in the communion
wafer. Sacred Violence in Early America reveals the Old World
antecedents of the burning of native bodies and texts during the
seventeenth-century wars of extermination, the prosecution of
heretics and blasphemers in colonial courts, and the destruction of
chapels and mission towns up and down the North American seaboard.
At the heart of the book is an analysis of "theologies of violence"
that gave conceptual and emotional shape to English colonists'
efforts to construct a New World sanctuary in the face of enemies
both familiar and strange: blood sacrifice, sacramentalism, legal
and philosophical notions of just and holy war, malediction, the
contest between "living" and "dead" images in Christian idology,
and iconoclasm.
Religion and empire were inseparable forces in the early modern
Atlantic world. Religious passions and conflicts drove much of the
expansionist energy of post-Reformation Europe, providing both a
rationale and a practical mode of organizing the dispersal and
resettlement of hundreds of thousands of people from the Old World
to the New World. Exhortations to conquer new peoples were the
lingua franca of Western imperialism, and men like the mystically
inclined Christopher Columbus were genuinely inspired to risk their
lives and their fortunes to bring the gospel to the Americas. And
in the thousands of religious refugees seeking asylum from the
vicious wars of religion that tore the continent apart in the
sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, these visionary explorers
found a ready pool of migrants—English Puritans and Quakers,
French Huguenots, German Moravians, Scots-Irish
Presbyterians—equally willing to risk life and limb for a chance
to worship God in their own way. Focusing on the formative period
of European exploration, settlement, and conquest in the Americas,
from roughly 1500 to 1760, Empires of God brings together
historians and literary scholars of the English, French, and
Spanish Americas around a common set of questions: How did
religious communities and beliefs create empires, and how did
imperial structures transform New World religions? How did
Europeans and Native Americans make sense of each other's spiritual
systems, and what acts of linguistic and cultural transition did
this entail? What was the role of violence in New World religious
encounters? Together, the essays collected here demonstrate the
power of religious ideas and narratives to create kingdoms both
imagined and real.
The age of revolution, in which kings were dethroned, radical
ideals of human equality embraced, and new constitutions written,
was also the age of prophecy. Neither an archaic remnant nor a
novel practice, prophecy in the eighteenth century was rooted both
in the primitive worldview of the Old Testament and in the vibrant
intellectual environment of the philosophers and their political
allies, the republicans. In Doomsayers: Anglo-American Prophecy in
the Age of Revolution, Susan Juster examines the culture of
prophecy in Great Britain and the United States from 1765 to 1815
side by side with the intellectual and political transformations
that gave the period its historical distinction as the era of
enlightened rationalism and democratic revolution. Although
sometimes viewed as madmen or fools, prophets of the 1790s and
early 1800s were very much products of a liberal commercial
society, even while they registered their disapproval of the values
and practices of that society and fought a determined campaign to
return Protestant Anglo-America to its biblical moorings. They
enjoyed greater visibility than their counterparts of earlier eras,
thanks to the creation of a vigorous new public sphere of
coffeehouses, newspapers, corresponding societies, voluntary
associations, and penny pamphlets. Prophecy was no longer just the
art of applying biblical passages to contemporary events; it was
now the business of selling both terror and reassurance to eager
buyers. Tracking the careers of several hundred men and women in
Britain and North America, most of ordinary background, who
preached a message of primitive justice that jarred against the
cosmopolitan sensibilities of their audiences, Doomsayers explores
how prophetic claims were formulated, challenged, tested, advanced,
and abandoned. The stories of these doomsayers, whose colorful
careers entertained and annoyed readers across the political
spectrum, challenge the notion that religious faith and the
Enlightenment represented fundamentally alien ways of living in and
with the world. From the debates over religious enthusiasm staged
by churchmen and the literati to the earnest offerings of ordinary
men and women to speak to and for God, Doomsayers shows that the
contest between prophets and their critics for the allegiance of
the Anglo-American reading public was part of a broader
recalibration of the norms and values of civic discourse in the age
of revolution.
Follows the influences of race and gender on the Protestant
tradition in America from the late eighteenth to the early
twentieth century.
Throughout most of the eighteenth century and particularly during
the religious revivals of the Great Awakening, evangelical women in
colonial New England participated vigorously in major church
decisions, from electing pastors to disciplining backsliding
members. After the Revolutionary War, however, women were excluded
from political life, not only in their churches but in the new
republic as well. Reconstructing the history of this change, Susan
Juster shows how a common view of masculinity and femininity shaped
both radical religion and revolutionary politics in America. Juster
compares contemporary accounts of Baptist women and men who voice
their conversion experiences, theological opinions, and
proccupation with personal conflicts and pastoral controversies. At
times, the ardent revivalist message of spiritual individualism
appeared to sanction sexual anarchy. According to one contemporary,
revival attempted "to make all things common, wives as well as
goods." The place of women at the center of evangelical life in the
mid-eighteenth century, Juster finds, reflected the extent to which
evangelical religion itself was perceived as "feminine"-emotional,
sensional, and ultimately marginal. In the 1760s, the Baptist order
began to refashion its mission, and what had once been a community
of saints-often indifferent to conventional moral or legal
constraints-was transformed into a society of churchgoers with a
concern for legitimacy. As the church was reconceptualized as a
"household" ruled by "father" figures, "feminine" qualities came to
define the very essence of sin. Juster observes that an image of
benevolent patriarchy threatened by the specter of female power was
a central motif of the wider political culture during the age of
democratic revolutions.
Follows the influences of race and gender on the Protestant
tradition in America from the late eighteenth to the early
twentieth century.
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