Mark Stahlman (via RadioMail) on Fri, 8 Aug 1997 18:53:10 +0200 (MET DST) |
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<nettime> The Ranters: Ejaculating with Prayer |
Folks: Perhaps the first time that all effective controls were abandoned for publishing one's world-shaping opinions was during the English Civil War when often clandestine printing presses disgorged a dazzling array of screeds. A remarkable gaggle of pamphleteers emerged to propose the marvelous forms of the revolutionary utopia presumed to lie just at hand. Largely forgotten by official British historiography in the 18th and 19th centuries, aspects of these popular utopias were revived by Friedrich Engles in his history of communist thought. Often grouped together (frequently by their opponents) under such labels as the Levelers, the Diggers and the Ranters, it was, as befits such a situation, truly every man for himself. But, of all these, the Ranters may provide some particularly fruitful material for pondering the current state of affairs on the Net and, indeed, for living in nettime. Here's how Frank and Fritzie Manuel described the Ranters situation in their monumental work, "Utopian Thought in the Western World" -- "During the Civil War there were individual preachers who boasted that they were emancipated from any sense of sin and who proclaimed that everything was "from nature" -- a kind of popular pantheism that saw Godliness in each act of their fellow creatures, drinking, smoking, fornicating, making merry. The term Ranter was loosely applied to this attitude toward God and men. The Ranters were not a proper sect, nor did they adhere to any formal manner of worship. Some among them not only felt God within themselves and in all living things and 'ejaculated with prayers' when moved by Him, but believed themselves to be gods. One gathers -- from their enemies and their own dubious recantations when apprehended by the authorities -- that they had assembled small, self-contained groups around leaders who engaged in promiscuous discourse with 'she-disciples.' "The ideal of liberation from guilt and the utopia without repression had never died in the West. The tenets of certain Gnostic sects had survived through the Middle Ages to reappear among the Taborite millenarians and the members of the Family of Love. In the mid-seventeenth century there were Continential sects both Christian and Judaic who believed that the Messiah would come when men were all good or all evil, and since the prospect of the former seemed remote there was a tendency among them to accept freedom of the will, without the restraints that traditional Christians and Renaissance humanists had imposed upon themselves. Many of these ideas crossed the Channel to England, "When societies are cut adrift from their morrings, instinctive drives break loose from the repressive psychic forces implanted in individuals by their upbringing. Groups arise among the ordinary people to demand public sanction for instinctual gratification that the upper classes have long enjoyed. In scriptural religious societies the demand for gratification presupposes total emancipation from written prohibitions in the commandments of God the Father. One Father Laurence Clarkson, or Claxton, told about his Ranter beliefs after he had abandoned them in favor of Muggletonianism. 'No man could be free'd from sin, till he had acted that so called sin, as no sin . . . till you can lie with all women as one woman, and not judge it sin, you can do nothing but sin . . . no man could attain perfection but this way.' Those who were moved by the Ranters wanted not only to sin, but to sin with the approval of the Father. Rarely is such rebelliousness authentic liberty; usually it is an inadequate way of flouting paternal authority, for the internalized censor cannot be overthrown as readily as a king can be beheaded or a prelate ousted." (pages 355-356) Mark Stahlman New Media Associates New York City newmedia@mcimail.com --- # distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@icf.de and "info nettime" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: nettime-owner@icf.de