1st Edition

Crafting Collectivity American Rainbow Gatherings and Alternative Forms of Community

By Chelsea Schelly Copyright 2014
    196 Pages
    by Routledge

    196 Pages
    by Routledge

    Every summer, thousands of people assemble to live together to celebrate the Annual Gathering of the Rainbow Family. Participants establish temporary systems of water distribution and filtration, sanitation, health care, and meals provided freely to all who gather, and they develop sharing and trading systems, recreational opportunities, and educational experiences distinct to this creative social world. The Rainbow Family has invented itself as a unique modern culture without formal organization, providing the necessities of life freely to all who attend. The Annual Gathering of the Rainbow Family has been operating for more than forty years as an experiment in liberty that demonstrates how material organization, participation, and cultural connection can reshape social relationships and transform individual lives. Grounded in sociological theory and research, the book considers what kind of culture the material systems of Babylon reinforce and how society could facilitate the kind of social world and human welfare humans desire."

    1. What’s with That Rainbow Fest?
    2. Who Goes Home?
    3. Rainbow Land: Understanding Rainbow Space
    4. The Free World of Rainbow: Food and Other Material Stuff
    5. Rainbow Speak: Language and Communication
    6. The Free Life of Rainbow: Hugs and Other Ways to Touch
    7. The Church of Nature: Rainbow Connections with the Earth
    8. Conclusion: Crafting Collectivity

    Being a Rainbow Sister: A Methodological Appendix
    A Glossary of Rainbow Gathering Vocabulary

    Biography

    Chelsea Schelly is Assistant Professor of Sociology at Michigan Technological University. Her research focuses on how alternative technologies can reshape social organization in ways that benefit communities and the natural environment. She has participated in Rainbow Gatherings since she was 17 years old.