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Introduction to New and Alternative Religions in America [Five Volumes]
Eugene V. Gallagher, ed., W. Michael Ashcraft, ed.
ISBN: 0-275-98712-4
ISBN-13: 978-0-275-98712-1
1504 pages
Greenwood Press
Publication: 10/30/2006
List Price: $399.95 (UK Sterling Price: £275.95)
Discount Price: $199.98 Sale Price for U.S. Customers Only. Save 50%. Ends 12/31/2009.
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Media Type: Hardcover
Trim Size: 6 1/8 x 9 1/4
Subjects: Reviews:
  • This scholarly five-volume introduction to religions in America provides readers with histories of traditional American religious groups as well as analytical perspectives on new and alternative religions that many conventional treatments have either stereotyped or misrepresented....Achieving its purpose of rectifying much of the misinformation of the past that has condemned many of America's alternative faiths, these clearly written entries provide the general public with accurate, comprehensive, authoratative, and accessible accounts of traditional religious groups and many of the new and alternative religious movements in American society....This set includes an ample index and a selected but comprehensive bibliography. The clarity of these entries makes them intelligible to a wider audience and are recommended for both the high school and college levels, as well as to the general public, including public libraries and churches.
    —American Reference Books Annual
    2008
  • [A]n impressive set....The authors provide rich historical background and also address specific issues with clarity that renders the volume very informative....The entire set is highly recommended for all libraries and scholars looking for handy reference to New Religious Movements in America.
    —Religious Studies Review
    April 2007
  • This is a fascinating study of societal reactions to new religious movements, including the secular anti-cult movement and the religious conter-cult movement.
    —Multicultural Review
    Fall 2007
  • The editors have assembled an impressive array of scholars and religious experts to provide thoughtful, well documented essays....[t]he authors provide lucid analyses that will be of great service to undergraduate and graduate students alike as they try to understand unfamiliar religions....[t]his set belongs in every academic library that supports coursework in American society or modern religion.
    —Catholic Library World
    June 2007
  • The set is an impressive achievement that will aid both scholar and layman in navigating the often nebulous territory of nonmainstream religion in the US....[A]shcraft and Eugene V. Gallagher have managed to compile what will be the standard reference on the subject for years to come....Introduction to New and Alternative Religions in America is a great set.
    —Perspectives on Science and Christian Faith
    June 2007
  • Ashcraft and Gallagher have assembled a fascinating and thorough resource on the many new and alternative religions to be found in the U.S. Each of the five volumes is devoted to a separate theme (and contains its own index), and contains lengthy articles on between 8 and 12 topics. The initial volume delves into history and controversies, with many religions discussed under such topics as globalization, the law, evangelical Christian countercult movements, and new religious movements and violence. The subsequent volumes contain articles on religious movements, with volumes on Asian traditions; African diaspora traditions and other American innovations; metaphysical, New Age, and neopagan movements; and Jewish and Christian traditions. The articles discuss each movement in depth, describing its history, philosophy, leaders, religious practice, controversies and issues, publications, and related themes. Each article is signed, annotated, and concludes with a bibliography.
    —Reference & Research Book News
    February 2007
  • Altogether, a solid and readable course in alternative religions suitable for high school and college students and particularly laudable for its inclusive stance on alternative faiths. Best purchased for circulating collections.
    —Library Journal
    2/15/2007
  • Edited by Gallagher and Ashcraft, this work consists of five volumes with topics ranging from New Religious Movements in Colonial America in volume 1 to UFOs and Religion near the end of volume 5. Contributions are by various scholarly authors with chapters averaging 15-20 pages. Extensive notes follow each entry, along with suggestions for further reading....Recommended. Lower-/upper-level undergraduates through faculty/researchers.
    —Choice
    8/1/2007
Description: Most new or alternative religious are gravely misunderstood by members of the religious mainstream. Labeled cults or sects, groups and their members are often ridiculed or otherwise disregarded as weird and potentially dangerous by the populace at large. Despite their efforts at educating the general public, the various anti- and counter-cult activists have in fact promoted much more mis-understanding than accurate understanding of the religious lives of some of their fellow citizens. Consequently, they have helped to create a very hostile environment for anyone whose religious practices do not fit within a so-called mainstream. This set rectifies the situation by presenting accurate, comprehensive, authoritative and accessible accounts of various new and alternative religious movements that have been and are active in American society, and it addresses ways of understanding new and alternative religions within a broader context.

Determining what actually constitutes a new or alternative religion is a subject of constant debate. Questions arise as to a new faith's legitimacy, beliefs, methods of conversion, and other facets of a religious movement's viability and place in a given culture. How a religion gains recognition by the mainstream, which often labels such new movements as cults, is fraught with difficulty, tension, and fear. Here, experts delineate the boundaries and examine the various groups, beliefs, movements, and other issues related to new faiths and alternative beliefs. Readers will come away with a fuller understanding of the religious landscape in America today.
