New approaches to the study of esotericism

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The academic study of esotericism is currently undergoing a phase of expan- sion and diversification. This is true whether we look at the topics, geographi- cal regions, and subject languages of new research projects in the field, at the disciplines involved in its study, or the demographic composition of its schol- ars. The past decade has seen monographs, anthologies, and journal special issues on topics such as African-American esotericism (Finley, Guillory and Page, eds., 2014), esotericism in South America (Bubello, 2010), esotericism in South Asia (Djurdjevic, 2014), esotericism in Scandinavia (Bogdan and Ham- mer, eds., 2016), global esotericism (Bogdan and Djurdjevic, 2014), contempo- rary esotericism (Asprem and Granholm, eds., 2013), esotericism in antiquity (Burns, ed., 2015), Islamic esotericism (Saif, 2019), cognitive approaches to es- otericism (Asprem and Davidsen, 2017), ethnographic approaches to esoteri- cism (Crockford and Asprem, 2018), feminist and queer analyses of esotericism (Hedenborg White, 2019), and so on. We see new forays into literary studies, art history, colonial and global history, history and sociology of science, the study of popular culture, and many other domains. The study of esotericism always had interdisciplinary aspirations, but recent years have accelerated this trend. With it comes an increased need for generalists in the field to read broadly across an expanding number of disciplines.The academic study of esotericism is currently undergoing a phase of expan- sion and diversification. This is true whether we look at the topics, geographi- cal regions, and subject languages of new research projects in the field, at the disciplines involved in its study, or the demographic composition of its schol- ars. The past decade has seen monographs, anthologies, and journal special issues on topics such as African-American esotericism (Finley, Guillory and Page, eds., 2014), esotericism in South America (Bubello, 2010), esotericism in South Asia (Djurdjevic, 2014), esotericism in Scandinavia (Bogdan and Ham- mer, eds., 2016), global esotericism (Bogdan and Djurdjevic, 2014), contempo- rary esotericism (Asprem and Granholm, eds., 2013), esotericism in antiquity (Burns, ed., 2015), Islamic esotericism (Saif, 2019), cognitive approaches to es- otericism (Asprem and Davidsen, 2017), ethnographic approaches to esoteri- cism (Crockford and Asprem, 2018), feminist and queer analyses of esotericism (Hedenborg White, 2019), and so on. We see new forays into literary studies, art history, colonial and global history, history and sociology of science, the study of popular culture, and many other domains. The study of esotericism always had interdisciplinary aspirations, but recent years have accelerated this trend. With it comes an increased need for generalists in the field to read broadly across an expanding number of disciplines.

Author(s): Egil Asprem, Julian Strube
Series: Supplements to method & theory in the study of religion
Publisher: Brill
Year: 2021

Language: English
Pages: 263

Contents
Notes on Contributors
Esotericism's Expanding Horizon: Why This Book Came to Be
Receptions of Revelations: A Future for the Study of Esotericism and Antiquity
Towards the Study of Esotericism without the ``Western'': Esotericism from the Perspective of a Global Religious History
``That I Did Love the Moor to Live with Him'': Islam in/and the Study of ``Western Esotericism''
The Occult among the Aborigines of South America? Some Remarks on Race, Coloniality, and the West in the Study of Esotericism
``Don't Take Any Wooden Nickels'': Western Esotericism, Yoga, and the Discourse of Authenticity
Rejected Knowledge Reconsidered: Some Methodological Notes on Esotericism and Marginality
Race and (the Study of) Esotericism
``What Can the Whole World Be Hiding?'': Exploring Africana Esotericisms in the American Soul-Blues Continuum
Double Toil and Gender Trouble? Performativity and Femininity in the Cauldron of Esotericism Research
What Do Jade Eggs Tell Us about the Category ``Esotericism''? Spirituality, Neoliberalism, Secrecy, and Commodities
Interpretation Reconsidered: The Definitional Progression in the Study of Esotericism as a Case in Point for the Varifocal Theory of Interpretation
Afterword: Outlines of a New Roadmap
Index