My Experience Or Foot Prints Of A Presbyterian To Spiritualism PDF Download

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My Experience; Or

My Experience; Or
Author: Francis H. Smith
Publisher:
Total Pages: 244
Release: 1860
Genre: Christian life
ISBN:

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A mixture of autobiography and spirit communications. The author describes his conversion to Spiritualism after attending a séance, and describes further "circles" and the Spirits who visit them, including those of Sir Humphry Davy, Edgar Allen Poe (who communicates in verse form), Dr. Franklin, Sir Walter Scott, and others, as well as discussions of the nature of the spirit world.


My Experience

My Experience
Author: Francis H. Smith
Publisher: Literary Licensing, LLC
Total Pages: 232
Release: 2014-03
Genre:
ISBN: 9781494153168

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This Is A New Release Of The Original 1860 Edition.


Body and Soul

Body and Soul
Author: Robert S. Cox
Publisher: University of Virginia Press
Total Pages: 304
Release: 2003-09-29
Genre: History
ISBN: 0813923905

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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 dead—whether 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 women’s rights and anti-slavery. 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.


Spiritual Magazine

Spiritual Magazine
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 588
Release: 1863
Genre: Spiritualism
ISBN:

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The Spiritual Magazine

The Spiritual Magazine
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 1156
Release: 1862
Genre: Spiritualism
ISBN:

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Activating the Past

Activating the Past
Author: Andrew Apter
Publisher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Total Pages: 470
Release: 2009-12-14
Genre: History
ISBN: 1443817902

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Activating the Past explores critical historical events and transformations associated with embodied memories in the Black Atlantic world. The assembled case-studies disclose hidden historical references to local and regional encounters with Atlantic modernity, focusing on religious festivals that represent political and economic relationships in “fetishized” forms of power and value. Although memories of the slave trade are rarely acknowledged in West Africa and the Americas, they have retreated, so to speak, within ritual associations as restricted, repressed, even secret histories that are activated during public festivals and through different styles of spirit possession. In West Africa, our focus on selected port cities along the coast extends into the hinterlands, where slave raiding occurred but is poorly documented and rarely acknowledged. In the Caribbean, regional contrasts between coastal and hinterland communities relate figures of the jíbaro, the indio and the caboclo to their ritual representations in Santería, Vodou, and Candomblé. Highlighting the spatial association of memories with shrines and the ritual “condensation” of regional geographies, we locate local spirits and domestic terrains within co-extensive Atlantic horizons. The volume brings together leading scholars of the African Diaspora who not only explore these ritual archives for significant echoes of the past, but also illuminate a subaltern historiography embedded within Atlantic cultural systems.