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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
An interesting perspective., October 18, 1999
A Community of Witches helped me to see how Witchcraft/Neo-Paganism/etc. has evolved and is growing through the eyes of a researcher - one who has not completely become a part the religion, yet has experienced it and watched people grow from the inside. I really enjoyed Helen's observations and connections to the concerns of parents bringing children into Wicca, and pointing out the ideas of a fluid community based on common interests. This book helped me to realize some of the many elements that are changing within this growing religion, and to think about where it fits together in my life. Thank YOU Helen for the wonderful thoughts!
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13 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
One of the finest studies of American Wicca ever published, May 25, 1999
By A Customer
"One of the finest sociological studies of American Wicca ever published. It is unlikely to be superseded. Its author is to be commended for maintaining a high degree of theoretical sophistication while remaining accessible to the average reader." Stephen D. Glazier (University of Nebraska) in Review of Religious Research, volume 40, number 4 (June 1999), p. 380.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Ideal for discussions of children and "routinization", March 18, 2005
Helen Berger is probably one of the leading investigators in trying to get a sense of the numbers and ideological places Pagans and Witches in the U.S. are going. While her book "Voices From The Pagan Census" is designed to display mostly raw survey data with little interpretation, this work handles most of her interpretive analysis of this movement. A note of warning--although the title includes "Neo-Paganism," there is very little here not of Witchen or Wiccan tradtion. Those looking for cross-tradition discussion will be disappointed.
Her book, thankfully, is centered around questions of family and tradition continuity through children, and how the influence of multi-generational change will affect the communities at hand. Her own major influence is Anthony Giddens, who holds that "postmodern fracturing" is the logical outgrowth of modernity, rather than a new era. Likewise, the subject or self has in no way evaporated, but rather remains symbolically negotiated and mediated between public and private experiences. As globalization lifts and floats institutions above their historically grounded practices and origins, so Wicca, as a religion of its time, asserts a similar possible universality, and this accounts for the way it draws both on individual experience and large, competing traditions of formerly indigenous knowledge as valid ways of practice.
Offering a background in census numbers, the concept of magic, Gerald Gardner, and other common Witchcraft parameters, Berger first focuses on the concept of the "magical self," a Promethean space attuned to the mysticism both of specific theurgical rituals and the mysticism of everyday life. Gods/Goddesses are viewed multivalently, and personal transformations, (often in terms of gender roles and expectations) are a predominant concern in ritual.
Berger then moves outward, to examine "The Coven," and the space of (post)modern friendships and fluid relations that develop. Secrecy, the Learning of Witch practices, and the similarity to family and kinship structures is discussed. Again moving outward, Berger examines covens and groups in relations to the larger concept of community. Drawing on Shane Phelan's concepts of lesbian community, Berger argues a similar process takes place--insulation from hostility, visibility, persona construction, and political launching pad for interacting with the wider world. While large conflicts exist, Berger posits the commonality of a magical "shared life world" and a collective memory that helps to construct a usable past and promising future, one that is envisioned especially at festivals.
Perhaps most fascinating and unique is Berger's attention to children and the routininzation that accompanies multigenerational development. While some families affiliate themselves with institutions such as Unitarian Universalism for social cover, others question bringing in children at all. As most parents were raised a different religion, many do not want to inflict that same conflict on their children. Another conflict is involving children in rituals normally meant for adults, with archaic language and intense group concentration. Other families and groups write rituals in which children can specifically particpate in some limited role, or certainly in their own rites of passage. The controversial topic of how children learn and relate to sexuality in a Wiccan context is well covered. But even that controversy fades somewhat as the prophetic voices of Witchcraft turn to priestly voices (to use Max Weber's language.) Practices, according to Berger, are becoming more standardized, and isomorphic. Two communities, EarthSpirit and Circle Sanctuary, are examined as creative responses to routinization.
The early parts of Berger's volume have much in common with other investigations. This makes them no less valuable, but there is a degree of redundancy in her discussions and "thick descriptions" of invocations and rituals. Where her work really shines is in her discussion of the role of children and routinzation of practice within magical communities. For these topics in particular, Berger's work is definitely required reading.
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