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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Sharon HatfieldPublisher: Ohio University Press Imprint: Swallow Press ISBN: 9780804012393ISBN 10: 0804012393 Pages: 360 Publication Date: 14 June 2022 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviews"“This is a marvelous book. It reads like a novel or a screenplay but also functions as a prism that opens up into dozens of other important aspects of nineteenth-century American religion: spiritualism, Johnny Appleseed, Swedenborgianism, atheism, social reform, women’s rights, psychometry, and so on. Perhaps most significantly of all, the author’s rare combination of humanistic sympathy, intellectual generosity, and healthy doubt is a model of what this kind of historiography can be.” -- Jeffrey J. Kripal, author of Secret Body: Erotic and Esoteric Currents in the History of Religions “The work of Jonathan Koons, and, indeed, midwestern Spiritualism in general, has often been overlooked, so Enchanted Ground is a welcome contribution to the field. The book has many strengths, not least of which are its evocative descriptions. Hatfield’s skill as a researcher, writer, and story-teller make this book appropriate for both scholarly and general readers."" * Nova Religio * “An unbiased, rich story that situates the historic and consequential acts of ‘the Venerable Jonathan Koons’ and the events that took place in southeast Ohio in wider modern spiritualist and reform movement contexts. Hatfield clearly illustrates the comfort, hope, and sense of community Koons’s supporters found in his séances, imaginative stories, and ostensible ability to connect the living with the dead.” -- Brianna Treleven * Ohio History * “Sharon Hatfield has made a painstaking examination of Koons’s life and career. A fascinating snapshot of the Spiritualist movement in its infancy.” -- Tom Ruffles * Journal of Scientific Exploration * “Hatfield offers a solid biography of one of the most famous and influential spiritualists of the nineteenth century…. Those interested in the hope and optimism spiritualism engendered will enjoy Hatfield’s biographical appreciation of a fascinating figure.” * Journal of Parapsychology * “By an evocative rendition of his story, Hatfield neatly dispels the view that Koons’s ‘spirit room’ was just one more trivial example of the public’s fascination with nineteenth century spiritualism. Instead, her explanation of Koons’s influence in Ohio and the Midwest clearly establishes his significance as one of the most important mediums of the era.” -- Nancy Rubin Stuart, author of The Reluctant Spiritualist: The Life of Maggie Fox “Hatfield demonstrates well (Koons’s) enormous impact on the spiritualist movement, with his popular spirit room becoming a major pilgrimage site in early American spiritualism, serving as a major source of inspiration for later spiritualist practitioners in the 1850s and beyond…. Although this book is of obvious interest to scholars of spiritualism, it should also be of interest also to scholars working in various other subfields of religious studies…. Having done the painstaking work of compiling and organizing the history of Koons and his circle, Hatfield has provided scholars with an important resource….” * Journal of the American Academy of Religion * “(Enchanted Ground) is more than a spiritual biography of one man, it is an history of early Spiritualism in the Midwest…. It would be hard to come away from reading this book without having a deeper understanding of this critical first decade of Spiritualism.” * The National Spiritualist Summit * “Hatfield is a skilled writer and this book is both entertaining and a valuable contribution to the psychical research literature.“ * Society for Psychical Research Journal * [Sharon] Hatfield's depth of research and reporting in Enchanted Ground is one of the book's greatest assets, but it is her luminous writing that makes the story as readable as it is trustworthy. -- Sarah Beth Hopton * Appalachian Journal *" "“This is a marvelous book. It reads like a novel or a screenplay but also functions as a prism that opens up into dozens of other important aspects of nineteenth-century American religion: spiritualism, Johnny Appleseed, Swedenborgianism, atheism, social reform, women’s rights, psychometry, and so on. Perhaps most significantly of all, the author’s rare combination of humanistic sympathy, intellectual generosity, and healthy doubt is a model of what this kind of historiography can be.” -- Jeffrey J. Kripal, author of Secret Body: Erotic and Esoteric Currents in the History of Religions “The work of Jonathan Koons, and, indeed, midwestern Spiritualism in general, has often been overlooked, so Enchanted Ground is a welcome contribution to the field. The book has many strengths, not least of which are its evocative descriptions. Hatfield’s