Showing posts with label understanding cults. Show all posts
Showing posts with label understanding cults. Show all posts

Thursday, March 5, 2026

A Manhattan Cult Story

A memoir

It is fascinating for me to observe the outreach of cults among the educated. Often, the main supporters and audience of cults originates among educated, middle class people. A discussion regarding rational intelligence does not have its place here, as in my opinion, a cult, as a religious awakening, has more to do with the emotional side of intelligence, with the need of belonging, being part of a group offering support and identity.

Manhattan Cult Story is a first person account of Spencer Schneider, a Long Island Jewish attorney who got caught for 23 years into a cult created around the minor actress Sharon Gans. Apparently though, she played the role of her life as a moody, dictatorial cult leader, whose members were awaken from ´sleep´ through lessons inspired by Gurdjieff and Ouspensky. Forbidden to share any information about ´the classes´ with people outside the group, the members were manipulated into sex games, matchmaking and even tax fraud on Gans´ behalf. 

How valuable the knowledge was from the intellectual point of view, it´s doubtful. Gans herself was appropriating Oprah´s quotes. But despite the abuse - verbal and sexual - many, among which the author himself, remained for the sense of belonging.

What I´ve found interesting, was the methods of recruitment into the cult, as sounded so close to any average business connection trick. Something to keep in mind when trying to gain influence, but aware when someone tries to get you into a cult.

The book adds specific information about this cult, but also provides details on the general topic of cults, particularly for researchers looking to gather information about such an actual subject.

Thursday, October 12, 2023

About Cults


Understanding cults cannot go separately from trying to understand the societies and their fears that produced them. The phenomenon is far from new and there are many discussions regarding its  definition and various categorizations. However, when it comes to leaders, the main character threats are usually the same: mostly male, narcissist, manipulating their female followers and luring them into open relationships and sexual slavery.

The books Cults by Max Culter with Kevin Conley, based on a popular podcasts with the same name, offers to the reader a diverse overview of various such movements, mostly created in the 1970s in the North American realm, many inspired by liberation hippie movements. Mostly focused on events and biographic information about the leaders, the book can be used as a reference for anyone interested in the psychology of cults. 

Importantly, it takes into account also less known cults, such as the Narcosatanists, NXIVM or Heaven´s Gate, but definitely it does leave unaccounted many others. Clearly, there is a need of more research and classification work for offering an even better view over such phenomena. 

A recommended read to anthropologists, historians and psychologists. Cults are offering insights about the intimate wishes at the society level, although in extreme form. Understanding them may only make the social reading in general much easier and predictable.

Rating: 3.5 stars

Disclaimer: Book offered by the publisher in exchange for an honest review