
Mindfulness And Yoga Are Widely Said To Improve Mental And Physical Health, And Booming Industries Have Emerged To Teach Them As Secular Techniques. This Movement Is Typically Traced To The 1970s, But It Actually Began A Century Earlier. Wakoh Shannon Hickey Shows That Most Of Those Who First Advocated Meditation For Healing Were Women: Leaders Of The Mind Cure Movement, Which Emerged During The Late Nineteenth And Early Twentieth Centuries. Instructed By Buddhist And Hindu Missionaries, Many Of These Women Believed That By Transforming Consciousness, They Could Also Transform Oppressive Conditions In Which They Lived. For Women - And Many African-american Men - Mind Cure Meant Not Just Happiness, But Liberation In Concrete Political, Economic, And Legal Terms. In Response To The Perceived Threat Posed By This Movement, White Male Doctors And Clergy With Elite Academic Credentials Began To Channel Key Mind Cure Methods Into Scientific Psychology And Medicine. As Mental Therapeutics Became Medicalized And Commodified, The Religious Roots Of Meditation, Like The Social-justice Agendas Of Early Mind Curers, Fell By The Wayside. Although Characterized As Universal, Mindfulness Has Very Specific Historical And Cultural Roots, And Is Now Largely Marketed By And Accessible To Affluent White People. Hickey Examines Religious Dimensions Of The Mindfulness Movement And Clinical Research About Its Effectiveness. By Treating Stress-related Illness Individualistically, She Argues, The Contemporary Movement Obscures The Roles Religious Communities Can Play In Fostering Civil Society And Personal Wellbeing, And Diverts Attention From Systemic Factors Fueling Stress-related Illness, Including Racism, Sexism, And Poverty.
This book investigates the historical origins of the modern mindfulness movement, arguing that its current secular, individualistic focus obscures its original roots in social justice and religious practice. Author Wakoh Shannon Hickey, a scholar of religion, utilizes historical archives and sociological analysis to trace the evolution of the Mind Cure movement from the late nineteenth century to the present. She demonstrates how early practitioners—primarily women and African American men—viewed meditation as a tool for political and economic liberation. The text argues that the subsequent medicalization of these practices by elite white male professionals stripped away their religious and social-justice dimensions, transforming them into the commodified wellness industry seen today.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and historians of religion recognize this work as a critical intervention in the study of American wellness culture. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose and the author's rigorous approach to deconstructing the cultural assumptions behind modern mindfulness.
Page Count:
320
Publication Date:
2019-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190864257
ISBN-13:
9780190864255
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