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Between the Pigeonholes: Gerald Heard, 1889-1971

Author Alison Falby
Publisher Cambridge Scholars Publishing
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Book Details
Author(s)Alison Falby
ISBN / ASIN184718555X
ISBN-139781847185556
AvailabilityIn stock. Usually ships within 2 to 3 days.
Sales Rank3,508,939
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸

Description

Aldous Huxley described Gerald Heard as that rare beinga learned man who [made] his mental home on the vacant spaces between the pigeonholes. Heards off-beat interests made him a cultural and intellectual pioneer on both sides of the Atlantic in the middle decades of the twentieth century. Despite accolades from such figures as E.M. Forster, who characterized him as one of the most penetrating minds in England, and Christopher Isherwood, who described him upon his death as one of the few great magic mythmakers and revealers of lifes wonder, Heard is largely unknown today. Between the Pigeonholes is the first published full-length study of Gerald Heard. Alison Falby examines Heards ideas and contexts in interwar Britain and postwar America, demonstrating his significance in several important twentieth-century movements. These movements include popular science and psychology, psychical research, Eastern spirituality, pacifism, cooperativism, and Californian counter-culture. All of Heards involvements expressed his desire to convey religious ideas in the modern languages of biological, social, and physical science. Falby also traces Heards shifting political leanings from left-liberal in the early-1930s to libertarian in the early-1960s. She finds that his modernist theological approach, conventionally associated with liberal religion and politics, provided spiritual fodder for those on both the Left and the Right: Isherwood and W.H. Auden on the one hand, and Clare Boothe Luce and Spiritual Mobilization on the other. Using Heard as a prism through which to examine popular ideas, Falby shows that the twentieth century contained much political and religious heterogeneity. This heterogeneity illustrates the diverse and overlapping roots of both liberal religion and conservative politics in the twenty-first century.