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Brook
Wilensky-Lanford
Author
Department of Religious Studies
College of Arts and Sciences
"Your Daily Life Is Your Temple And Your Religion”: The Material and Immaterial Availability of Kahlil Gibran’s The Prophet
This thesis will use the reception history of the book The Prophet by Kahlil Gibran, a short, illustrated book of prose poetry first published in 1923, to question the prevailing characterization in American religious history of the sixties as a revolution in an otherwise stagnant religious culture. The Prophet is best known for its popularity in the 1960s, where it acquired a reputation as a “counterculture Bible.” I argue that The Prophet is distinguished not by any special affinity for the counterculture, but by its remarkably consistent level of “availability” to readers over time, in terms both literary and material, as demonstrated by two instances in its publication history: the publication and distribution of an “Armed Services Edition” of The Prophet during World War II; and the widespread selection of excerpts from The Prophet as alternate ritual texts for reading aloud at weddings beginning in the late 1960s and 70s.
Spring 2017
2017
American history
American literature
eng
Master of Arts
Thesis
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Graduate School
Degree granting institution
Religious Studies
Todd
Ochoa
Thesis advisor
Brandon
Bayne
Thesis advisor
Yaakov
Ariel
Thesis advisor
text
Brook
Wilensky-Lanford
Creator
Department of Religious Studies
College of Arts and Sciences
"Your Daily Life Is Your Temple And Your Religion”: The Material and
Immaterial Availability of Kahlil Gibran’s The Prophet
This thesis will use the reception history of the book The Prophet by Kahlil
Gibran, a short, illustrated book of prose poetry first published in 1923, to question the
prevailing characterization in American religious history of the sixties as a revolution
in an otherwise stagnant religious culture. The Prophet is best known for its popularity
in the 1960s, where it acquired a reputation as a “counterculture Bible.” I argue that The
Prophet is distinguished not by any special affinity for the counterculture, but by its
remarkably consistent level of “availability” to readers over time, in terms both literary
and material, as demonstrated by two instances in its publication history: the publication
and distribution of an “Armed Services Edition” of The Prophet during World War II; and
the widespread selection of excerpts from The Prophet as alternate ritual texts for
reading aloud at weddings beginning in the late 1960s and 70s.
Spring 2017
2017
American history
American literature
eng
Master of Arts
Thesis
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Graduate School
Degree granting
institution
Religious Studies
Todd
Ochoa
Thesis advisor
Brandon
Bayne
Thesis advisor
Yaakov
Ariel
Thesis advisor
text
Brook
Wilensky-Lanford
Creator
Department of Religious Studies
College of Arts and Sciences
"Your Daily Life Is Your Temple And Your Religion”: The Material and Immaterial Availability of Kahlil Gibran’s The Prophet
This thesis will use the reception history of the book The Prophet by Kahlil Gibran, a short, illustrated book of prose poetry first published in 1923, to question the prevailing characterization in American religious history of the sixties as a revolution in an otherwise stagnant religious culture. The Prophet is best known for its popularity in the 1960s, where it acquired a reputation as a “counterculture Bible.” I argue that The Prophet is distinguished not by any special affinity for the counterculture, but by its remarkably consistent level of “availability” to readers over time, in terms both literary and material, as demonstrated by two instances in its publication history: the publication and distribution of an “Armed Services Edition” of The Prophet during World War II; and the widespread selection of excerpts from The Prophet as alternate ritual texts for reading aloud at weddings beginning in the late 1960s and 70s.
Spring 2017
2017
American history
American literature
eng
Master of Arts
Thesis
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Graduate School
Degree granting institution
Religious Studies
Todd
Ochoa
Thesis advisor
Brandon
Bayne
Thesis advisor
Yaakov
Ariel
Thesis advisor
text
Brook
Wilensky-Lanford
Creator
Department of Religious Studies
College of Arts and Sciences
"Your Daily Life Is Your Temple And Your Religion”: The Material and Immaterial Availability of Kahlil Gibran’s The Prophet
This thesis will use the reception history of the book The Prophet by Kahlil Gibran, a short, illustrated book of prose poetry first published in 1923, to question the prevailing characterization in American religious history of the sixties as a revolution in an otherwise stagnant religious culture. The Prophet is best known for its popularity in the 1960s, where it acquired a reputation as a “counterculture Bible.” I argue that The Prophet is distinguished not by any special affinity for the counterculture, but by its remarkably consistent level of “availability” to readers over time, in terms both literary and material, as demonstrated by two instances in its publication history: the publication and distribution of an “Armed Services Edition” of The Prophet during World War II; and the widespread selection of excerpts from The Prophet as alternate ritual texts for reading aloud at weddings beginning in the late 1960s and 70s.
