Chapter 1 Preface Chapter 2 Introduction Chapter 3 How the Ravens Came to the Lake: Wicca's Birth and Atlantic Passage Chapter 4 Calling It 'Nature Religion' Chapter 5 The Rhetoric of Wicca Chapter 6 The Playboy and the Witch: Wicca and Popular Culture Chapter 7 West Coast Wicca, Self-Invention, and the "Gardnerian Magnet" Chapter 8 A Search for Paradise: Other New Pagan Religions Chapter 9 Final Thoughts
Chas Clifton is professor of English at Colorado State University-Pueblo. He is an editor for The Pomegranate: The International Journal of Pagan Studies, a peer-reviewed religious studies journal, as well as the Pagan Studies Series by AltaMira Press.
One of the essential books on paganism by the Huffington Post!
The history of any religious movement can get murky. But the
history of American Paganism--with so many invented lineages, so
many solitary practitioners, so much resistance to staid
definition, so much hiddenness--is especially hard to decipher. But
here in Her Hidden Children Chas Clifton tells many
never-before-told stories of the origins of Paganism and Wicca in
the United States. The people, publications, and organizations that
allowed Paganism and Wicca to set roots down in American soil and
become "nature religion" are revealed in delicious detail. With a
timeline, glossary, and photos of important figures, Her Hidden
Children is compelling and important for any student of Paganism or
American Religion.
*The Huffington Post*
Chas Clifton has provided a foundational step toward the history of
a new religion that is still in the process of emergence. He has
brought forth figures, movements, and a constructive historical
periodization of which future scholars of Wicca and Paganism will
take note.
*H-Net: Humanities and Social Science Reviews Online*
Anyone interested in exploring the scaffolding from which feminist
Wicca launched itself would do well to delve into this thorough and
well-organized history.
*Gnosis Cafe Blog*
He does an admirable job of providing for the first time a formal
history of the movement. His book contains a timeline, glossary,
and bibliography, all of which enhance the book's usefulness. This
book is highly recommended for undergraduate as well as general
readers.
*Magic, Ritual, and Witchcraft*
Witchcraft is both scholarly interest and avocation for Clifton so
he is well situated to trace its rise in the US...One only wishes
this excellent study went deeper into the subject. Summing Up:
Recommended.
*CHOICE*
Her Hidden Children is a rare gem of contemporary Pagan history and
ethnography. ...An important and welcome contribution to academic
and non-scholar Pagans alike.
*The Pomegranate*
Clifton does a masterful job in articulating how Wicca began as a
tradition focused on fertility and mystery rites....Clifton
includes a wealth of rich material throughout the book....Her
Hidden Children, while possessing the precision and research
expected of an academic work, maintains an approachable style that
welcomes the lay reader. It is a work of critical significance to
the community, and a must-have for any religious library.
*Pangaia*
Simply the best single work yet written on the history of American
Paganism. It is perceptive, intelligent, sympathetic and
persuasive; tactful without sparing scholarly appraisal; personal
without losing objectivity; and constantly engaging. It embodies a
beautiful mixture of warmth and rigour, and deals strictly with
aspects of the subject that can be appraised from precise data,
revealing to me- at least- how much more of the latter there was
than I had ever thought.
*Ronald Hutton, Professor of History, Bristol University*
Chas S. Clifton's Her Hidden Children is a pioneering look at the
history of Neopagan religions in the U.S. Written with the
sensitivity and humor of an insider and the dispassion of an
outsider, it traces the early development of one of the
fastest-growing religious movements in America today, and its
uniquely American use of the trope of "nature" to create its
identity. This book should be invaluable to scholars of religion,
American Studies, and the burgeoning field of Pagan Studies.
*Sabina Magliocco, California State University-Northridge, and
author of Witching Culture: Folklore and Neo-Paganism in
America*
An excellent introduction to contemporary Paganism in North
America, and required reading for those who wish to understand the
growth and appeal of Wicca and Witchcraft in late modern society.
Clifton writes from a wealth of experience as a modern Pagan, but
with a critical and insightful eye that is so often missing. He has
done stellar service to both the Pagan and scholarly
communities.
*Douglas E. Cowan, Author of Cyberhenge: Modern Pagans on the
Internet *
Finally a history of American Paganism from someone who knows the
subject inside and out! Chas Clifton has chosen with this book to
lay down some basic parameters for talking about modern Pagan
history in America. He has done yeoman's work here and should be
highly praised. An essential book for anyone interested in our
history, and how that history is shaping the future of modern
Paganism. The bar has just been raised.
*Jason Pitzl-Waters, The Wild Hunt: Religion, politics, music and
culture. A modern Pagan perspective.*
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