skill as a researcher, writer, and story-teller make this book appropriate for both scholarly and general readers."" * Nova Religio * “An unbiased, rich story that situates the historic and consequential acts of ‘the Venerable Jonathan Koons’ and the events that took place in southeast Ohio in wider modern spiritualist and reform movement contexts. Hatfield clearly illustrates the comfort, hope, and sense of community Koons’s supporters found in his séances, imaginative stories, and ostensible ability to connect the living with the dead.” -- Brianna Treleven * Ohio History * “Sharon Hatfield has made a painstaking examination of Koons’s life and career. A fascinating snapshot of the Spiritualist movement in its infancy.” -- Tom Ruffles * Journal of Scientific Exploration * “Hatfield offers a solid biography of one of the most famous and influential spiritualists of the nineteenth century…. Those interested in the hope and optimism spiritualism engendered will enjoy Hatfield’s biographical appreciation of a fascinating figure.” * Journal of Parapsychology * “By an evocative rendition of his story, Hatfield neatly dispels the view that Koons’s ‘spirit room’ was just one more trivial example of the public’s fascination with nineteenth century spiritualism. Instead, her explanation of Koons’s influence in Ohio and the Midwest clearly establishes his significance as one of the most important mediums of the era.” -- Nancy Rubin Stuart, author of The Reluctant Spiritualist: The Life of Maggie Fox “Hatfield demonstrates well (Koons’s) enormous impact on the spiritualist movement, with his popular spirit room becoming a major pilgrimage site in early American spiritualism, serving as a major source of inspiration for later spiritualist practitioners in the 1850s and beyond…. Although this book is of obvious interest to scholars of spiritualism, it should also be of interest also to scholars working in various other subfields of religious studies…. Having done the painstaking work of compiling and organizing the history of Koons and his circle, Hatfield has provided scholars with an important resource….” * Journal of the American Academy of Religion * “(Enchanted Ground) is more than a spiritual biography of one man, it is an history of early Spiritualism in the Midwest…. It would be hard to come away from reading this book without having a deeper understanding of this critical first decade of Spiritualism.” * The National Spiritualist Summit * “Hatfield is a skilled writer and this book is both entertaining and a valuable contribution to the psychical research literature.“ * Society for Psychical Research Journal *" This is a marvelous book. It reads like a novel or a screenplay but also functions as a prism that opens up into dozens of other important aspects of nineteenth-century American religion: spiritualism, Johnny Appleseed, Swedenborgianism, atheism, social reform, women's rights, psychometry, and so on. Perhaps most significantly of all, the author's rare combination of humanistic sympathy, intellectual generosity, and healthy doubt is a model of what this kind of historiography can be. -- Jeffrey J. Kripal, author of Secret Body: Erotic and Esoteric Currents in the History of Religions The work of Jonathan Koons, and, indeed, midwestern Spiritualism in general, has often been overlooked, so Enchanted Ground is a welcome contribution to the field. The book has many strengths, not least of which are its evocative descriptions. Hatfield's skill as a researcher, writer, and story-teller make this book appropriate for both scholarly and general readers. * Nova Religio * An unbiased, rich story that situates the historic and consequential acts of 'the Venerable Jonathan Koons' and the events that took place in southeast Ohio in wider modern spiritualist and reform movement contexts. Hatfield clearly illustrates the comfort, hope, and sense of community Koons's supporters found in his seances, imaginative stories, and ostensible ability to connect the living with the dead. -- Brianna Treleven * Ohio History * Sharon Hatfield has made a painstaking examination of Koons's life and career. A fascinating snapshot of the Spiritualist movement in its infancy. -- Tom Ruffles * Journal of Scientific Exploration * Hatfield offers a solid biography of one of the most famous and influential spiritualists of the nineteenth century.... Those interested in the hope and optimism spiritualism engendered will enjoy Hatfield's biographical appreciation of a fascinating figure. * Journal of Parapsychology * By an evocative rendition of his story, Hatfield neatly dispels the view that Koons's 'spirit room' was just one more trivial example of the public's fascination with nineteenth century spiritualism. Instead, her explanation of Koons's influence in Ohio and the Midwest clearly establishes his significance as one of the most important