Difference between revisions of "Elmina Drake Slenker"

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(Created page with "'''Elmina Drake Slenker''' wrote novels and short stories for children. She also wrote about Darwinism and various atheist/secularist topics. She was an ex-Quaker atheist, T...")
 
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The atheist sociologist Phil Zuckerman wrote:
 
The atheist sociologist Phil Zuckerman wrote:
{{Cquote|The final profile is that of [[Elmina Drake Slenker]], an ex-[[Quaker]] who wrote novels as well as short, didactic stories for children about Darwinian naturalism, rationalism, and other secularist topics. Slenker came out publicly as an atheist in 1856 by publishing a letter in the Boston Investigator in defense of the infamous infidel Ernestine Rose. Such declarations of unbelief were scandalous for any individual at the time, but especially for women. As Schmidt documents, “Being a village atheist invited cold shoulders; being a female village atheist doubly so.” Condemnation of Slenker was swift, not only by friends and relatives, but also by public voices, newspapers editors, and writers such as the poet Ella Wheeler Wilcox, who wrote that “the most repellent object on earth is a woman infidel. She is as unnatural as a flower which breathes poison instead of perfume.” What ultimately brought Slenker into national prominence was her prosecution by Anthony Comstock’s anti-vice crusade. Her crime? Writing leaflets and personal letters to various people about human sexuality, marital relations, birth control, and bestiality. She was put on trial, and it only took the jury 10 minutes to find her guilty.<ref>[The Church of the Churchless] by Phil Zuckerman, Los Angeles Review of Books, March 19, 2017</ref>}}
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{{Cquote|The final profile is that of Elmina Drake Slenker, an ex-[[Quaker]] who wrote novels as well as short, didactic stories for children about Darwinian naturalism, rationalism, and other secularist topics. Slenker came out publicly as an atheist in 1856 by publishing a letter in the Boston Investigator in defense of the infamous infidel Ernestine Rose. Such declarations of unbelief were scandalous for any individual at the time, but especially for women. As Schmidt documents, “Being a village atheist invited cold shoulders; being a female village atheist doubly so.” Condemnation of Slenker was swift, not only by friends and relatives, but also by public voices, newspapers editors, and writers such as the poet Ella Wheeler Wilcox, who wrote that “the most repellent object on earth is a woman infidel. She is as unnatural as a flower which breathes poison instead of perfume.” What ultimately brought Slenker into national prominence was her prosecution by Anthony Comstock’s anti-vice crusade. Her crime? Writing leaflets and personal letters to various people about human sexuality, marital relations, birth control, and bestiality. She was put on trial, and it only took the jury 10 minutes to find her guilty.<ref>[The Church of the Churchless] by Phil Zuckerman, Los Angeles Review of Books, March 19, 2017</ref>}}
  
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[[Category: Authors]]
 
[[Category: Atheists]]
 
[[Category: Atheists]]

Revision as of 01:12, May 16, 2017

Elmina Drake Slenker wrote novels and short stories for children. She also wrote about Darwinism and various atheist/secularist topics. She was an ex-Quaker atheist,

The atheist sociologist Phil Zuckerman wrote:

The final profile is that of Elmina Drake Slenker, an ex-Quaker who wrote novels as well as short, didactic stories for children about Darwinian naturalism, rationalism, and other secularist topics. Slenker came out publicly as an atheist in 1856 by publishing a letter in the Boston Investigator in defense of the infamous infidel Ernestine Rose. Such declarations of unbelief were scandalous for any individual at the time, but especially for women. As Schmidt documents, “Being a village atheist invited cold shoulders; being a female village atheist doubly so.” Condemnation of Slenker was swift, not only by friends and relatives, but also by public voices, newspapers editors, and writers such as the poet Ella Wheeler Wilcox, who wrote that “the most repellent object on earth is a woman infidel. She is as unnatural as a flower which breathes poison instead of perfume.” What ultimately brought Slenker into national prominence was her prosecution by Anthony Comstock’s anti-vice crusade. Her crime? Writing leaflets and personal letters to various people about human sexuality, marital relations, birth control, and bestiality. She was put on trial, and it only took the jury 10 minutes to find her guilty.[1]
  1. [The Church of the Churchless] by Phil Zuckerman, Los Angeles Review of Books, March 19, 2017