Albert Chavannes

Albert Chavannes
Born Albert Chavannes
(1836-02-23)February 23, 1836[1]
Lausanne, Switzerland[2]
Died May 3, 1903(1903-05-03) (aged 67)[1]
Knoxville, Tennessee, USA
Resting place Spring Place Presbyterian Church Cemetery[1]
Knoxville, Tennessee, USA
36°01′50″N 83°51′43″W / 36.03046°N 83.86189°W / 36.03046; -83.86189
Occupation Author, farmer
Genre Utopian fiction, nonfiction
Notable works Vital Force and Magnetic Exchange (1888), The Future Commonwealth, or, What Samuel Balcom saw in Socioland (1892), In Brighter Climes, or, Life in Socioland: A Realistic Novel (1895)
Spouse Cecile Bolli[2]

Signature

Albert Chavannes (February 23, 1836 May 3, 1903) was a Swiss-born American author, philosopher, and sociologist, active primarily in the late 19th century. He is best known for his two utopian novels, The Future Commonwealth and In Brighter Climes, which discuss a fictional futuristic society, "Socioland," where the economy is governed by socialist ideals rather than capitalism, and where morality is based on social scientific experimentation, rather than traditional religion.[3] Chavannes was also one of the earliest social theorists to extensively discuss exchange theory,[4] and his ideas on "magnetism" influenced writers such as J William Lloyd and Ida C. Craddock.[5]

Life

Chavannes was born in Lausanne, Switzerland, one of six children of the Reverend Adrian Chavannes and his wife, Anna Francillon.[2] In 1848, the Chavanneses migrated to East Tennessee, which had been advertised as having ample farmland and a climate similar to that of Switzerland.[2] The family initially settled in Wartburg, Tennessee, atop the Cumberland Plateau, but finding the land unsuitable for farming, soon afterward moved to northern Knox County.[2] By 1855, the Chavanneses had been joined by several other French-speaking Swiss families, comprising one of the county's largest immigrant groups.[6]

Albert Chavannes married fellow French Swiss immigrant Cecile Bolli in 1857, and the two settled down to a life of dairy farming.[2] One of Chavannes' earliest writings was an article entitled, "How Manure Is Made in Switzerland," published in the agricultural journal, The Cultivator, in 1858.[7] This article was inspired by a trip Chavannes had made to his home country the previous year.[7]

During the Civil War, Chavannes supported the Confederacy. He was part of the citizens-guard that defended Knoxville from a raid by Union general William P. Sanders in June 1863, and later provided an account of this raid in his book, East Tennessee Sketches.[8] In 1864, following the occupation of Knoxville by Union forces, Chavannes moved to Berkshire, New York, where he opened a woodworking shop.[2] His experiences in New York would later inspire his novel, Lizzie Melton, A Self-Reliant Girl.[9] In 1870, he moved back to Knox County, where he established a new dairy farm in the Adair Creek area north of Knoxville.[2]

Around the age of 40, Chavannes began questioning the religious traditions with which he was raised, his chief inspiration being the Theory of Evolution.[10] Between 1883 and 1885, Chavannes published a journal, The Sociologist.[3] In the late 1880s, Chavannes began to theorize on emotional and sexual exchanges between humans, which he called "magnetism" (John William Lloyd, with whom Chavannes had been corresponding, later wrote that he had suggested the term to Chavannes).[11] In 1888, Chavannes published his theories on magnetism in his book, Vital Force and Magnetic Exchange.

