Animal Spirits: The American Pursuit of Vitality from Camp Meeting to Wall Street (virtual)
This event is no longer on sale.
In Animal Spirits, historian Jackson Lears explores an alternative American cultural history by tracking the thinkers who championed the individual’s spontaneous energies and the idea of a living universe against the strictures of conventional religion, business, and politics. From Puritan times to today, Lears traces ideas and fads such as hypnosis and faith healing from the pulpit and stock exchange to the streets and the betting table. We meet prophets of American vitality, from Walt Whitman and William James to Andrew Jackson Davis and the “New Thought” pioneer Helen Wilmans. Well before John Maynard Keynes stressed the reliance of capitalism on investors’ “animal spirits,” these vernacular vitalists established an American religion of embodied mind that also suited the needs of the marketplace. In the twentieth century, the vitalist impulse would be enlisted in projects of violent and racially charged national regeneration by Theodore Roosevelt and his legatees, even as African American writers confronted the paradoxes of primitivism, and the 1960s counterculture imagined new ways of inspiriting the universe.