NovaCat - NSU Libraries Catalog user info Skip the menu to the main content
     

Cover for {{ rc.info.title }}

{{rc.info.title}}

{{ rc.info.subtitle }}

{{ rc.info.author }}

{{ rc.info.edition }}

{{ rc.info.publisher }} {{ rc.info.year }}

Summary

{{rc.info.summary}} {{rc.info.summaryMore}}

Location Call # Volume Status
 Sherman Library  BF639 .S124 1999    AVAILABLE  
Author Satter, Beryl, 1959-
Title Each mind a kingdom : American women, sexual purity, and the New Thought movement, 1875-1920 / Beryl Satter.
OCLC 39654723
ISBN 0520217659
Publisher Berkeley : University of California Press, [1999]
©1999
Description xii, 382 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm
LC Subject heading/s Eddy, Mary Baker, 1821-1910.
Medical
Subject heading/s
Eddy, Mary Baker, 1821-1910.
LC Subject heading/s New Thought -- History.
Women -- Religious life -- United States.
Christian Science -- United States -- History.
Twelve-step programs -- History.
Sex role -- United States -- History.
Feminism -- United States -- History.
Medical
Subject heading/s
Mind-Body Relations, Metaphysical -- United States.
Christian Science -- history -- United States.
Feminism -- history -- United States.
Gender Identity -- United States.
Women -- history -- United States.
LC Subject heading/s Sex customs -- United States -- History.
United States -- Church history.
United States -- Civilization -- 1865-1918.
United States -- Intellectual life -- 1865-1918.
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 333-357) and index.
Contents Introduction: New Thought in late-Victorian America -- The era of woman and the problem of desire -- The mother or the warrior: mind, matter, selfhood, and desire in the writings of Mary Baker Eddy and Warren Felt Evans -- Emma Curtis Hopkins and the spread of New Thought, 1885-1905 -- Sex and desirelessness: the New Thought novels of Helen Van-Anderson, Ursula Gestefeld, and Alice Bunker Stockham -- Money and desire: Helen Wilmans and the reorientations of New Thought -- New thought and early progressivism -- New Thought and popular psychology, 1905-1920 -- Conclusion: New Thought in American culture after 1920.
Permanent link back to this item
https://novacat.nova.edu:446/record=b1416410~S13

Use classic NovaCat |