2017-05
2017
American history
American literature
eng
Master of Arts
Masters Thesis
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Graduate School
Degree granting institution
Religious Studies
Todd
Ochoa
Thesis advisor
Brandon
Bayne
Thesis advisor
Yaakov
Ariel
Thesis advisor
text
Brook
Wilensky-Lanford
Creator
Department of Religious Studies
College of Arts and Sciences
"Your Daily Life Is Your Temple And Your Religion”: The Material and Immaterial Availability of Kahlil Gibran’s The Prophet
This thesis will use the reception history of the book The Prophet by Kahlil Gibran, a short, illustrated book of prose poetry first published in 1923, to question the prevailing characterization in American religious history of the sixties as a revolution in an otherwise stagnant religious culture. The Prophet is best known for its popularity in the 1960s, where it acquired a reputation as a “counterculture Bible.” I argue that The Prophet is distinguished not by any special affinity for the counterculture, but by its remarkably consistent level of “availability” to readers over time, in terms both literary and material, as demonstrated by two instances in its publication history: the publication and distribution of an “Armed Services Edition” of The Prophet during World War II; and the widespread selection of excerpts from The Prophet as alternate ritual texts for reading aloud at weddings beginning in the late 1960s and 70s.
2017
American history
American literature
eng
Master of Arts
Masters Thesis
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Graduate School
Degree granting institution
Religious Studies
Todd
Ochoa
Thesis advisor
Brandon
Bayne
Thesis advisor
Yaakov
Ariel
Thesis advisor
text
2017-05
Brook
Wilensky-Lanford
Creator
Department of Religious Studies
College of Arts and Sciences
"Your Daily Life Is Your Temple And Your Religion”: The Material and Immaterial Availability of Kahlil Gibran’s The Prophet
This thesis will use the reception history of the book The Prophet by Kahlil Gibran, a short, illustrated book of prose poetry first published in 1923, to question the prevailing characterization in American religious history of the sixties as a revolution in an otherwise stagnant religious culture. The Prophet is best known for its popularity in the 1960s, where it acquired a reputation as a “counterculture Bible.” I argue that The Prophet is distinguished not by any special affinity for the counterculture, but by its remarkably consistent level of “availability” to readers over time, in terms both literary and material, as demonstrated by two instances in its publication history: the publication and distribution of an “Armed Services Edition” of The Prophet during World War II; and the widespread selection of excerpts from The Prophet as alternate ritual texts for reading aloud at weddings beginning in the late 1960s and 70s.
2017
American history
American literature
eng
Master of Arts
Masters Thesis
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Graduate School
Degree granting institution
Religious Studies
Todd
Ochoa
Thesis advisor
Brandon
Bayne
Thesis advisor
Yaakov
Ariel
Thesis advisor
text
2017-05
Brook
Wilensky-Lanford
Creator
Department of Religious Studies
College of Arts and Sciences
"Your Daily Life Is Your Temple And Your Religion”: The Material and Immaterial Availability of Kahlil Gibran’s The Prophet
This thesis will use the reception history of the book The Prophet by Kahlil Gibran, a short, illustrated book of prose poetry first published in 1923, to question the prevailing characterization in American religious history of the sixties as a revolution in an otherwise stagnant religious culture. The Prophet is best known for its popularity in the 1960s, where it acquired a reputation as a “counterculture Bible.” I argue that The Prophet is distinguished not by any special affinity for the counterculture, but by its remarkably consistent level of “availability” to readers over time, in terms both literary and material, as demonstrated by two instances in its publication history: the publication and distribution of an “Armed Services Edition” of The Prophet during World War II; and the widespread selection of excerpts from The Prophet as alternate ritual texts for reading aloud at weddings beginning in the late 1960s and 70s.
2017
American history
American literature
eng
Master of Arts
Masters Thesis
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Graduate School
Degree granting institution
Religious Studies
Todd
Ochoa
Thesis advisor
Brandon
Bayne
Thesis advisor
Yaakov
Ariel
Thesis advisor
text
2017-05
Brook
Wilensky-Lanford
Creator
Department of Religious Studies
College of Arts and Sciences
"Your Daily Life Is Your Temple And Your Religion”: The Material and Immaterial Availability of Kahlil Gibran’s The Prophet
This thesis will use the reception history of the book The Prophet by Kahlil Gibran, a short, illustrated book of prose poetry first published in 1923, to question the prevailing characterization in American religious history of the sixties as a revolution in an otherwise stagnant religious culture. The Prophet is best known for its popularity in the 1960s, where it acquired a reputation as a “counterculture Bible.” I argue that The Prophet is distinguished not by any special affinity for the counterculture, but by its remarkably consistent level of “availability” to readers over time, in terms both literary and material, as demonstrated by two instances in its publication history: the publication and distribution of an “Armed Services Edition” of The Prophet during World War II; and the widespread selection of excerpts from The Prophet as alternate ritual texts for reading aloud at weddings beginning in the late 1960s and 70s.
