By the early twenty-first century, a phenomenon that once was inconceivable had become nearly commonplace in American society: the public spiritual teacher who neither belongs to, nor is authorized by a major religious tradition. From the Oprah Winfrey-endorsed Eckhart Tolle to figures like Gangaji and Adhyashanti, there are now countless spiritual teachers who claim and teach variants of instant or immediate enlightenment.
American Gurustells the story of how this phenomenon emerged. Through an examination of the broader literary and religious context of the subject, Arthur Versluis shows that a characteristic feature of the Western esoteric tradition is the claim that every person can achieve spontaneous, direct, unmediated spiritual insight. This claim was articulated with special clarity by the New England Transcendentalists Bronson Alcott and Ralph Waldo Emerson. Versluis explores Transcendentalism, Walt Whitman, the Beat movement, Timothy Leary, and the New Age movement to shed light on the emergence of the contemporary American guru.
This insightful study is the first to show how Asian religions and Western mysticism converged to produce the phenomenon of spontaneously enlightened American gurus.
1. Introduction
Nineteenth-Century Enlightenments 2. Revivalism, Romanticism, and the Protestant Principle 3. The Sage of Concord 4. Emerson and Platonism 5. The Concord School and American Platonism 6. Walt Whitman's Cosmic Consciousness
Enlightened Literature 7. American Spiritual Teachers 8. Beat Religion and The Choice 9. Enter Psychedelics 10. Dogmas, Catmas, and Spiritual Anarchism 11. Oh, ho, ho, it's magic 12. Spiritual Anarchy, Tantra, and Islamic Heterodoxy 13. On the Counterculture
American Gurus 14. From Europe to America 15. Varieties of Modern American Mysticism 16. The Sage on the Stage 17. The American Guru Enters,lĂ