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New Age and Neopagan Religions in America

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From Shirley MacLaine's spiritual biography Out on a Limb to the teenage witches in the film The Craft, New Age and Neopagan beliefs have made sensationalistic headlines. In the mid- to late 1990s,...
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  • 10 October 2006
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From Shirley MacLaine's spiritual biography Out on a Limb to the teenage witches in the film The Craft, New Age and Neopagan beliefs have made sensationalistic headlines. In the mid- to late 1990s, several important scholarly studies of the New Age and Neopagan movements were published, attesting to academic as well as popular recognition that these religions are a significant presence on the contemporary North American religious landscape. Self-help books by New Age channelers and psychics are a large and growing market; annual spending on channeling, self-help businesses, and alternative health care is at $10 to $14 billion; an estimated 12 million Americans are involved with New Age activities; and American Neopagans are estimated at around 200,000. New Age and Neopagan Religions in America introduces the beliefs and practices behind the public faces of these controversial movements, which have been growing steadily in late twentieth- and early twenty-first-century America.

What is the New Age movement, and how is it different from and similar to Neopaganism in its underlying beliefs and still-evolving practices? Where did these decentralized and eclectic movements come from, and why have they grown and flourished at this point in American religious history? What is the relationship between the New Age and Neopaganism and other religions in America, particularly Christianity, which is often construed as antagonistic to them? Drawing on historical and ethnographic accounts, Sarah Pike explores these questions and offers a sympathetic yet critical treatment of religious practices often marginalized yet soaring in popularity. The book provides a general introduction to the varieties of New Age and Neopagan religions in the United States today as well as an account of their nineteenth-century roots and emergence from the 1960s counterculture. Covering such topics as healing, gender and sexuality, millennialism, and ritual experience, it also furnishes a rich description and analysis of the spiritual worlds and social networks created by participants.

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Price: $32.00
Pages: 256
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Imprint: Columbia University Press
Series: Columbia Contemporary American Religion Series
Publication Date: 10 October 2006
ISBN: 9780231124034
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

RELIGION / General, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Sociology of Religion, RELIGION / Comparative Religion

This work offers general readers a scholarly assessment of Neopaganism and the New Age movement.... Pike provides an overview of key themes of these movements and traces their beliefs back to 19th-century traditions of mesmerism, seances, Swedenborgianism, and Theosophy.... her book provides a necessary complement to Margot Adler'sDrawing Down the Moon and Paul Heelas'sThe New Age Movement.
Sarah M. Pike (PhD, Religious Studies, Indiana) is Professor of Comparative Religion and Humanities at California State University Chico. She is the author of Earthly Bodies, Magical Selves: Contemporary Pagans and the Search ofr Coomunity (California, 2001), New Age and Neopagans in America (Columbia, 2004), and For the Wild: Ritual and Commitment in Radical Eco-Activism (California, 2017). Her interests include new religious movements, religion and ecology, and ritual studies.

Ancient Mysteries in Contemporary America
Introduction to the Religious Worlds of Neopagans and New Agers
Early Varieties of Alternative Spirituality in American Religious History
The 1960s Watershed Years
Healing and Techniques of the Self
"All Acts of Love and Pleasure Are My Rituals": Sex, Gender, and the Sacred
The Age of Aquarius