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9858_373 | especially in Western Europe. Occult lodges and secret societies flowered among European |
9858_374 | intellectuals of this era who had largely abandoned traditional forms of Christianity. The |
9858_375 | spreading of secret teachings and magic practices found enthusiastic adherents in the chaos of |
9858_376 | Germany during the interwar years. Notable writers such as Guido von List spread neo-pagan, |
9858_377 | nationalist ideas, based on Wotanism and the Kabbalah. Many influential and wealthy Germans were |
9858_378 | drawn to secret societies such as the Thule Society. Thule Society activist Karl Harrer was one of |
9858_379 | the founders of the German Workers' Party, which later became the Nazi Party; some Nazi Party |
9858_380 | members like Alfred Rosenberg and Rudolf Hess were listed as "guests" of the Thule Society, as was |
9858_381 | Adolf Hitler's mentor Dietrich Eckart. After their rise to power, the Nazis persecuted occultists. |
9858_382 | While many Nazi Party leaders like Hitler and Joseph Goebbels were hostile to occultism, Heinrich |
9858_383 | Himmler used Karl Maria Wiligut as a clairvoyant "and was regularly consulting for help in setting |
9858_384 | up the symbolic and ceremonial aspects of the SS" but not for important political decisions. By |
9858_385 | 1939, Wiligut was "forcibly retired from the SS" due to being institutionalised for insanity. On |
9858_386 | the other hand, the German hermetic magic order Fraternitas Saturni was founded on Easter 1928 and |
9858_387 | it is one of the oldest continuously running magical groups in Germany. In 1936, the Fraternitas |
9858_388 | Saturni was prohibited by the Nazi regime. The leaders of the lodge emigrated to avoid |
9858_389 | imprisonment, but in the course of the war Eugen Grosche, one of their main leaders, was arrested |
9858_390 | for a year by the Nazi government. After World War II they reformed the Fraternitas Saturni. |
9858_391 | Several religious scholars such as Hugh Urban and Donald Westbrook have classified Scientology as |
9858_392 | being a modern form of Western Esotericism. |
9858_393 | Later 20th century |
9858_394 | In the 1960s and 1970s, esotericism came to be increasingly associated with the growing |
9858_395 | counter-culture in the West, whose adherents understood themselves in participating in a spiritual |
9858_396 | revolution that marked the Age of Aquarius. By the 1980s, these currents of millenarian currents |
9858_397 | had come to be widely known as the New Age movement, and it became increasingly commercialised as |
9858_398 | business entrepreneurs exploited a growth in the spiritual market. Conversely, other forms of |
9858_399 | esoteric thought retained the anti-commercial and counter-cultural sentiment of the 1960s and |
9858_400 | 1970s, namely the techno-shamanic movement promoted by figures such as Terence McKenna and Daniel |
9858_401 | Pinchbeck, which built on the work of anthropologist Carlos Castaneda. |
9858_402 | This trend was accompanied by the increased growth of modern Paganism, a movement initially |
9858_403 | dominated by Wicca, the religion propagated by Gerald Gardner. Wicca was adopted by members of the |
9858_404 | second-wave feminist movement, most notably Starhawk, and developing into the Goddess movement. |
9858_405 | Wicca also greatly influenced the development of Pagan neo-druidry and other forms of Celtic |
9858_406 | revivalism. In response to Wicca there has also appeared literature and groups who label themselves |
9858_407 | followers of traditional witchcraft in opposition to the growing visibility of Wicca and these |
9858_408 | claim older roots than the system proposed by Gerald Gardner. Other trends that emerged in western |
9858_409 | occultism in the later 20th century included satanism, as exposed by groups such as the Church of |
9858_410 | Satan and Temple of Set, as well as chaos magick through the Illuminates of Thanateros group. |
9858_411 | Additionally, since the start of the 1990s, countries inside of the former Iron Curtain have |
9858_412 | undergone a radiative and varied religious revival, with a large number of occult and new religious |
9858_413 | movements gaining popularity. Gnostic revivalists, New Age organizations, and Scientology splinter |
9858_414 | groups have found their way into much of the former Soviet bloc since the cultural and political |
9858_415 | shift resulting from the dissolution of the USSR. In Hungary, a significant number of citizens |
9858_416 | (relative to the size of the country’s population and compared to its neighbors) practice and/or |
9858_417 | adhere to new currents of Western Esotericism. In April 1997, the Fifth Esoteric Spiritual Forum |
9858_418 | was held for two days in the country and was attended at-capacity; In August of the same year, the |
9858_419 | International Shaman Expo began, being broadcast on live TV and ultimately taking place for 2 |
9858_420 | months wherein various neo-Shamanist, Millenarian, mystic, neo-Pagan, and even UFO religionist |
9858_421 | congregations and figures were among the attendees. |
9858_422 | Academic study |
