As Kirsten Fischer reminds us in American Freethinker, Elihu Palmer (1764–1806) was once such an infamous religious iconoclast that his name was frequently mentioned in the same breath with such freethinkers as Thomas Paine, Voltaire, and William Godwin. Today, however, Palmer has completely passed from public consciousness, surviving only as a footnote in histories of American Deism. Fischer seeks to remedy this with her new book, although her task was not an easy one, since little documentary evidence of Palmer’s life has come down to us beyond his published writings. What we do know can be succinctly narrated. Born into a Congregationalist family in a small Connecticut town, Elihu Palmer grew up during the excitement of the Revolutionary War and the founding of the United States. He was educated at Dartmouth, where he was probably exposed to the emerging literature of European skepticism, which likely influenced his decision to...
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August 2021
Book Review|
August 01 2021
Review: American Freethinker: Elihu Palmer and the Struggle for Religious Freedom in the New Nation, by Kirsten Fischer
American Freethinker: Elihu Palmer and the Struggle for Religious Freedom in the New Nation
. By Kirsten Fischer. University of Pennsylvania Press
, 2020
. 304 pages. $39.95 cloth; ebook available.
Brian C. Wilson
Brian C. Wilson
Western Michigan University
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Nova Religio (2021) 25 (1): 149–151.
Citation
Brian C. Wilson; Review: American Freethinker: Elihu Palmer and the Struggle for Religious Freedom in the New Nation, by Kirsten Fischer. Nova Religio 1 August 2021; 25 (1): 149–151. doi: https://doi.org/10.1525/nr.2021.25.1.149
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