Exploring the transformative impact of transcendentalism in 1830s and 1840s New England, the author challenges the notion of its atheistic roots. David Faflik argues that the movement reshaped religious sensibilities, leading to a diverse spectrum of beliefs and practices that defy simple classification as either religious or nonreligious. Instead of being labeled as infidelity, followers embraced their unique spiritual expressions as a contemporary form of religion, highlighting the movement's innovative approach to spiritual inquiry.
David Faflik Bücher


Urban Formalism
- 144 Seiten
- 6 Lesestunden
This book examines how the city peoples of New York and Paris interpreted their urban surroundings during the middle decades of the nineteenth century. At the center of this examination are the literary, material, political, and visual forms which afforded contemporaries new ways of reading the modern metropolis.