Unholy Sensations

A Story of Sex, Scandal, and California's First Cult Scare

Joshua Paddison author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Oxford University Press Inc

Publishing:17th Jul '25

£19.99

This title is due to be published on 17th July, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

Unholy Sensations cover

The true story of the first California cult scandal In 1891, a suffragist and social reformer named Alzire Chevaillier launched a moral crusade to destroy Fountaingrove, a utopian spiritualist community in northern California. Chevaillier accused the colony's leader, the poet and prophet Thomas Lake Harris, of perverting the teachings of the Bible to promote a “new sexology” that was “worse than Mormonism.” She insisted that Harris used magical powers of hypnosis to take sexual and financial advantage of his followers, turning them into a “spiritual harem” that practiced “free love” and other gross immoralities. Media reports emphasized the presence of Japanese immigrant men at Fountaingrove, raising racialized specters of miscegenation and moral contamination. The international scandal, full of the sorts of salacious details prized by newspaper editors at the dawn of the era of yellow journalism, would last more than a decade, establishing Harris as the prototype for a new type of public menace-the “California cult leader.” Unholy Sensations takes a close-up look at the Fountaingrove scandal to examine religion, gender, sexuality, and race in the Gilded Age from a fresh perspective. By chronicling the life stories of the people swept up in the scandal, Unholy Sensations reveals connections and tensions between a wide variety of nineteenth-century religious and social groups, including suffragists and spiritualists, Christian Scientists and Theosophists, journalists and politicians, and Protestant ministers and urban reformers. Together, these disparate groups helped spark California's first cult scare, demonizing Harris as the first-but far from the last-dangerous California cult leader. By showing that the term “cult” has always been a marker of race, sexuality, and religion, Unholy Sensations reveals the limits of American freedom and the centrality of religion to the policing of whiteness, family, and nation.

Unholy Sensations is everything you could want from a book-sex! race! cults!-wrapped up in a tale that is as riveting as the research upon which is based is exhaustive. Joshua Paddison has provided us an origins story for some of the most powerful, yet contested, categories that continue to shape America's religious imagination. This is a must-read story for scholars, general readers, and students alike. * Benjamin E. Park, author of Kingdom of Nauvoo: The Rise and Fall of a Religious Empire on the American Frontier *
Joshua Paddison has a great story to tell of a spiritualist community and its scandalized detractors in 1890s California. Nuanced in its detail, Paddison's account of Fountaingrove and its mystic founder, Thomas Lake Harris, is mesmerizing, but his telling also manages to surface the very origins of the modern notion of a "cult" in the scare Harris generated-a critical contribution to the broader study of new religious movements and the politics of their categorization. * Leigh Eric Schmidt, author of Heaven's Bride: The Unprintable Life of Ida C. Craddock, American Mystic, Scholar, Sexologist, Martyr, and Madwoman *

ISBN: 9780197775325

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

280 pages