Body and Soul: A Sympathetic History of American Spiritualism
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| Robert S. Cox |
| 288 pages, 6 x 9 |
| 13 b&w illustrations |
| Cloth ISBN 0-8139-2230-5 $45.00 |
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A product of the spiritual hothouse of the Second Great Awakening, Spiritualism became
the fastest growing religion in the nation during the 1850s, and one of the principal responses to the
widespread perception that American society was descending into atomistic particularity.
In Body and Soul, Robert Cox shows how Spiritualism sought to transform sympathy into social practice, arguing that each individual, living and dead, was poised within a nexus of affect, and through the active propagation of these sympathetic bonds, a new and coherent society would emerge. Phenomena such as spontaneous somnambulism and sympathetic communion with the deadwhether through séance or spirit photography
were ways of transcending the barriers dissecting the American body politic, including the ultimate barrier, death. Drawing equally upon social, occult, and physiological registers, Spiritualism created a unique social physiology in which mind was integrated into body and body into society, leading Spiritualists into earthly social reforms, such as womens rights and antislavery.
From the beginning, however, Spiritualist political and social expression was far more diverse than has
previously been recognized, encompassing distinctive proslavery and antiegalitarian strains, and in the wake
of racial and political adjustments following the Civil War, the movement began to fracture. Cox traces the
eventual dissolution of Spiritualism through the contradictions of its various regional and racial factions and
through their increasingly circumscribed responses to a changing world. In the end, he concludes, the history
of Spiritualism was written in the limits of sympathy, and not its limitless potential.
Robert S. Cox is Curator of Manuscripts at the American Philosophical Society.