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Adepts of Modernism: Magical Magazine Culture, 1887-1922

Authors :
Beauchesne, Nicholas L.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Abstract: Abstract This tome is both a “solar” dissertation and a “lunar” grimoire that performs its own argument. Adepts of Modernism argues that the infamous “little magazines” of modernism conjured their own enlightened, reading “counter-publics” by exploiting the same strategies and tactics of initiation and exclusion mobilized in occult circles. Figures from the literary and occult spheres from the Fin de Siècle and through the Great War converge in a network of adeptship. The magazines in this network disseminate knowledge from the occult “wisdom tradition” and share a common adept attitude that sets them apart from the public and the exoteric, mainstream media they consume. Chapter 1 analyzes The Little Review and shows how Margaret Anderson and Jane Heap’s editorial posture of insouciance reflects their initial commitment to both anarchism and esotericism, culminating in a thwarted mystical anarchism. A comparison of memoirs by Huntly Carter and Algernon Blackwood reveals how, for this magazine, poetry and spirituality go hand in hand. Chapter 2 focuses on co-editors of The Egoist, Dora Marsden and Harriet Shaw Weaver, along with Leonard A. Compton-Rickett, Richard Aldington, H. D., and Ezra Pound. These figures have a complex, ambivalent relationship with mysticism, but their common investment in individualism and an elitist, exclusive, classical modernism holds them together. Olivia Shakespear’s translation of the occult story, Le Comte de Gabalis, embodies these investments. Chapter 3 considers the distinct “presentative” style of The New Age magazine in relation to editor A. R. Orage’s mystical socialism. A series of articles by Florence Farr provides a feminist corrective to Orage’s masculinist “brilliant common sense.” This idiosyncratic, “Luciferian” socialism appeals to an audience of modernists, Fabians, and occultists alike, and its threads lead back to the great French magus, Eliphas Lévi. Chapter 4 examines Aleister Crowley’s Equinox in the context of modernist periodical culture. The Equinox is most committed to occult subjects and offers readers a course of study and a method of self-initiation. Esoteric literature, in the form of a magical diary and a short story, “The Dream Circean,” complements Crowley’s formal program of initiation and blurs the boundaries between objective and subjective ‘reality.’ Chapter 5 shows how Lucifer magazine, edited by H. P. Blavatsky and Mabel Collins, utilizes the same techniques of occult initiation replicated in the modernist little magazines that followed, thus revealing a continuity of esoteric editorial practice from the Fin de Siècle through the Great War. Blavatsky’s controversial “Luciferian” editorials and Collins’s serialized esoteric novella, “The Blossom and the Fruit,” exemplify the adept attitude that inspired subsequent generations of adept writers. Adepts of Modernism concludes with a personal reflection on occult pedagogy before outlining the legacy of these magical magazines and gesturing towards some new directions for future research.

Subjects

Subjects :
Modernism
Mysticism
Occult
Magic
Adept
Periodical
Little magazine
Yeats
William Butler
Crowley
Aleister
Farr
Florence
H. D.
Pound
Ezra
Gurdjieff
George
Shakespear
Olivia
Heap
Jane
Anderson
Margaret
Carter
Huntly
Blackwood
Algernon
Marsden
Dora
Shaw Weaver
Harriet
Shaw
George Bernard
Wells
H. G.
Orage
Alfred Richard
Lévi
Eliphas
Aldington
Richard
Compton-Rickett
Leonard A.
Villars
abbé de (Nicolas-Pierre-Henri)
Nihil
Nix
Blavatsky
Helena Petrovna
Collins
Mabel
The Little Review
The Egoist
The New Age
The Equinox
Lucifer
Theosophy
Thelema
Fourth Way
fin-de-siècle
Great War
The English Review
The Dream Circean
The Blossom and the Fruit: The True Story of a Magician
Agrippa
Henry Cornelius
Fin de Siècle
Memoirs of a Charming Person
Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn
A Vision
Initiation
Western Esotericism
Ritual
Pedagogy
literature
poetry
New Modernist Studies
counter-public
public sphere
Hermes Trismegistus
Master
Apprentice
Seeker
Neophyte
Initiate
Great Work
Alchemy
Secret Society
Wisdom tradition
Perennial Philosophy
Harry Potter
Nicolas Flamel
Soror Mystica
Neo-Platonism
Gnosticism
Hellenism
Spiritual
Religion
Heterodox
Kabbalah
Pagan
Practical Person
Solar
Lunar
Gnome
Sylph
Salamander
Undine
Imagism
Symbolism
The New Freewoman
Eliot
Thomas Stearns
Socialism
Anarchism
Feminism
Harlem Renaissance
Apocalyptic
Surrealism
Definition of the Godhead
The Theosophical Review
The Theosophist
The Quest
The Occult Review
Jackson
Holbrook
Egoism
Individualism
Montfaucon
Moonchild
Ordo Templi Orientis
Underhill
Evelyn
Tagore
Rabindranath
Fuller
J. F. C.
Correspondences
Elements
Astral
Blast
Lewis
Wyndham
Christ
Satan
Exoteric
Esoteric
Media
Fleta
Estanol
Hilary
Abyss
Capitalism
New Woman
Cixous
Hélène
Victoria
Doolittle
Hilda
Magick
The Path
Besant
Annie
Mead
G. R. S.
Harrison
Austin
Wallace
Lewis Alexander
Leisenring
Winifred
Eliade
Mircea
Rowling
J.K.
Beauchesne
Nick

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenDissertations
Publication Type :
Dissertation/ Thesis
Accession number :
ddu.oai.era.library.ualberta.ca.052277da.8002.4c1f.85a0.b1fedd8be05f