Fortune Telling and American Religious Freedom

IF 0.3 3区 哲学 Q2 HISTORY
Charles McCrary
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Abstract

Abstract In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, a number of people who were arrested for pretending telling fortunes appealed their convictions on religious freedom grounds. These accused fortune tellers, mostly white spiritualist women, were arrested for violating state statutes across the United States, from New York to Georgia to Oklahoma to Washington. Though each defendant lost her case, their arguments showcase previously understudied early twentieth-century attempts by relatively disempowered actors to expand the scope of religious freedom. One law professor, named Blewett Lee, wrote a series of articles in the 1920s in which he considered these cases and their implications, identifying central problems and advancing prescient arguments about religious freedom. This article thinks with Lee and the accused fortune tellers to highlight two key aspects of secularism and American religious freedom. First, it uncovers the epistemological assumptions embedded into jurisprudence and legislation around “fortune telling.” Many of the statutes, which were based on English vagrancy laws, applied to “persons pretending to tell fortunes.” The term “pretending” raised questions about what the law presumed to be true and whether secular states could adjudicate religious veracity. Second, this article argues that secularism is regulatory and that scholars should connect religious freedom to histories of policing, licensure, and other forms of regulation. These two aspects, one primarily conceptual and the other practical and procedure, work together to delineate the parameters of American religious freedom, as secular state agents both define “religious belief” and regulate believers.
算命与美国宗教自由
在19世纪末和20世纪初,一些因假装算命而被捕的人以宗教自由为由对他们的定罪提出上诉。这些被指控的算命先生,大多是白人通灵的女性,因违反美国各地的州法规而被捕,从纽约到乔治亚州,从俄克拉荷马州到华盛顿州。虽然每个被告都输掉了她的案子,但他们的论点展示了20世纪早期相对弱势的行动者试图扩大宗教自由范围的努力,这在以前没有得到充分的研究。一位名叫布莱维特·李(Blewett Lee)的法学教授在20世纪20年代撰写了一系列文章,对这些案件及其影响进行了研究,指出了其中的核心问题,并提出了有关宗教自由的先见之明的论点。本文与李和被指控的算命先生一起思考,以突出世俗主义和美国宗教自由的两个关键方面。首先,它揭示了围绕“算命”的法学和立法中嵌入的认识论假设。许多以英国流浪法为基础的法规适用于“假装算命的人”。“假装”一词引发了一些问题,比如法律假定什么是真实的,以及世俗国家是否可以裁决宗教的真实性。其次,本文认为世俗主义是监管的,学者应该将宗教自由与警务、许可证和其他形式的监管联系起来。这两个方面,一个主要是概念上的,另一个是实践和程序上的,共同描绘了美国宗教自由的参数,因为世俗的国家机构既定义了“宗教信仰”,又规范了信徒。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.40
自引率
25.00%
发文量
7
期刊介绍: Religion and American Culture is devoted to promoting the ongoing scholarly discussion of the nature, terms, and dynamics of religion in America. Embracing a diversity of methodological approaches and theoretical perspectives, this semiannual publication explores the interplay between religion and other spheres of American culture. Although concentrated on specific topics, articles illuminate larger patterns, implications, or contexts of American life. Edited by Philip Goff, Stephen Stein, and Peter Thuesen.
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