9858_423 | The academic study of Western esotericism was pioneered in the early 20th century by historians of |
9858_424 | the ancient world and the European Renaissance, who came to recognise that—even though previous |
9858_425 | scholarship had ignored it—the effect pre-Christian and non-rational schools of thought on European |
9858_426 | society and culture was worthy of academic attention. One of the key centres for this was the |
9858_427 | Warburg Institute in London, where scholars like Frances Yates, Edgar Wind, Ernst Cassirer, and D. |
9858_428 | P. Walker began arguing that esoteric thought had had a greater effect on Renaissance culture than |
9858_429 | had been previously accepted. The work of Yates in particular, most notably her 1964 book Giordano |
9858_430 | Bruno and the Hermetic Tradition, has been cited as "an important starting-point for modern |
9858_431 | scholarship on esotericism", succeeding "at one fell swoop in bringing scholarship onto a new |
9858_432 | track" by bringing wider awareness of the effect that esoteric ideas had on modern science. |
9858_433 | In 1965, at the instigation of the scholar Henry Corbin, École pratique des hautes études in the |
9858_434 | Sorbonne established the world's first academic post in the study of esotericism, with a chair in |
9858_435 | the History of Christian Esotericism. Its first holder was François Secret, a specialist in the |
9858_436 | Christian Kabbalah, though he had little interest in developing the wider study of esotericism as a |
9858_437 | field of research. In 1979 Faivre assumed Secret's chair at the Sorbonne, which was renamed the |
9858_438 | "History of Esoteric and Mystical Currents in Modern and Contemporary Europe". Faivre has since |
9858_439 | been cited as being responsible for developing the study of Western esotericism into a formalised |
9858_440 | field, with his 1992 work L'ésotérisme having been cited as marking "the beginning of the study of |
9858_441 | Western esotericism as an academic field of research". He remained in the chair until 2002, when he |
9858_442 | was succeeded by Jean-Pierre Brach. |
9858_443 | Faivre noted that there were two significant obstacles to establishing the field. One was that |
9858_444 | there was an engrained prejudice towards esotericism within academia, resulting in the widespread |
9858_445 | perception that the history of esotericism was not worthy of academic research. The second was that |
9858_446 | esotericism is a trans-disciplinary field, the study of which did not fit clearly within any |
9858_447 | particular discipline. As Hanegraaff noted, Western esotericism had to be studied as a separate |
9858_448 | field to religion, philosophy, science, and the arts, because while it "participates in all these |
9858_449 | fields" it does not squarely fit into any of them. Elsewhere, he noted that there was "probably no |
9858_450 | other domain in the humanities that has been so seriously neglected" as Western esotericism. |
9858_451 | In 1980, the U.S.-based Hermetic Academy was founded by Robert A. McDermott as an outlet for |
9858_452 | American scholars interested in Western esotericism. From 1986 to 1990 members of the Hermetic |
9858_453 | Academy participated in panels at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Religion under the |
9858_454 | rubric of the "Esotericism and Perennialism Group". By 1994, Faivre could comment that the academic |
9858_455 | study of Western esotericism had taken off in France, Italy, England, and the United States, but he |
9858_456 | lamented that it had not done so in Germany. |
9858_457 | In 1999, the University of Amsterdam established a chair in the History of Hermetic Philosophy and |
9858_458 | Related Currents, which was occupied by Hanegraaff, while in 2005 the University of Exeter created |
9858_459 | a chair in Western Esotericism, which was taken by Goodrick-Clarke, who headed the Exeter Center |
9858_460 | for the Study of Esotericism. Thus, by 2008 there were three dedicated university chairs in the |
9858_461 | subject, with Amsterdam and Exeter also offering master's degree programs in it. Several |
9858_462 | conferences on the subject were held at the quintennial meetings of the International Association |
9858_463 | for the History of Religions, while a peer-reviewed journal, Aries: Journal for the Study of |
9858_464 | Western Esotericism began publication in 2001. 2001 also saw the foundation of the North American |
9858_465 | Association for the Study of Esotericism (ASE), with the European Society for the Study of Western |
9858_466 | Esotericism (ESSWE) being established shortly after. |
9858_467 | Within a few years, Michael Bergunder expressed the view that it had become an established field |
9858_468 | within religious studies, with Asprem and Granholm observing that scholars within other |
9858_469 | sub-disciplines of religious studies had begun to take an interest in the work of scholars of |
9858_470 | esotericism. |
9858_471 | Asprem and Granholm noted that the study of esotericism had been dominated by historians and thus |
9858_472 | lacked the perspective of social scientists examining contemporary forms of esotericism, a |
Subsets and Splits