H-NET BOOK REVIEW
Published by H-AmRel@h-net.msu.edu (December, 1999)
Marilyn J. Westerkamp. Women and Religion in Early America, 1600-1850:
The Puritan and Evangelical Traditions.
Christianity and Society in the
Modern World.
London and New York: Routledge, 1999.
ix + 219 pp. Notes,
bibliographic essay, bibliography, and index. $22.99 (paper), ISBN
0-415-19448-2.
Reviewed for H-AmRel by Emily Clark , Faculty of History,
University of Cambridge.
Women and Religion: Coming of Age
This work of synthesis by a senior scholar offers a limited, yet densely
informative and elegantly insightful introduction to the emerging field of
study that examines the relationship between gender and religion in early
America. Marilyn Westerkamp has chosen to focus on the Puritan and
evangelical traditions which have stimulated most of the scholarship that
has probed women's engagement with Christianity in early America.
Following an introductory chapter in which she briefly reviews the
European legacy of feminine spirituality, she divides her book into two
parts. Part one surveys the Puritan heritage in three chapters, while her
treatment of evangelicalism ranges over the five chapters constituting
part two. Westerkamp establishes the theme that is focal to her study in
the introductory chapter, when she notes that the Puritan and evangelical
women in early America who were "socially and politically subordinate
according to custom and law, experienced the Holy Spirit during their
lives and discovered their own charismatic authority" (p. 1). In the
chapters that follow, she explores the evolving counterpoint between
women's claim to a public religious voice inspired and authorized by the
Holy Spirit and opposing social and cultural structures of domestic,
ecclesiastic and political patriarchy. Both the Puritan and evangelical
traditions acknowledged the legitimacy of the Holy Spirit's call and
defended patriarchal norms. They constitute a logical focus for her
study, Westerkamp claims in her introduction, because within their compass
lay this central paradox.
In the opening chapter of part one, Westerkamp provides a portrait of New
England Puritans as she sketches the ideal of the "goodwife." She
emphasizes the ways in which Puritan theology and social organization
buttressed hierarchy in its affirmation of patriarchal authority and
order. Even the promotion of literacy across gender boundaries served, she
argues, to reinforce male superiority, since the public fruits of reading
the Bible -- textual exegesis and preaching -- were reserved to men. "By
privileging erudition as a primary source of religious authority, Puritans
effectively disfranchised women religiously," she asserts (pp. 20-21).
Yet, she concedes, women's capacity to open themselves to the working of
God's grace made them influential within the circle of Puritan orthodoxy,
where they provided spiritual leadership through their example without
directly challenging gender hierarchy.
Not all women were satisfied with such a limited deployment of the gifts
grace, and in chapter three Westerkamp describes those who stepped beyond
the boundaries of acceptable behavior as they gave voice to the Spirit.
The tradition of Puritan dissent animated individual women like Anne
Hutchinson and Mary Dyer, as well as Quakers, to contest the male
ministerial monopoly on public spiritual authority. Westerkamp ably
describes the suppression of such feminine dissent by Puritan civil and
church officials. She moves on, in chapter four, to a consideration of
the ways in which they advanced their suppression of women's spiritual
voices through the medium of the witchcraft persecutions of the late
seventeenth century. By emphasizing women's susceptibility to evil,
churchmen made it easier for women's claims to mystical inspiration to be
construed as manifestations of satanic rather than divine powers.
Part two shifts its focus to evangelical religion, opening with a chapter
that considers Quakers and the Great Awakening. Westerkamp presents a
competent overview of Quaker piety and its well known, and exceptional,
promotion of gender equality. Her coverage of the Awakening bears the
salutary imprint of her previous work on the transatlantic context of this
movement, providing more information on the Scots-Irish role than is
customary. Using Sarah Osborne's home-based yet public ministry as an
illustration, Westerkamp delineates the continuing conundrum between
Spirit-driven piety and a patriarchal social system. In rejecting
Puritanism's privileging of the learned, the Awakening strengthened the
claims of those whose lack of learning made them more receptive to the
gifts of the Holy Spirit: women and enslaved blacks.
In succeeding chapters, Westerkamp explores the continuing tension between
women's strengthening religious voice and patriarchal suppression. She
describes Methodism's experiments with gender equality and the openings it
created for public female religious speech, attending to differing white
and black experiences. In her chapter on nineteenth-century domesticity
she widens her discussion to include a provocative consideration of
missionary wives, depicting an alternative to benevolence for women
compelled by the Spirit to act. In both settings, Westerkamp argues,
women were also often acting upon a sense of earthly vocation and
aspiration. Both domesticity and missionary work provided women with
opportunities to act on their own impulse while under the aegis of the
Holy Sprit and within the sanctioned compass of marriage and family.
Westerkamp moves onto more contentious and interpretively adventurous
ground in chapter eight. Here she reveals herself sceptical of the link
that has often been made between reform, particularly abolitionism, and
evangelicalism, citing the incompatibility of conservative religious
belief and social change. She also locates in the reform movement a key
shift in the development of women's religious voice, exemplified by
Sojourner Truth. Truth, Westerkamp suggests, "displayed the authority of
the spiritually gifted, but she spoke in her own voice" (p. 173). As she
recapitulates the emergence of an autonomous public female voice in a
concluding chapter, Westerkamp draws our attention again to the essential
role of the Holy Spirit in the process. Because they recognized the
legitimacy of the Spirit's power to animate and work through all
believers, Puritanism and evangelicalism unlocked women's public voice and
gave it a space in which to grow beyond the confines of religious speech.
This book is both more and less than the perfect introductory synthesis on
women and religion in early America. It will be useful in both
undergraduate and undergraduate teaching for its comprehensive and
detailed attention to the personalities, ideas and developments that
constituted Puritanism and evangelicalism in early America. The text and
bibliographic essay point readers in the direction of the latest
scholarship, and the portraits of figures such as Anne Hutchinson, Sarah
Osborne, Phoebe Palmer and Sojourner Truth provide illustrative anchors
for undergraduates traversing the territory of women and religion for the
first time. Students may find less accessible what will be most appealing
to those already familiar with the topic, who will find Westerkamp's
articulation of the thesis that grows from her synthesis both an elegant
interpretation and a spur to new research. Finally, students and scholars
alike may regret, as I do, the limitation of this study to Protestant
women. Catholic religious women responded to divine inspiration with
activist ministries in early America, too. Their experiences, from the
eighteenth-century evangelizing Ursulines in Louisiana to the phalanx of
teaching and nursing sisters who swept across antebellum America,
constitute an important strand in the development of women's public voice.
To exclude them and the growing scholarship about them makes a certain
degree of interpretive sense, but there should have been some
acknowledgement that they must be part of the agenda of future research to
which Westerkamp alludes in her conclusion.
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