New Age
New Age describes a broad movement of late twentieth century and contemporary Western culture characterised by an individual eclectic approach to spiritual exploration. It has some attributes of a new, emerging religion but is currently a loose network of spiritual seekers, teachers, healers and other participants. The name "New Age" also refers to the market segment in which goods and services are sold to people in the movement.
History
The name New Age was popularized by the American mass media during the late 1980s,
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to describe the alternative spiritual subculture interested in such things as meditation, channeling, reincarnation, crystals, psychic experience, holistic health, environmentalism, and various “unsolved mysteries” such as UFOs, Earth mysteries and Crop circles. Typical activities of this subculture include participation in study or meditation groups, attendance at lectures and fairs; the purchase of books, music, and other products such as crystals or incense; patronage of fortune-tellers, healers and spiritual counselors.
Related Topics:
Meditation - Channeling - Reincarnation - Crystals - Psychic - Holistic health - Environmentalism - UFO - Earth mysteries - Crop circle
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The New Age subculture already existed in the 1970s, and arguably continued themes from the 1960s counterculture. Earlier generations would have recognized some, but not all, of the New Age's constituent elements under the practices of Spiritualism, Theosophy, or some forms of New Thought / the Metaphysical movement, all of which date back to the nineteenth century, as does alternative health. These movements in turn have roots in Transcendentalism, Mesmerism, Swedenborgianism, and various earlier Western esoteric or occult traditions, such as the Hermetic arts of astrology, magic, alchemy, and cabbala.
Related Topics:
Counterculture - Spiritualism - Theosophy - New Thought - Transcendentalism - Mesmerism - Swedenborgianism - Esoteric - Occult - Hermetic - Astrology - Magic - Alchemy - Cabbala
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In the English-speaking world, we should make special mention of study groups devoted to American trance-diagnostician Edgar Cayce, who inspired many of today's channelers. The British neo-Theosophist Alice Bailey's writings may have supplied the term New Age (or New Era). The Findhorn Foundation, an early intentional New Age community in northern Scotland founded in 1962 played a significant role. The movement in Russia has been heavily influenced by the legacy of Nicholas Roerich and Helena Roerich, who taught in the Theosophical tradition. Another former Theosophist, Rudolf Steiner and his anthroposophical movement, is a major influence, especially upon German-speaking New Agers. In Brazil, followers of Spiritualist writer Allan Kardec blend with the Africanized folk traditions of Candomblé and Umbanda.
Related Topics:
Edgar Cayce - Alice Bailey - Findhorn Foundation - Nicholas Roerich - Helena Roerich - Rudolf Steiner - Anthroposophical movement - Allan Kardec - Candomblé - Umbanda
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Key moments in raising public awareness of this subculture include the Harmonic Convergence organized by Jose Arguelles in Sedona, Arizona in 1987; and the wave of interest in the broadcast of Shirley MacLaine's television mini-series Out on a Limb (also 1987). This was an autobiographical account of her mid-life spiritual exploration. Also influential are the claims of channelers such as Jane Roberts (Seth) and J.Z. Knight (Ramtha), as well as revealed writings such as A Course In Miracles (Helen Schucman), The Celestine Prophecy (James Redfield), Mutant Message Down Under (Marlo Morgan), and Conversations with God (Neale Donald Walsch).
Related Topics:
Harmonic Convergence - Jose Arguelles - 1987 - Shirley MacLaine - Jane Roberts - A Course In Miracles - Helen Schucman - The Celestine Prophecy - James Redfield - Mutant Message Down Under - Marlo Morgan - Conversations with God - Neale Donald Walsch
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The question of which contemporary cultural elements ought to be included under the name of "New Age" is quite vexed. New Age channelers have many points of similarity with Spiritualist mediums. Many spiritual movements, such as neo-paganism and transpersonal psychology partially overlap with it. Many groups prefer to distance themselves from the possible negative connotations of the "New Age" name such as the media hoopla, commercialism, and perhaps hucksterism. For example, key individuals in the New Thought movement, such as Ernest Holmes, have focused on a more scientific approach and do not share New Age beliefs in reincarnation, magic, or channeling. Major attempts to present the New Age as a values-based sociopolitical movement included Mark Satin's New Age Politics (orig. 1976), Theodore Roszak's Person/Planet (1978), and Marilyn Ferguson's Aquarian Conspiracy (1980). The New Age is a wide menu of ideas and activities, from which participants in the subculture select their own preferred streams to patronise or identify with.
Related Topics:
Neo-paganism - Transpersonal psychology - Ernest Holmes - Reincarnation - Magic - Channeling - Mark Satin - Theodore Roszak
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~ Table of Content ~
| ► | Introduction |
| ► | History |
| ► | Beliefs |
| ► | Quotations |
| ► | Lifestyle |
| ► | Underlying assumptions |
| ► | Language |
| ► | Critiques of the New Age |
| ► | Medicine |
| ► | Music |
| ► | See also |
| ► | References |
| ► | External links |
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