Shakers at the Center

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19th-century religious revivals
alternative Protestant traditions
alternative scripture traditions
American religious experiments
American sacred objects
American spiritual manuscripts
American visionary movements
archival religious treasures
Category=JBSR
Category=NHK
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celestial revelations in theology
communal mysticism in history
communal religious societies
divine revelation in 19th century
ecstatic prophecy traditions
ecstatic religious practices
embodied religious practice
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forthcoming
gender and spirit communication
historical spirit communication
intersection of faith and spectacle
Mother Ann Lee legacy
mystical American religions
New Era religious experience
prophetic American religions
Protestant mystical traditions
race and religion in utopian movements
radical religious expression
religion and materiality.
religious archives and material culture
religious cultural production
sacred music and art in worship
sacred performance studies
sacred visions in American culture
Shaker prophetic legacy
Shaker ritual performance
Shaker spiritual culture
Shaker theology and visions
speaking with spirits in religion
spirit possession in Christianity
spirit writing and gender roles
spirit-led artistic creation
spiritual artifacts and worship
spiritual writing in religious history
theology of revelation
transgressive religious expression
utopian religious imagination
visionary religion and social order
visionary rituals in America

Product details

  • ISBN 9781625349460
  • Weight: 454g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 28 Jul 2026
  • Publisher: University of Massachusetts Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Exploring the theological, social, and cultural dimensions of one of America's most ambitious prophetic movements

The Shakers' Era of Manifestations ranks among the most astounding events in American religious history. During the 1840s, members of the United Society of Believers in Christ's Second Appearing embarked on an audacious project of receiving visions, revelations, and other manifestations from the spirit world and convincing both themselves and the world's people of their reality. Gifted Shakers known as "instruments" surrendered their bodies to possessing spirits and celestial beings who, in turn, provided the Believers with an unimaginable number of revelatory communications that collapsed time and space, rewrote the Bible, and vastly expanded traditional Protestant beliefs and practices. The fruits of Shaker spiritualism would gain a permanent place in America's public consciousness.

Hundreds of volumes and thousands of pages of inspired writings, music, and art from the New Era or period of Mother's Work, as the Shakers called it, crowd the shelves of a half dozen major research libraries. The archive is so vast, so extraordinary, so seemingly bizarre that few scholars have dared tackle it in its totality. The authors of this volume, specialists in nineteenth-century American religious studies, have collaborated to produce an extensive analysis of Mother Ann's Work. They examine a fascinating range of topics: speaking with the dead; the spectacle of Shaker rituals; race, gender, and family life; and the material culture of physical and spiritual things; as well as manuscripts, books, songs, objects, and art produced during the New Era.

Shakers at the Center brings the sprawling elements of the Era of Manifestations together in a single volume. Written for students, scholars, and general readers alike, it will stand for years as the definitive history of the Shakers' most fascinating and vexing historical period.

Contributors include the volume editor as well as Emily Suzanne Clark, Brett Malcolm Grainger, Sonia Hazard, Dana Logan, Carol Medlicott, Sally M. Promey, Erik R. Seeman, Ryan K. Smith, and David Walker.

Douglas L. Winiarski is professor of religious studies at the University of Richmond. He is the author of Darkness Falls on the Land of Light: Experiencing Religious Awakenings in Eighteenth-Century New England, which won the Bancroft Prize. His work has appeared in American Historical Review, the Journal of American History, the New England Quarterly, and the William and Mary Quarterly.