mediums of the era. -- Nancy Rubin Stuart, author of The Reluctant Spiritualist: The Life of Maggie Fox Hatfield demonstrates well (Koons's) enormous impact on the spiritualist movement, with his popular spirit room becoming a major pilgrimage site in early American spiritualism, serving as a major source of inspiration for later spiritualist practitioners in the 1850s and beyond.... Although this book is of obvious interest to scholars of spiritualism, it should also be of interest also to scholars working in various other subfields of religious studies.... Having done the painstaking work of compiling and organizing the history of Koons and his circle, Hatfield has provided scholars with an important resource.... * Journal of the American Academy of Religion * (Enchanted Ground) is more than a spiritual biography of one man, it is an history of early Spiritualism in the Midwest.... It would be hard to come away from reading this book without having a deeper understanding of this critical first decade of Spiritualism. * The National Spiritualist Summit * Hatfield is a skilled writer and this book is both entertaining and a valuable contribution to the psychical research literature. * Society for Psychical Research Journal * "“This is a marvelous book. It reads like a novel or a screenplay but also functions as a prism that opens up into dozens of other important aspects of nineteenth-century American religion: spiritualism, Johnny Appleseed, Swedenborgianism, atheism, social reform, women’s rights, psychometry, and so on. Perhaps most significantly of all, the author’s rare combination of humanistic sympathy, intellectual generosity, and healthy doubt is a model of what this kind of historiography can be.” “The work of Jonathan Koons, and, indeed, midwestern Spiritualism in general, has often been overlooked, so Enchanted Ground is a welcome contribution to the field. The book has many strengths, not least of which are its evocative descriptions. Hatfield’s skill as a researcher, writer, and story-teller make this book appropriate for both scholarly and general readers."" * Nova Religio * “An unbiased, rich story that situates the historic and consequential acts of ‘the Venerable Jonathan Koons’ and the events that took place in southeast Ohio in wider modern spiritualist and reform movement contexts. Hatfield clearly illustrates the comfort, hope, and sense of community Koons’s supporters found in his séances, imaginative stories, and ostensible ability to connect the living with the dead.” * Ohio History * “Sharon Hatfield has made a painstaking examination of Koons’s life and career. A fascinating snapshot of the Spiritualist movement in its infancy.” * Journal of Scientific Exploration * “Hatfield offers a solid biography of one of the most famous and influential spiritualists of the nineteenth century…. Those interested in the hope and optimism spiritualism engendered will enjoy Hatfield’s biographical appreciation of a fascinating figure.” * Journal of Parapsychology * “By an evocative rendition of his story, Hatfield neatly dispels the view that Koons’s ‘spirit room’ was just one more trivial example of the public’s fascination with nineteenth century spiritualism. Instead, her explanation of Koons’s influence in Ohio and the Midwest clearly establishes his significance as one of the most important mediums of the era.” “Hatfield demonstrates well (Koons’s) enormous impact on the spiritualist movement, with his popular spirit room becoming a major pilgrimage site in early American spiritualism, serving as a major source of inspiration for later spiritualist practitioners in the 1850s and beyond…. Although this book is of obvious interest to scholars of spiritualism, it should also be of interest also to scholars working in various other subfields of religious studies…. Having done the painstaking work of compiling and organizing the history of Koons and his circle, Hatfield has provided scholars with an important resource….” * Journal of the American Academy of Religion * “(Enchanted Ground) is more than a spiritual biography of one man, it is an history of early Spiritualism in the Midwest…. It would be hard to come away from reading this book without having a deeper understanding of this critical first decade of Spiritualism.” * The National Spiritualist Summit * “Hatfield is a skilled writer and this book is both entertaining and a valuable contribution to the psychical research literature.“ * Society for Psychical Research Journal *" Author InformationSharon Hatfield is an award-winning journalist and nonfiction writer. Her interest in Appalachian letters and history led to her writing Never Seen the Moon: The Trials of Edith Maxwell and coediting An American Vein: Critical Readings in Appalachian Literature. She lives in Athens, Ohio, with her husband. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |