Cover art for the Treadwell's Paper
Occultism in the Age of Transparency (2023)
by Stephen Alexander (shadowy version)
This post is a slightly revised extract from a paper presented at Treadwell's Bookshop, on 7 September, 2023. The event was graciously hosted, as ever, by Christina Harrington, and marked my return to the store as a speaker after an absence of eleven years [1].
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The Veil of Isis is a metaphorical and artistic motif in which nature is personified as a goddess, covered by a veil or mantle representing the inaccessibility of her secrets [2].
Illustrations of Isis with her veil being lifted were extremely popular from the late 17th to the early-mid 19th century and were usually intended to show the triumph of Reason. However, even occultists were happy to play this game of indecent exposure; Madame Blavatsky, for example, used the metaphor of Isis unveiled when expounding the spiritual teachings of Theosophy [3].
According to Blavatsky, whilst scientists and philosophers revealed only material facts and superficial forms, she would penetrate further to the most hidden truths. That, to me at least, is a shameful ambition.
And I don't much like it either when practitioners of modern ceremonial magic also attempt to unveil Isis, or command demons hidden in darkness to make themselves apparent and obedient to the will of the one who has summoned them forth.
For me, occultism - particularly in this, the age of transparency - should be a defence of concealment and anonymity, not making visible and naming those beings who stand dark on the threshold of the Unknown.
I don’t want to violently drag everything out into the open - least of all some poor demon - so it can be subject to our x-ray vision. For even gods and demons die when they shed all negativity (all shadow, all darkness). That’s why Goethe’s Faust encouraged us to hold tight to the veil of Isis, even if we can never embrace the goddess, or catch anything other than a glimpse of her [4].
Occultism is ultimately not about revelation, but mystical initiation. And this involves closing your eyes and shutting your mouth; for it's an attempt to maintain the silence and stillness. Thus, when casting a spell, for example, whisper it in a voice that is lighter than breath. For magic, like poetry, is an event of stillness (i.e., a phenomenon of negativity) that enables us to listen to the silence (to be attentive to the darkness).
In other words, magic is about tuning in to intensities; about forming a sensitive relationship with the world "that is not characterized by representation (that is, by ideas or meaning) but by immediate touching and presence" [5]. Only in silent stillness "do we enter into a relation with the nameless, which exceeds us" [6].
Silence, stillness, secrecy, and shadows are the fourfold of terms at the heart of occultism.
And I would suggest to any would-be wiccans or neo-pagans here this evening that, instead of trying to move with the times and making secret rituals open to everyone, you stay concealed, hidden, and withdrawn.
And, above all, stay still: for just as we can only ever catch a glimpse of the gods, they can only cast their gaze upon those who "linger in contemplative calmness" [7].
In sum: occult practices and magical rituals are symbolic techniques of becoming-imperceptible [8] and I’m hoping, that via a form of occultism, we might learn how to stage our own disappearance and darken the world, giving it back its shadows, its secrecy, and its silence.
For whilst people talk a lot about plastic in the seas and worry about their so-called carbon footprint, I would suggest that light pollution and noise pollution are far more threatening to our ontological wellbeing.
Photo by Paul Gorman
(as posted on Instagram)
Notes
[1] Readers can find a full list of previous Treadwell's papers by clicking here.
[2] The motif was based on a statue of Isis located in the ancient Egyptian
city of Sais, which was said to have an inscription reading: I am all
that has been and is and shall be; and no mortal has ever lifted my
mantle - which admittedly sounds like a challenge. For an interesting
philosophical study of this topic, see Pierre Hadot, The Veil of Isis
(Harvard University Press, 2008).
Taking the allegorical figure of the veiled goddess Isis as a
guide, and drawing on the work of both ancient and modern thinkers (the
latter including Goethe, Rilke, Wittgenstein, and Heidegger), Hadot
traces successive interpretations of a cryptic phrase which has long
intrigued the Western imagination and is attributed to Heraclitus:
Phusis kruptesthai philei (Nature loves to hide).
Hadot concludes that
there are essentially two (contradictory) approaches to nature: the
Promethean, or experimental-questing, approach, which embraces
technology as a means of tearing the veil from Nature and revealing her
secrets; and the Orphic, or contemplative-poetic, approach, according to
which such a denuding of Nature is a grave trespass.
[3] Blavatsky’s most famous work - Isis Unveiled:A Master-Key to the Mysteries of Ancient and Modern Science and Theology - was published in 1877. For some, a seminal text; for others, a work largely plagiarised from the writings of other occult authors.
[4] Whilst most people understand a glimpse simply to mean a brief or
partial view - to catch a quick look, perhaps in passing, of something
or someone - it has a more poetic and philosophical resonance for those
with ears to hear. D. H. Lawrence, for example, was fascinated by the
word and often used it in his late poetry to describe how aspects of
divinity are seen in the faces and forms of people when they are
momentarily unaware of themselves. It's this glimmer of godhood which
gives human beings their more-than-human beauty; which makes the flesh
gleam with radiance or the bright flame of being. See the related group
of verses on pp. 579-582 of The Poems, ed. Christopher Pollnitz,
(Cambridge University Press, 2013).
Heidegger also privileged the word Blick, which I would translate
as glimpse. For Heidegger, a glimpse is a kind of lightning flash which
provides an insight into that which is, whilst, at the same time,
guarding the hidden darkness of what remains forever withdrawn. See 'The
Turn', from the 1949 Bremen Lecture series Insight Into That Which Is,
trans. Andrew J. Mitchell, (Indiana University Press, 2012), pp. 64-73.
[5] Byung-Chul Han, 'Stillness', in Non-things, trans. Daniel Steuer, (Polity Press, 2022), p. 77.
[6] Byung-Chul Han, 'The Magic of Things', Non-things, pp. 56-57.
[7] Byung-Chul Han, 'Stillness', Non-things, p. 83.
[8] See Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari, A Thousand Plateaus, trans. Brian Massumi, (The Athlone Press, 1996). According to the above, there is one becoming towards which all other becomings rush, marking the immanent end of becoming and providing the process with its cosmic formula; the becoming-imperceptible (279).
Readers who are interested might also like to see two earlier posts that acted as previews to the talk at Treadwell's:
'In Memory of Anne Dufourmantelle: Risk Taker Extraordinaire and Defender of Secrets' (14 May 2023): click here
'On Georg Simmel's Sociology of Secrecy and Secret Societies' (10 August 2023): click here.