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Book: Translocal Lives and Religion

Chapter: 5. Religion and the "Simple Life": Dugald Semple and Translocal "Life Reform" Networks

DOI: 10.1558/equinox.31742

Blurb:

This chapter presents a case study of a Scottish exponent of the “simple life”, Dugald Semple (1884−1964), within early 20th-century networks of life reform or Lebensreform. It argues that the underlying thread in Semple’s “life reform” is a non-conformist, anti-clerical religious individualism which incorporated Transcendentalism with a Tolstoyan and Gandhian pacifism. A case study of Semple’s career in dialogue with his English and continental interlocutors demonstrates the value of empirically based transnational enquiry at the level of individuals and networks for understanding the varied inflections of “life reform”, particularly the religious roots of the phenomenon. It also contributes to the historiography of important currents in “alternative religion” which fed the post-world-war-two “new age”, “eco” and commune movements.

Chapter Contributors

  • Steven Sutcliffe (s.sutcliffe@ed.ac.uk - ssutcliffe) 'University of Edinburgh'