History 233 Reading Guide
The Perfectionist Impulse In Antebellum Reform: Utopian Alternatives
- Carl J. Guarneri, "Reconstructing the Antebellum Communitarian Movement: Oneida and Fourierism," Journal of the Early Republic 16 (1996), 463-488. (e-reserve)
- Further reading: Lucy Jayne Kamau, "The Anthropology of Space in Harmonist and Owenite New Harmony," Communal Societies 12 (1992), 68-89. (e-reserve)
Questions:
- In his article, Guarneri examines the nature and the significance of the interconnections and shared goals of the Oneida Community and the Fourierists as one example of the connections among nineteenth-century communitarians.
- How did John Humphrey Noyes, the founder of the Oneida Community, compare and contrast Oneida with the "social reform" communitarians like the Fourierist phalanxes and with religious communitarians?
- In what ways did these comparisons of similarities and differences matter? To what extent, and for what purposes, did the members of different communal societies view themselves as allies or competitors?
- What did Noyes conclude about the role of communitarianism in American society?