Esoteric discourse and the European history of religion: in search of a new interpretational framework

Authors

  • Kocku von Stuckrad University of Amsterdam

Keywords:

Esotericism, Occult sciences, Secret societies, Philosophy and religion, Europe -- Religion, Europe -- History, Discourse analysis, Mysticism, Meditation

Abstract

Often, when people nowadays talk of ‘esotericism’, they are using this word either as more or less synonymous with ‘New Age’, or as a term for movements that are based on a secret wisdom that is only accessible to an ‘inner circle’ of initiates. In academic discussions, however, during the past fifteen years, a field of research has been established that critically engages these assumptions and applies the term ‘esotericism’ in a very different way, namely as a signifier of a number of currents in Western culture that have influenced the history of religions in manifold ways. ‘New Age’ and secret initiatory knowledge are but two aspects of these traditions, and certainly not the most important ones. In this article, the author reflects on the various scholarly approaches to the concept of ‘Western esotericism’. He proposes an analysis that takes in­to account the manifold pluralisms that have shaped Western culture—not only in modernity. He argues that the academic study of Western esotericism should be understood as part and parcel of a broader analysis of European history of religion, with all its complexities, polemics, diachronic developments, and pluralistic discourses.
Section
Articles

Published

2008-01-01

How to Cite

von Stuckrad, K. (2008). Esoteric discourse and the European history of religion: in search of a new interpretational framework. Scripta Instituti Donneriani Aboensis, 20, 217–236. https://doi.org/10.30674/scripta.67337