Night Journeys:
The Power of Dreams in Transatlantic Quaker Culture |
| Carla Gerona |
| 256 pages, 6 x 9 |
| Cloth ISBN 0-8139-2310-7 $39.50 |
 |
Early modern Quakers looked to their dreams to gain spiritual
insight and developed a potent system of dreamwork that acted
simultaneously as a device for gaining and retaining authority
and as a democratizing force. Night Journeys recounts
how Quakers on both sides of the Atlantic turned their sleeping
experiences into powerful stories that advanced a more inclusive--but
still imperial--vision of colonial and Revolutionary America.
Quakers did not keep their dreams to themselves. On the American
mainland, Caribbean plantations, and in the British Isles, Quakers
were competing to shape their imperial culture when they circulated
dreams beyond meetinghouse walls and influenced larger transatlantic
movements for reform.
Covering a broad time span that begins with the English civil
war and ends with the creation of the American republic, Carla
Gerona argues that dreams provided Quakers with mental maps to
influence the values of their emerging colonial society, usually,
though not exclusively, in progressive ways. Night visions, as
Quakers often termed their dreams, contributed to social and cultural
changes such as the abolition of slavery and religious reform.
Simultaneously, dreams helped Quakers define and delineate their
mission in America and the world, fostering innovative concepts
of individuality, community, nation, and empire..
Carla Gerona is Assistant Professor of History
at the University of Texas, Dallas.