By the 1890s, Chavannes was exchanging ideas with socialists Lester Frank Ward and Edward Bellamy.[12] In 1892, Chavannes published his first Socioland novel, The Future Commonwealth. That year, Chavannes ran for the state legislature on the Populist ticket, but lost badly.[13] His wife, Cecile, wrote an account of their canvassing trip across rural East Tennessee that was included in their book, East Tennessee Sketches.[13]

Chavannes wrote a non-fiction follow-up to The Future Commonwealth in 1893 entitled, The Concentration of Wealth, and published his second Socioland novel, In Brighter Climes, in 1895. He published several more works on magnetism in the late 1890s. Chavannes died in 1903, and is buried in the Spring Place Presbyterian Church Cemetery in northeast Knoxville.[1]

Family

Albert Chavannes was related to several prominent Knoxville businessmen, whose careers stand somewhat in contrast to his socialist ideals. His sister, Emma, was married to Edward J. Sanford, one of the city's leading financiers.[2] The Sanford children included Supreme Court justice Edward Terry Sanford and iron manufacturer Hugh Sanford. In 1894, Chavannes' son, Adrian Leon Chavannes (18711938), founded the Chavannes Lumber Company, which operated a large mill in North Knoxville until the 1950s.[2] Albert Chavannes' grandson, Edward Chavannes, served as Mayor of Knoxville from 1946 to 1947.[2]

Works

Socioland

Chavannes' two novels, The Future Commonwealth and In Brighter Climes, discuss a fictional country known as "Socioland." Socioland, according to Chavannes, was located in central Africa, about 300 miles inland along the shores of the fictional Lake Norlay.[14]:5 The new country had been formed circa 1900 by American colonists disenchanted with the ills of American society and the lack of progress in fixing the ills, in spite of the nation's rapidly growing wealth.[3] Though both books are set in the 1950s, Chavannes makes virtually no speculations regarding technological innovations.[3]

In The Future Commonwealth, Socioland is described as a country where major industries and modes of transportation are publicly owned, but controlled by popularly elected directors rather than the central government.[3] Individuals may earn profits, though the accumulation of interest is barred. Land is publicly owned, but leases tantamount to ownership can be granted.[3][15]:96 All children receive the same educational opportunities, and are required to serve a 6-year apprenticeship.[15]:30–1 The government provides health care, utilities, bread, and basic services such as laundry.[15]:85 Because work is more evenly divided, individuals only work for a few hours per day.[15]:37

In Brighter Climes follows Charles Morrill and his wife Mary, who were inspired by Chavannes' The Future Commonwealth to migrate to Socioland.[14]:3 When the Morrills arrive, they find that the Sociolanders are concerned that elements of capitalism are creeping into their economy, and eventually decide to implement a communist-style system.[14]:164–170 Laws regarding marriage are lax, and divorce is much easier to obtain for both males and females.[3] Artists and writers receive no money for their work, with Sociolanders likening selling one's genius to prostitution.[14]:62 In his introduction to the book, Chavannes states that Mary's letters were written by an "unnamed female," though he wrote the remainder of the book.[14]:iv

Magnetism

Chavannes used the term "vital force" to describe the intellectual, emotional and sexual energy stored within the body.[16]:6 Intellectual vital force, he believed, is stored in the brain, emotional vital force is stored behind the heart, and sexual vital force is stored in the genitalia.[16]:28 Memory is the result of modifications to a person's vital force.[16]:13

"Magnetism," according to Chavannes, is the exchange of vital force between two individuals.[16]:25 Intellectual magnetism involves the exchange of thoughts, emotional magnetism involves the exchange of sympathy and affection, and sexual magnetism is exchanged through ejaculation during sexual intercourse.[16]:30–40 Chavannes believed that individuals require magnetic equilibrium, and suggested that misbehavior and general unpleasantness result from too much or too little stored vital force.[16]:45

Chavannes argued that the exchange of magnetism through ejaculation ruined an individual's equilibrium.[16]:90–1 He suggested that individuals therefore practice sexual continence.[16]:87 Chavannes' ideas on sexual magnetism would later provide inspiration for the Karezza method originated by Dr. Alice Bunker Stockham and further developed by J William Lloyd.

