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The Place of Enchantment (Hardcover, 2nd ed.)
Loot Price: R1,315
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The Place of Enchantment (Hardcover, 2nd ed.)
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Exploratory sex magic. Experimentation with mind-altering drugs.
Astral travel. Alchemy. Alex Owen's new book, The Place of
Enchantment, situates these seemingly anachronistic practices
squarely alongside revolutionary understandings of rationality in a
compelling demonstration of how a newly psychologized magic
operated in conjunction with the developing patterns of modern
life. By the end of the nineteenth century, Victorians sought
rational explanations for the world in which they lived. The
radical ideas of Charles Darwin had shaken traditional religious
beliefs. Sigmund Freud was developing his innovative models of the
conscious and unconscious mind. And anthropologist James George
Frazer was subjecting magic, myth, and ritual to systematic
inquiry. Why, then, in this quintessentially modern moment, did
late-Victorian and Edwardian men and women become absorbed by
metaphysical quests, heterodox spiritual encounters, and occult
experimentation? In answering this question for the first time, The
Place of Enchantment breaks new ground in its consideration of
occultism in British culture prior to World War I. Rescuing
occultism from its status as an "irrational indulgence" and placing
it at the center of British intellectual life, Owen argues that an
involvement with the occult was a leitmotif of an intellectual
avant-garde. She details such fascinating examples of occult
practice as the sex magic of Aleister Crowley, the pharmacological
experimentation of W. B. Yeats, and complex forms of astral
clairvoyance as taught in secret and hierarchical magical societies
like the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn. Through a remarkable
blend of theoretical discussion and intellectual history, Owen has
produced a work that is far more than a social history of
occultism. Her conclusions bear directly on understandings of
modernity and force us to rethink the place of the irrational in
modern culture.
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