Chapter 1 Introduction: Gnosticism and the Erosion of Public Life Chapter 2 The Moral Revolution of Metaphysics: The Rebirth of Gnosticism in Modern Times; The Public Crisis of Liberal Religion; Women and Fractured Appearances; Gnosticism and the Reform Impulse Chapter 3 New Thought and the Cosmic Sphere of Women: Emma Curtis Hopkins and Women's Alienation; Ursula Gestefeld, Therapeutic Space, and the Claims of Duty; Lilian Whiting's Muddle of Manners: Taste, Appearances, and the A-Cosmic Self Chapter 4 The Metaphysics of Nationalism: Abby Morton Diaz, the Emersonian Inheritance, and the Cult of Oneness; Edward Bellamy's Passion for the Nude in Things of Thought; The Theosophical Ensoulment of Nationalism; The Diseased and Discordant Elements of the Body Chapter 5 Cultural Experimentation in the New Age: Gnostic Syncretism and Its Dearth of Critics; The Syncretic Cultus of Greenacre: A Peaceful Thought Colony Chapter 6 Everyday Physics: Gnostic Theology and the Bohemian Manners of Mass Culture: The Stilted Esthetics of New Thought; Feminine Bohemianism; From the Higher Self to the Universal I WANT Chapter 7 Conclusion: The Empowered Self and Gnostic Spiritual Flight
Catherine Tumber is a staff editor for the Boston Phoenix. She holds a Ph.D. in history from the University of Rochester.
Here is a book that shows, in fresh detail, how what Harold Bloom
has called 'the American religion' has been emptying our politics
and our private lives of meaning, in favor of tired fantasies of
vacuous well-being. Of course this 'new age spirituality' will not
prove unique to the United States, but Catherine Tumber helps us
see why it is being pioneered here, fungus like, out of our
uncontrolled capitalism. Tumber's mentor, Christopher Lasch, would
be proud. The rest of us can be warned.
*Donald Meyer, Wesleyan University*
In a clear and accessible voice, Tuber credits gnosticism's radical
turn away from the world not only with facilitating women's
discovery of their higher moral and spiritual selves but also with
bequeathing them crucial theological resources that ironically
enabled them to transform the very world they were attempting to
escape.
*Journal of American History*
An important addition to the literature, engaging, and
scholarly.
*Utopian Studies*
Catherine Tumber’s lucidly written and forcefully argued book
rescues New Thought from its genteel backwater and places it at the
center of a depressing story of a feminist contribution to the
decline of public life. In the tradition of Christopher Lasch,
historical analysis becomes cultural criticism. This is a provoking
book.
*James Turner, University of Notre Dame*
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