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THE PURSUIT OF PERFECTION

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Title: THE PURSUIT OF PERFECTION


1
THE PURSUIT OF PERFECTION
  • America Past and Present
  • Chapter 12

2
The Rise of Evangelicalism
  • Separation of church and state gives all churches
    the chance to compete for converts
  • Pious Protestants form voluntary associations to
    combat sin, infidelity

3
The Second Great Awakening The Frontier Phase
  • Camp meetings contribute to frontier life
  • provide emotional religion
  • offer opportunity for social life
  • Camp meeting revivals convey intensely personal
    religious message
  • Camp meetings rarely lead to social reform

4
The Second Great Awakening in the North
  • In New England reformers defend Calvinism against
    the Enlightenment
  • Charles G. Finney rejects Calvinism to preach
    free will
  • Finney preaches in upstate New York
  • Finney stresses revival techniques
  • Revivals lead to organization of more churches

5
From Revivalism to Reform
  • Northern revivals stimulate reform
  • Middle-class participants adapt evangelical
    religion to preserve traditional values
  • "The benevolent empire" of evangelical reform
    movements alter American life
  • e.g. temperance movement cuts alcohol consumption
    by more than fifty percent

6
Domesticity and Changes in the American Family
  • New conception of familys role in society
  • Child rearing seen as essential preparation for
    self-disciplined Christian life
  • Women confined to domestic sphere
  • Women assume crucial role within home

7
Marriage for Love
  • Mutual love must characterize marriage
  • Wives became more of a companion to their
    husbands and less of a servant
  • Legally, the husband was the unchallenged head of
    the household

8
The Cult of Domesticity
  • "The Cult of True Womanhood"
  • places women in the home
  • glorifies home as center of all efforts to
    civilize and Christianize society
  • Middle- and upper-class women increasingly
    dedicated to the home as mothers
  • Women of leisure enter reform movements

9
The Discovery of Childhood
  • Nineteenth-century child the center of family
  • Each child seen as unique, irreplaceable
  • Ideal to form childs character with affection
  • Parental discipline to instill guilt, not fear
  • Train child to learn self-discipline

10
Institutional Reform
  • Domesticity to inform public institutions
  • Schools continue what family begins
  • Asylums, prisons mend familys failures

11
The Extension of Education
  • Public schools expand rapidly 1820-1850
  • Working class sees as means to advance
  • Middle-class reformers see as means for
    inculcating values of hard work, responsibility
  • Horace Mann argues schools save immigrants, poor
    children from parents bad influence
  • Many parents believe public schools alienate
    children from their parents

12
Discovering the Asylum
  • Poor, criminal, insane seen as lacking
    self-discipline
  • Harsh measures to promote rehabilitation
  • solitary confinement of prisoners
  • strict daily schedule
  • Public support for rehabilitation skimpy
  • Prisons, asylums, poorhouses become warehouses
    for the unwanted

13
Reform Turns Radical
  • Most reform aims to improve society
  • Some radical reformers seek destruction of old
    society, creation of perfect social order

14
Divisions in the Benevolent Empire
  • Radical perfectionists impatient by 1830s, split
    from moderate reform
  • temperance movement
  • peace movement
  • antislavery movement
  • Moderates seek gradual end to slavery
  • Radicals demand immediate emancipation
  • 1833--American Anti-Slavery Society

15
The Abolitionist Enterprise Theodore Dwight
Weld
  • Weld an itinerant minister converted by Finney
  • Adapted his revivalist techniques to abolition
  • Successful mass meetings in Ohio, New York

16
The Abolitionist Enterprise Public Reception
  • Appeal to hard-working small town folk
  • Opposition in cities near Mason-Dixon line
  • Opposition from the working class
  • dislike blacks
  • fear black economic and social competition
  • Solid citizens see abolitionists as anarchists

17
The Abolitionist Enterprise Obstacles
  • Abolitionists hampered by in-fighting
  • William Lloyd Garrison disrupts movement by
    associating with radical reform efforts
  • urged abolitionists to abstain from participating
    in the political process
  • also got involved in womens rights movement
  • Some abolitionists help form the Liberty Party in
    1840

18
Black Abolitionists
  • Former slaves related the horrible realities of
    bondage
  • prominent figures included Frederick Douglass and
    Sojourner Truth
  • Black newspapers, books, and pamphlets publicized
    abolitionism to a wider audience
  • Blacks were also active in the Underground
    Railroad

19
From Abolitionism to Women's Rights
  • Abolitionism open to womens participation
  • Involvement raises awareness of womens
    inequality
  • Seneca Falls Convention in 1848
  • Lucretia Mott, Elizabeth Cady Stanton organize
  • prompted by experience of inequality in abolition
    movement
  • begins movement for womens rights

20
Radical Ideas Experiments Utopian Communities
  • Utopian socialism
  • Inspired by Robert Owen, Charles Fourier
  • New Harmony, IndianaOwenite
  • Fourierite phalanxes
  • Religious utopianism
  • Shakers
  • Oneida Community

21
Utopian Communities Before the Civil War
22
Radical Ideas Experiments Transcendentalism
  • Ralph Waldo Emerson
  • Margaret Fuller
  • George Ripley
  • founded cooperative community at Brook Farm
  • Henry David Thoreau

23
Counterpoint on Reform
  • Reform encounters perceptive critics
  • Nathaniel Hawthorne allegorically refuted
    perfectionist movements
  • Reform prompts necessary changes in American life
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