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Ohio University Press · Swallow Press · www.ohioswallow.com

Creating a Perfect World
Religious and Secular Utopias in Nineteenth-Century Ohio

By Catherine M. Rokicky

“Will pique the interest of students and general readers who are less familiar wit Ohio’s utopian past…Creating a Perfect World raises a number of questions that merit further investigation.”

Joanne E. Passet, Ohio History

“The book is thoroughly researched…and packed with information about a movement that spoke forcefully for religious freedom, and political, economic, and social change. The reader comes away with a good sense of how all of this related to the history of Ohio.”

Dean H. Keller, Northern Ohio Bibliographic Society Newsletter

Powerful currents of religious revival and political and social reform swept nineteenth-century America. Many people expressed their radical religious and social ideals by creating or joining self-contained utopian communities. These utopianists challenged the existing social and economic order with alternative notions about religion, marriage, family, sexuality, property ownership, and wage labor.

Between 1787 and 1919, approximately 270 utopian communities existed in the United States. Due to its unique location on the young nation’s frontier, the state of Ohio was the site of much of this activity.

Creating a Perfect World examines Ohio’s utopian movements, both religious and secular. These include the United Society of Believers in Christ’s Second Coming, or Shakers; the Society of Separatists at Zoar; the Mormons, who stopped in the state for several years on their way west; and several societies based on the philosophies of European social reformers Robert Owen and Charles Fourier.

In this detailed account of a unique and fascinating chapter in Ohio’s history, Catherine M. Rokicky profiles these communities and explores their ideals, how and why they were established, their leaders, and their members’ reasons for joining and sometimes leaving. She also examines the roles men and women played, their approaches to communal living and community property, their economic activities, their relations with surrounding communities and the state, and the various reasons for their success or failure.

Catherine M. Rokicky is assistant professor of history at Cuyahoga Community College. She is the author of James Monroe: Oberlin’s Christian Statesman and Reformer, 1821–1898.   More info →

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In Series

Ohio Bicentennial Series

Formats

Paperback
978-0-8214-1439-2
Retail price: $26.95, S.
Release date: March 2002
15 illus. · 192 pages · 6 × 9 in.
Rights:  World

Hardcover
978-0-8214-1438-5
Retail price: $49.95, S.
Release date: March 2002
15 illus. · 192 pages · 6 × 9 in.
Rights:  World

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