Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- 1 Introduction
- PART I TRADITION
- PART II POPULAR CULTURE AND NEW MEDIA
- 6 Occulture is Ordinary
- 7 From Book to Bit: Enacting Satanism Online
- 8 Accessing the Astral with a Monitor and Mouse: Esoteric Religion and the Astral Located in Three-Dimensional Virtual Realms
- 9 The Secrets of Scientology: Concealment, Information Control and Esoteric Knowledge in the World's Most Controversial New Religion
- 10 Hidden Knowledge, Hidden Powers: Esotericism and Conspiracy Culture
- PART III ESOTERIC TRANSFERS
- PART IV LEAVING THE MARGINS
- Bibliography, Discography and Filmography
- Index
9 - The Secrets of Scientology: Concealment, Information Control and Esoteric Knowledge in the World's Most Controversial New Religion
from PART II - POPULAR CULTURE AND NEW MEDIA
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- 1 Introduction
- PART I TRADITION
- PART II POPULAR CULTURE AND NEW MEDIA
- 6 Occulture is Ordinary
- 7 From Book to Bit: Enacting Satanism Online
- 8 Accessing the Astral with a Monitor and Mouse: Esoteric Religion and the Astral Located in Three-Dimensional Virtual Realms
- 9 The Secrets of Scientology: Concealment, Information Control and Esoteric Knowledge in the World's Most Controversial New Religion
- 10 Hidden Knowledge, Hidden Powers: Esotericism and Conspiracy Culture
- PART III ESOTERIC TRANSFERS
- PART IV LEAVING THE MARGINS
- Bibliography, Discography and Filmography
- Index
Summary
Secrets, secrets SECRETS! Ah, the endless quest, the far, far search, the codes, the vias, the symbols, the complications, the compilations, the mathematicity and abstracticity of secrets, secrets, SECRETS!
The secret operates as an adorning possession … This involves the contradiction that what recedes before the consciousness of others and is hidden from them is emphasized in their consciousness; that one should appear as a noteworthy person through what one conceals.
From its origins in the 1950s, the Church of Scientology has been one of the most controversial, contested, and yet also poorly understood new religions in the world. Best known for its cast of high-profile celebrity spokespersons, such as John Travolta, Tom Cruise and Kirstie Alley, the Church has also been widely attacked by the media, anti-cult groups and various government agencies as a rapacious business and a dangerous “cult of greed”. And yet despite its infamous reputation in popular culture, Scientology has – with a few notable exceptions – rarely been subjected to serious critical analysis by historians of religions.
The reasons for this neglect are not far to seek. From its first incorporation in 1953, the Church of Scientology has been not only one of the most lucrative but also arguably the most secretive (and litigious) new religion in the world, maintaining very tight control over the flow of information both within and outside the organization.
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- Information
- Contemporary Esotericism , pp. 181 - 199Publisher: Acumen PublishingPrint publication year: 2012