2017
American history
American literature
eng
Master of Arts
Masters Thesis
Religious Studies
Todd
Ochoa
Thesis advisor
Brandon
Bayne
Thesis advisor
Yaakov
Ariel
Thesis advisor
text
2017-05
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Degree granting institution
Brook
Wilensky-Lanford
Creator
Department of Religious Studies
College of Arts and Sciences
"Your Daily Life Is Your Temple And Your Religion”: The Material and Immaterial Availability of Kahlil Gibran’s The Prophet
This thesis will use the reception history of the book The Prophet by Kahlil Gibran, a short, illustrated book of prose poetry first published in 1923, to question the prevailing characterization in American religious history of the sixties as a revolution in an otherwise stagnant religious culture. The Prophet is best known for its popularity in the 1960s, where it acquired a reputation as a “counterculture Bible.” I argue that The Prophet is distinguished not by any special affinity for the counterculture, but by its remarkably consistent level of “availability” to readers over time, in terms both literary and material, as demonstrated by two instances in its publication history: the publication and distribution of an “Armed Services Edition” of The Prophet during World War II; and the widespread selection of excerpts from The Prophet as alternate ritual texts for reading aloud at weddings beginning in the late 1960s and 70s.
2017
American history
American literature
eng
Master of Arts
Masters Thesis
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Graduate School
Degree granting institution
Religious Studies
Todd
Ochoa
Thesis advisor
Brandon
Bayne
Thesis advisor
Yaakov
Ariel
Thesis advisor
text
2017-05
Brook
Wilensky-Lanford
Creator
Department of Religious Studies
College of Arts and Sciences
"Your Daily Life Is Your Temple And Your Religion”: The Material and Immaterial Availability of Kahlil Gibran’s The Prophet
This thesis will use the reception history of the book The Prophet by Kahlil Gibran, a short, illustrated book of prose poetry first published in 1923, to question the prevailing characterization in American religious history of the sixties as a revolution in an otherwise stagnant religious culture. The Prophet is best known for its popularity in the 1960s, where it acquired a reputation as a “counterculture Bible.” I argue that The Prophet is distinguished not by any special affinity for the counterculture, but by its remarkably consistent level of “availability” to readers over time, in terms both literary and material, as demonstrated by two instances in its publication history: the publication and distribution of an “Armed Services Edition” of The Prophet during World War II; and the widespread selection of excerpts from The Prophet as alternate ritual texts for reading aloud at weddings beginning in the late 1960s and 70s.
2017
American history
American literature
eng
Master of Arts
Masters Thesis
Religious Studies
Todd
Ochoa
Thesis advisor
Brandon
Bayne
Thesis advisor
Yaakov
Ariel
Thesis advisor
text
2017-05
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Degree granting institution
Brook
Wilensky-Lanford
Creator
Department of Religious Studies
College of Arts and Sciences
"Your Daily Life Is Your Temple And Your Religion”: The Material and Immaterial Availability of Kahlil Gibran’s The Prophet
This thesis will use the reception history of the book The Prophet by Kahlil Gibran, a short, illustrated book of prose poetry first published in 1923, to question the prevailing characterization in American religious history of the sixties as a revolution in an otherwise stagnant religious culture. The Prophet is best known for its popularity in the 1960s, where it acquired a reputation as a “counterculture Bible.” I argue that The Prophet is distinguished not by any special affinity for the counterculture, but by its remarkably consistent level of “availability” to readers over time, in terms both literary and material, as demonstrated by two instances in its publication history: the publication and distribution of an “Armed Services Edition” of The Prophet during World War II; and the widespread selection of excerpts from The Prophet as alternate ritual texts for reading aloud at weddings beginning in the late 1960s and 70s.
2017
American history
American literature
eng
Master of Arts
Masters Thesis
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Graduate School
Degree granting institution
Religious Studies
Todd
Ochoa
Thesis advisor
Brandon
Bayne
Thesis advisor
Yaakov
Ariel
Thesis advisor
text
2017-05
Brook
Wilensky-Lanford
Creator
Department of Religious Studies
College of Arts and Sciences
"Your Daily Life Is Your Temple And Your Religion”: The Material and Immaterial Availability of Kahlil Gibran’s The Prophet
This thesis will use the reception history of the book The Prophet by Kahlil Gibran, a short, illustrated book of prose poetry first published in 1923, to question the prevailing characterization in American religious history of the sixties as a revolution in an otherwise stagnant religious culture. The Prophet is best known for its popularity in the 1960s, where it acquired a reputation as a “counterculture Bible.” I argue that The Prophet is distinguished not by any special affinity for the counterculture, but by its remarkably consistent level of “availability” to readers over time, in terms both literary and material, as demonstrated by two instances in its publication history: the publication and distribution of an “Armed Services Edition” of The Prophet during World War II; and the widespread selection of excerpts from The Prophet as alternate ritual texts for reading aloud at weddings beginning in the late 1960s and 70s.
2017
American history
American literature
eng
Master of Arts
Masters Thesis
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Graduate School
Degree granting institution
Todd
Ochoa
Thesis advisor
Brandon
Bayne
Thesis advisor
Yaakov
Ariel
Thesis advisor
text
2017-05
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