Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction: Thirty red pills from Hermes Trismegistus
- Aren't we Living in a Disenchanted World?
- Esotericism, That's for White Folks, Right?
- Surely Modern Art is not Occult? It is Modern!
- Is it True that Secret Societies are Trying to Control the World?
- Numbers are Meant for Counting, Right?
- Wasn't Hermes a Prophet of Christianity who Lived Long Before Christ?
- Weren't Early Christians up Against a Gnostic Religion?
- The Imagination… You Mean Fantasy, Right?
- Weren't Medieval Monks Afraid of Demons?
- What does Popular Fiction have to do with the Occult?
- Isn't Alchemy a Spiritual Tradition?
- Music? What does that have to do with Esotericism?
- Why all that Satanist Stuff in Heavy Metal?
- Religion can't be a Joke, Right?
- Isn't Esotericism Irrational?
- Rejected Knowledge…: So you mean that Esotericists are the Losers of History?
- The Kind of Stuff Madonna Talks about – that's not Real Kabbala, is it?
- Shouldn't Evil Cults that Worship Satan be Illegal?
- Is Occultism a Product of Capitalism?
- Can Superhero Comics Really Transmit Esoteric Knowledge?
- Are Kabbalistic Meditations all about Ecstasy?
- Isn't India the Home of Spiritual Wisdom?
- If People Believe in Magic, isn't that just Because they aren't Educated?
- But what does Esotericism have to do with Sex?
- Is there such a Thing as Islamic Esotericism?
- Doesn't Occultism Lead Straight to Fascism?
- A Man who Never Died, Angels Falling from the Sky…: What is that Enoch Stuff all about?
- Is there any Room for Women in Jewish Kabbalah?
- Surely Born-again Christianity has Nothing to do with Occult Stuff like Alchemy?
- Bibliography
- Contributors to this Volume
- Index of Persons
- Index of Subjects
Rejected Knowledge…: So you mean that Esotericists are the Losers of History?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 November 2020
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction: Thirty red pills from Hermes Trismegistus
- Aren't we Living in a Disenchanted World?
- Esotericism, That's for White Folks, Right?
- Surely Modern Art is not Occult? It is Modern!
- Is it True that Secret Societies are Trying to Control the World?
- Numbers are Meant for Counting, Right?
- Wasn't Hermes a Prophet of Christianity who Lived Long Before Christ?
- Weren't Early Christians up Against a Gnostic Religion?
- The Imagination… You Mean Fantasy, Right?
- Weren't Medieval Monks Afraid of Demons?
- What does Popular Fiction have to do with the Occult?
- Isn't Alchemy a Spiritual Tradition?
- Music? What does that have to do with Esotericism?
- Why all that Satanist Stuff in Heavy Metal?
- Religion can't be a Joke, Right?
- Isn't Esotericism Irrational?
- Rejected Knowledge…: So you mean that Esotericists are the Losers of History?
- The Kind of Stuff Madonna Talks about – that's not Real Kabbala, is it?
- Shouldn't Evil Cults that Worship Satan be Illegal?
- Is Occultism a Product of Capitalism?
- Can Superhero Comics Really Transmit Esoteric Knowledge?
- Are Kabbalistic Meditations all about Ecstasy?
- Isn't India the Home of Spiritual Wisdom?
- If People Believe in Magic, isn't that just Because they aren't Educated?
- But what does Esotericism have to do with Sex?
- Is there such a Thing as Islamic Esotericism?
- Doesn't Occultism Lead Straight to Fascism?
- A Man who Never Died, Angels Falling from the Sky…: What is that Enoch Stuff all about?
- Is there any Room for Women in Jewish Kabbalah?
- Surely Born-again Christianity has Nothing to do with Occult Stuff like Alchemy?
- Bibliography
- Contributors to this Volume
- Index of Persons
- Index of Subjects
Summary
That's a very loaded question, so I’ll try to unpack it carefully. First of all, it is important to see that the study of Western esotericism involves much more than studying “esotericists.” Today it is not so hard to find groups or individuals who understand the terminology as a marker of identity, meaning that they would accept or even actively embrace it as a label for who they are and what they stand for. Whether implicitly or explicitly, such esoteric identities always involve some element of defiance in the face of negative mainstream perceptions, and often they are backed up by some kind of historical narrative about hidden or secret or discredited wisdom. Rather than being direct and explicit (“I’m an esotericist”), they may well be indirect and implicit, for instance when modern practitioners who do not self-identify as such still think of themselves as part of the great chain of ancient or perennial wisdom referred to as “the esoteric tradition.” Such affirmations of an esoteric identity almost always reflect the idea that “esotericists” and their beliefs have been treated unfairly by the cultural mainstream, have lost the battle for legitimacy, and have been suppressed or marginalised by the powers of the establishment. Self-identified esotericists of course do not see themselves as “losers,” but if they are asked, most of them will readily concede that the traditions or modes of thinking and practice that they value have become victims of a historiography written by the “winners.” They know that they are on the wrong side of the hegemonic discourses or dominant grand narratives of Western culture.
This use of “esotericism” as an identity marker is relatively recent. The very term emerged during the second half of the eighteenth century and is evidently part of the identity politics of that period. The perspectives and worldviews that we nowadays associate with “modern science” and “Enlightenment” were winning the battle against their opponents and assuming a position of hegemony in public discourse. To clearly establish their identity – to explain who they were and what they stood for – the advocates of Enlightenment needed to juxtapose themselves as sharply as possible against their polemical “others”: religious bigotry, priestly deceit, blind credulity, belief in magic, irrational delusion, superstitious practices, and so on.
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- Hermes ExplainsThirty Questions about Western Esotericism, pp. 145 - 152Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2019
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