Heart Religion in the British Enlightenment

Gender and Emotion in Early Methodism

Phyllis Mack author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Cambridge University Press

Published:16th Jun '11

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

This paperback is available in another edition too:

Heart Religion in the British Enlightenment cover

A fascinating account of the daily life and spirituality of early Methodists by a prize-winning gender historian.

Challenging traditional, negative depictions of early Methodism, this revisionist study sheds light on the daily life and spirituality of early Methodist men and women through an analysis of a vast array of primary sources. In examining ordinary people's experiences it places particular emphasis on the experience of women.This is a major study of the daily life and spirituality of early Methodist men and women. Phyllis Mack challenges traditional, negative depictions of early Methodism through an analysis of a vast array of primary sources - prayers, pamphlets, hymns, diaries, recipes, private letters, accounts of dreams, and rules for housekeeping. She examines how ordinary men and women understood the seismic shift from the religious culture of the seventeenth century to the so-called 'disenchantment of the world' that developed out of the Enlightenment. She places particular emphasis on the experience of women, arguing that both their spirituality and their contributions to the movement were different from men's. This revisionist account sheds light on how ordinary people understood their experience of religious conversion, marriage, worship, sexuality, friendship, and the supernatural, and what motivated them to travel the world as missionaries.

Review of the hardback: 'This is an important revisionist study that will necessitate a re-evaluation of the eighteenth century development of Methodism and an expression of its dynamism.' The Historical Association
Review of the hardback: '… for the general reader this is a well-presented and brilliant book. I commend it heartily.' The Methodist Recorder
Review of the hardback: 'What this book offers most significantly is a discursive, rather than merely descriptive, framework for understanding and interpreting the religious experience of women. … It is an important treatment of women's religious experiences in post-Enlightenment Western society.' The Catholic Historical Review
Review of the hardback: 'Mack's Heart Religion [in the British Enlightenment], whether read singly or in interrogative tandem with her earlier Visionary Women, is a challenging and thought‐provoking book. It prompts the reader to question the very basis upon which the historical interaction of religion, gender, and wider cultural trends can be written as well as offering insightful interpretations of the experience and culture of early Methodism.' American Historical Review
'Mack's new study seeks to treat its emotional character seriously, and, by emphasising the relationship that her many diarists, letter writers and poets had with the self, she adds to a case currently being made by religious historians for regarding Methodism as a creed that had a close connection with enlightenment thought.' Annual Bulletin of Historical Literature
'… a path-breaking work of meticulous scholarship and shrewd analysis.' Bruce Hindmarsh, Books and Culture

ISBN: 9780521290364

Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 18mm

Weight: 460g

342 pages