home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Newsgroups: alt.co-ops
- Path: sparky!uunet!east-win!co-ops-request
- From: kingdon@east-wind.org (Jim Kingdon)
- Subject: Communities magazine out
- Content-Type: text
- Message-ID: <1992Nov22.225244.11834@east-wind.org>
- Sender: co-ops-request@east-wind.org
- Original-To: co-ops
- Organization: East Wind Community, Tecumseh, Missouri, USA
- Date: Sun, 22 Nov 1992 22:52:44 GMT
- Approved: alt.co-ops@mail.east-wind.org
- Content-Length: 3325
- Lines: 64
-
- A new issue of Communities magazine has recently been published (those
- of you who saw Geoff's communities workshop at the NASCO institute
- already know this). This is the first issue under the management of
- the Fellowship for Intentional Community. Here is a summary of the
- contents (it's hard to summarize, being mainly a long list of short
- items about a very diverse set of communities):
-
- * One item I thought was interesting was Arthur Deikman's four basic
- cult behaviors:
-
- - Dependence on the leader to provide you with what you want and take
- care of your problems and troubles
- - Compliance with the group ... a more or less unconscious process of
- doing what the group wants and not doing what it doesn't want.
- - Devaluing the outsider so that outside opinions that differ from the
- group's can be written off, dismissed.
- - Avoiding dissent--avoiding those things that would question the
- rightness of the group's opinions or beliefs.
-
- This is relevant to the Fellowship partly because some of the
- communities which they consider to be part of the movement are pretty
- cult-like (IMHO), and also because even if we're not, some people
- probaby assume we all are. Deikman is quoted as saying "a cult is
- less a matter of direction than intensity. Looking at cult behavior
- in that way, you find areas where one or more of the four basic cult
- behaviors are quite manifest in lots of different groups . . . The
- focus for me is not so much which group is a cult and which is not,
- but how much cult behavior is present in the operation of any
- particular group." And of course this applies to churches, civic
- clubs, the miliary, and large corporations, as well as what we might
- usually think of as cults. He is the author of _The Wrong Way Home:
- Uncovering the Patterns of Cult Behavior in American Society_ (which I
- have never read).
-
- * There are items about various community activities--businesses
- (solar cars, building, agriculture, and others), a school, political
- action.
-
- * There are additional updates to the _Directory of Intentional
- Communities_. These are the listings from the 2nd and 3rd printings
- plus a list of phone numbers and addresses for communities which
- aren't in any printing of the directory.
-
- * There are two articles about co-housing communities which have
- already been built (as far as I know, the only 2 in the US): Muir
- Commons in Davis (?), CA, and one in Bainbridge Island, WA.
-
- * There are a bunch of neat comics by Jonathan Roth of Twin Oaks
- Community in Virginia. I won't try to describe them, but I think they
- are pretty funny and they are quite well done. They are, of course,
- about community.
-
- * There are a few blurbs for the 1993 Celebration of Community at
- Evergreen State College in Olympia, Washington. The idea is that this
- is supposed to be a big deal, with lots of people. Activities
- mentioned in the article include: Forums for Seekers, Forums for
- Communitarians, children's activities, Native American Elders program,
- Community Spirit program ("experiential, interactive, and
- participatory structures" and "small 'family' groups"), Art and
- Festival program, and FUN committee. For more information, write: '93
- Celebration of Community, 615 First St., Langley, WA 98260.
-
- For more information on Communities magazine, write Communities, Route
- 1, Box 155, Rutledge, MO 63563.
-