Search the Products Store

Search the Book Store

Religious Book Store Index

Home







Religious Book Store > Religious books beginning with N

More details of book titled: Nature Religion in America: From the Algonkian Indians to the New Age (Chicago History of American Religion)

Nature Religion in America: From the Algonkian Indians to the New Age (Chicago History of American Religion)

Author: Catherine L. Albanese
Published: 1991-09-24
List price: $24.00
Our price: $24.00
Usually ships in 24 hours
As of: January 05th, 2009 09:39:09 PM
Customer comments on this selection.

Religious Indispensible for studying U.S. Religious History
Catherine Albanese's treatise on Nature Religion in the U.S. is probably her best known work, although it is by no means her only area of focus. In this volume, she defines and defends what she calls "Nature Religion."

And its an impressive set of drawn-out sketches and themes-- admittedly just one of many possible ways to map this space. Algonkian Amerindian religion is impressively overviewed, and the role of "Nature" here (a European concept) is dissolved into a complex interlocking set of relationships between Powers, Places, and Persons, both Human and Other-Than-Human. For the Puritans, Nature was abstracted into all that was "Other," usually a place of wilderness and evil--a Place to be feared. Although, as Albanese points out, precedents exist in Christian history for the wilderness as a place of testing and purification. The new republicanism from the conservative American "revolution" fostered a "wilderness eucharist" mentality--holding Nature sacred as something to be ingested, thereby becomed (and overcomed).

Yet other turns no less revelant today are covered. Transcendentalism and its associated 'heathen' ambiguous reverance for Nature are documented, both in the paradoxical sense of Nature as the Ultimate and Nature as a illusion (or correspondence for the Ultimate. Both of these senses are inherited in contemporary Goddess worship and the different, but related phenomenon of New Age religion, while each of them individually leads Albanese to wilderness preservation ideology and Christian Science/Mind cure movements.

For Albanese, this protean concept contains its own multivalency, its own pluralism, and therefore tends to recede in influence and importance the more a particular offshoot institutionalizes and fossilizes. It is a voice more suited to a prophetic mindset than a priestly mindset, although that too could be possible, it seems. Excellent and challenging work to uncover and begin to document this counter-covenantal thread throughout American history and religion. Albanese freely admits to inventing the term herself--but she is correct in that using it as a frame of reference, for both elite and popular culture, for both empirical and cultural facts, tells us something very important about religion in the United States.


Religious good
state living in, name of indians, etc.

Similar Listings

Book cover of A Republic of Mind and Spirit: A Cultural History of American Metaphysical Religion.A Republic of Mind and Spirit: A Cultural History of American Metaphysical Religion
Book cover of Making Nature Sacred: Literature, Religion, and Environment in America from the Puritans to the Present.Making Nature Sacred: Literature, Religion, and Environment in America from the Puritans to the Present
Book cover of Reconsidering Nature Religion (Rockwell Lecture Series).Reconsidering Nature Religion (Rockwell Lecture Series)
Book cover of Faith in Nature: Environmentalism As Religious Quest (Weyerhaeuser Environmental Books).Faith in Nature: Environmentalism As Religious Quest (Weyerhaeuser Environmental Books)
Book cover of The Schopenhauer Cure: A Novel (P.S.).The Schopenhauer Cure: A Novel (P.S.)
Our Religious book picks:


Search the Religious Products Store
Keywords:   


LCS Amazon Store 2.5 © 2009