Other works

East Tennessee Sketches is a collection of six articles, two of which ("Canvassing the District" and "Adair Creek Notes") are written by Chavannes' wife, Cecile. "Canvassing the District" describes the Chavanneses' 1892 canvass. "Adair Creek Notes" describes how cheese was made on the Chavannes farm. "Saunders' Raid" is an eyewitness account of General William Sanders's attack on Knoxville in June 1863. "Coming Home to Knoxville" details the Chavannes' trek from the Virginia coast back to Knoxville following a trip to Switzerland in 1897. "An Old Reprobate," is the story of a man who became an alcoholic following the deaths of his two sons from smallpox. "A War Episode" describes the confiscation of Chavannes' prized cane by a Union officer in 1864.[17]

Chavannes considered his 1900 work, Lizzie Melton, A Self-Reliant Girl, to be his only full-fledged novel.[9] The book is essentially a critique of Victorian morals regarding women, with the title character being ostracized by the community after becoming pregnant out of wedlock. The novel is set in Richland, New York, with characters and scenes inspired by Chavannes' experiences in the region following the Civil War.[9]

Bibliography

Journals

Pamphlets

Books

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Albert Chavannes Find A Grave Memorial, Findagrave.com. Retrieved: 14 November 2011.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Alice Howell, Lucile Deaderick (ed.), Heart of the Valley: A History of Knoxville, Tennessee (Knoxville, Tenn.: East Tennessee Historical Society, 1976), pp. 507-508.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Francine Cary, "Albert Chavannes and the Future Commonwealth: The Utopian Novelist As Social Critic," East Tennessee Historical Society Publications, Vol. 48 (1976), pp. 71-84.
  4. Russell Cropanzano and Deborah Rupp, "Social Exchange Theory and Organizational Justice," Justice, Morality, and Social Responsibility (Information Age Publishing, 2008), pp. 69-71.
  5. Leigh Eric Schmidt, Heaven's Bride: The Unprintable Life of Ida C. Craddock (New York: Basic Books, 2010), pp. 148, 154.
  6. Ann Bennett, Historic and Architectural Resources in Knoxville and Knox County, Tennessee, May 1994, p. E-26. Retrieved: 14 November 2011.
  7. 1 2 Albert Chavannes, "How Manure Is Made In Switzerland," The Cultivator, Vol. 6, No. 3 (March 1858), pp. 78-79.
  8. Albert Chavannes, "Saunders' Raid," East Tennessee Sketches (Knoxville, Tenn.: 1900), pp. 77-88.
  9. 1 2 3 Albert Chavannes, Lizzie Melton: A Self-Reliant Girl, The Complete Works of Albert Chavannes, Vol. 2 (Knoxville, Tenn., 1900/1903), pp. ii-iii.
  10. Albert Chavannes, The Nature of the Mind, The Complete Works of Albert Chavannes, Vol. 3 (Knoxville, Tenn.: 1898/1903), p. 1.
  11. John William Lloyd, The Karezza Method or Magnetation: The Art of Connubial Love (1931), p. 5.
  12. Edward Rafferty, Apostle of Human Progress: Lester Frank Ward and American Political Thought (Rowman and Littlefield Publishing Group, 2003), p. 190.
  13. 1 2 Cecile Chavannes, "Canvassing the District," East Tennessee Sketches (Knoxville, Tenn.: 1900), p. 1.
  14. 1 2 3 4 5 Albert Chavannes, In Brighter Climes, or Life in Socioland: A Realistic Novel (Chavannes and Company, 1895).
  15. 1 2 3 4 Albert Chavannes, The Future Commonwealth, or What Samuel Balcom Saw in Socioland (New York: The Nationalist Publishing Company, 1892).
  16. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Albert Chavannes, Vital Force, Magnetic Exchange and Magnetism, The Complete Works of Albert Chavannes, Vol. 1 (Knoxville, Tenn.: 1897/1903).
  17. Albert Chavannes and Cecile Chavannes, East Tennessee Sketches (1900). Archive.org. Retrieved: 14 November 2011.

External links

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