Volume 1: History and Controversies discusses the foundations of new and alternative religions in the United States and addresses the controversies that surround them. This volume helps readers better understand what makes a new or alternative belief system a religion and the issues involved.
Volume 2: Jewish and Christian Traditions explores the various new religions that have grown out of these two Abrahamic faiths. Groups such as the Shakers, the People's Temple, the Branch Davidians, Jehovah's Witnesses and others are examined.
Volume 3: Metaphysical, New Age, and Neopagan Movements looks at Shamanism, Spiritualism, Wicca, and Paganism, among other movements, as they have developed and grown in the U.S. These faiths have found new and devoted followers yet are often misunderstood.
Volume 4: Asian Traditions focuses on those new and alternative religions that have been inspired by Asian religious traditions. From Baha'i to Soka Gakkai, from Adidam to the Vedanta Society, contributors look at a full range of groups practicing and worshiping in the U.S. today.
Volume 5: African Diaspora Traditions and Other American Innovations examines the various traditions linked to the African diaspora such as Rastafarianism, Santeria, and the Nation of Islam, alongside traditions that are truly American incarnations like Scientology, UFO religions, and Heaven's Gate. Some of the new and alternative religions covered in these pages include:
; Shamanism
; Wicca
; Black Israelites
; Santeria
; Scientology
; Elan Vital
; Hare Krishna
; Soka Gakkai
; and many more
Table of Contents:
  • VOLUME I: HISTORY AND CONTROVERSIES
    Introduction
    New Religious Movements in American History
    Leadership in New Religious Movements
    Affiliation and Disaffiliation Careers in New Religious Movements
    New Religious Movements and the Law
    New Religious Movements and Globalization
    Critiquing Cults: An Historical Perspective
    Evangelical Christian Countercult Movement
    New Religious Movements and Violence
    Gender in New and Alternative Religions
    Children in New Religious Movements: The Mormon Experience
    Same-Sex Eroticism and Gender Fluidity in New and Alternative Religions
    Millennial Destiny: A History of Millennialism in America
    VOLUME II: JEWISH AND CHRISTIAN TRADITIONS
    Introduction
    The Shakers
    The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
    The Adventist Tradition
    Jehovahs Witnesses
    Christian Science
    Peoples Temple: A Typical Cult?
    The Children of God / The Family
    The Branch Davidians
    Christian Identity: An American Millennial Mythology
    Judaism and Christianity Unite!: The Unique Culture of Messianic Judaism
    VOLUME III: METAPHYSICAL, NEW AGE, NEOPAGAN MOVEMENTS
    Introduction
    Swedenborgianism
    Spiritualism
    The Theosophical Society
    The American New Thought Movement
    North American Esotericism
    ECKANKAR
    The New Age: A Twentieth Century Movement
    Contemporary Shamanism
    The Worship of the Goddess in Feminist Spirituality in the United States
    Wicca, Witchcraft, and Modern Paganism
    Learning about Paganism
    Ritual and Neopaganism
    VOLUME IV: ASIAN TRADITIONS
    Introduction
    The Vedanta Society
    The Hare Krishna Movement: Beginnings, Change, and Transformation
    Soka Gakkai: A Human Revolution
    From Guru Maharaj Ji to Prem Rawat: Paradigm shifts over the Period of Forty Years as a Master (1966-2006)
    Adidam
    Buddhism in America
    Tibetan Buddhism in the United States
    The Unification Church/Movement in the United States
    The Bah's of the United States
    VOLUME V: AFRICAN DIASPORA TRADITIONS AND OTHER AMERICAN INNOVATIONS
    Introduction
    Part I
    The Nation of Islam
    Alternatives to Religion in African American Islamic Communities I: The Five Percent Nation of Gods and Earths
    Alternatives to Religion in African American Islamic Communities II: The Ansaaru Allah Community/Nuwaubian Nation of Moors
    Black Israelites aka Black Jews aka Black Hebrews: Black Israelism, Black Judaism, Judaic Christianity
    Santera
    Rastafarianism
    Vodou in the United States: The Case of New Orleans
    Part II
    Satanism and the Church of Satan
    The Church of Scientology
    Heavens Gate
    UFO(s and) Religion
    New and Alternative Nature Religions in America
About the Author: Eugene V. Gallagher is the Rosemary Park Professor of Religious Studies at Connecticut College. He is the author of Divine Man or Magician? Celsus and Origen on Jesus (1980), Expectation and Experience: Explaining Religious Conversion (1990), The New Religious Movements Experience in America (2004), and, with James D. Tabor, Why Waco? Cults and the Battle for Religious Freedom in America (1995) as well as articles on ancient Mediterranean religions and contemporary new religious movements.

W. Michael Ashcraft is Associate Professor of Religion at Truman State University in Kirksville, Missouri. He is the author of The Dawn of the New Cycle: Point Loma Theosophists and American Culture (2002) and co-editor with Dereck Daschke of New Religious Movements: A Documentary Reader (2005).
LCC Class: BL2525
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