Americans today don’t associate progressive politics with
spiritualism. Progressive thinking was linked to the rise of science, and machines
not spirits became the highway to Utopia. Karl Marx insisted religion and
spirituality were “opiates” of the people. They were no cure for the pain inflicted by capitalism.
But I want to recall a period when America was in ferment
with ideas of radical spiritualism. The extraordinary rise of Spiritualism
began in 1848 with the Fox sisters in upstate New York. For an eyewitness
overview of the entire movement, Modern
American Spiritualism by Emma Hardinge is indispensable. Hardinge had a successful career as a
musician and was herself a practicing medium. 19th century Spiritualism
was a kind of family-based discovery of ways to activate and
communicate with alleged spirits or the creative unconscious—no one knows for
sure.
It began with mysterious rappings, perhaps unconsciously
produced by the girls. But in
time, by asking for raps, stipulating one rap for yes, two raps for no, the
young ladies had, in effect, figured out how to talk with their
unconscious. Whether these
responses came from their minds or from an deceased mind is too tricky to be
glib about.
What interests me are the conversations with the “spirits.” They
tried to prove the reality of an afterworld. But they also had much to say about
how we ought to live in this world. And the ideas from the beyond turned out to be humane,
democratic, and progressive. They also gave voice to a bevy of progressive
ideas designed to revolutionize prevailing society.
The voices from the beyond were not in awe of authority; in fact,
they favored the overthrow of male hegemony. A quote from Emma Hardinge: “A
prominent feature of the spiritual movement . . .is the admission of woman to
an equal position on the rostrum and in the executive with man; an experiment
which is no longer doubtful.” In
short, she was predicting that women would and should take their rightful place
in power structures of the planet. --
Among the most famous trance speakers of the time were
women. In the ancient world they
were called prophets. Emma Hardinge
was not only a medium and historian of mediumship, she was herself for 20 years
a leader of the movement.
Unlike Emma Hardinge, a more recent historian of
Spiritualism, Ann Braude, is mainly interested in women’s rights and not the
spirits. The full title of her groundbreaking
study (1989) explains her position. Radical
Spirits: Spiritualism and Women’s Rights in Nineteenth Century America—“How
séances and trance speaking empowered a generation of American women to claim
their own voices.” That is especially true if it feels like the inspiration is
coming from beyond yourself—as it was true for Moses and Joan of Arc and many
others.
The mediums and trance speakers had the courage to trust in
their own spiritual experience, and rejected the authority of the churches.
Once that break was effected, Spiritualists felt free to step up the critique of the
established order across the board, so to speak.
As radical
believers in the value of the individual, they became a major force in the
women’s rights movement. And about
the same time many of them joined the Quaker Abolitionists in the anti-slavery
movement. Harriet Beecher Stowe
once remarked that the marriage laws in America were a form of slavery for
women, equivalent to the slavery of blacks, for neither legally owned property
or themselves. There were other crimes against property that the spirits
reviled such as rampant land-grabbing from native populations.
The Spiritualists were progressive in two ways that speak to
us today. especially crucial
nowadays. They were passionate about what was called “free love” and about
health reform. But free love in
mid-nineteen century America wasn’t about promiscuity. Something more immediately pressing was
at stake; it was about sexual love being freely and jointly chosen in marriage,
resisting the assumed right of the husband to take his pleasure from his wife at
will.
The ‘spirits’ were ill-disposed to their coarse alcoholic
facsimiles, as all-too-often wreaking havoc on lives. Radical health reform was a major theme of mid-nineteen
century Spiritualists. The ‘spirits’ recommended a vegetarian diet, the end of
restrictive clothing; they opposed being a slave to fashion and they had strong
views about animal rights.
Women had to fight off doctors insisting that their bodies
are more prone to disease than men’s, and therefore need to be managed and
controlled. Women of this era had
to deconstruct the mythology of their natural inferiority. Spiritualism stood for a revolution in
the health-care paradigm for all.
We’re still trying to move in that direction today--health
care, women’s rights, animal rights, an end to the tyranny of the rich, and so
on and so forth. I think it worth remembering. A movement largely inspired by women was the fountainhead of many of today’s progressive
ideals. Spiritualism as a movement
may have faded, but in its place we have seen the rise of consciousness studies. What’s missing is a well-defined activist
approach to consciousness studies today.
Consciousness isn’t just a great scientific mystery. It is the theater where the drama of
existence is played out.
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