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‘Do we Still Quake?’ An Ethnographic and Historical Enquiry
Research Article
‘Do we Still Quake?’ An Ethnographic and Historical Enquiry
Research Article
‘Do we Still Quake?’ An Ethnographic and Historical Enquiry

Abstract

Michele Tarter’s (2004) essay, on first generation Friends and their prophecy of celestial flesh, explores the striking bodily manifestations of their spiritual experience, particularly ‘quaking’. Reflecting on this, she writes: ‘it is precisely what we no longer do: quake’. Using interview data from a small group of British Friends I shall show that some twenty-first-century Friends certainly do quake. I use accounts of early quaking, a variety of Quaker commentators, and historical accounts of the understanding of the body, to show the ways in which current quaking is different, and differently understood, from that of early Friends.

Keywords

spirit, flesh, Quaking, Galen, enthusiasm, body, Toronto Blessing

How to Cite

Lunn, P., (2008) “‘Do we Still Quake?’ An Ethnographic and Historical Enquiry”, Quaker Studies 12(2), 216–229. doi: https://doi.org/10.3828/quaker.12.2.216

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Authors

Pam Lunn (Woodbrooke Quaker Study Centre, Birmingham, England)

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Issue

  • Volume 12 • Issue 2 • 2008

Publication details

Pages 216–229
Published on 2008-12-01

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Identifiers

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.3828/quaker.12.2.216

Peer Review

This article has been peer reviewed.

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  • XML: 6e8aed6f13396d24ff24309ab388b00e
  • PDF: 35076f274d5b6448837de16220a2b0f4

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