355 lines
17 KiB
Plaintext
355 lines
17 KiB
Plaintext
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Paganism
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by
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Eric S. Raymond.
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I. Introduction
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The neopagan phenomenon is a loose collection of religious
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movements, experiments and jokes that offers a healthy alternative to
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the dogmatism of the Judeo/Christian/Islamic mainstream (on the one
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hand) and the mushy- mindedness of most 'New Age' groups (on the
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other).
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This article, prepared at the request of a number of curious
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net.posters, offers a brief description of neopagan thought and
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practice. A list of good sources for further study are listed at
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the end.
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II. What is a neopagan?
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I used the term 'religious' above, but as you'll see it's actually
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more than somewhat misleading, and I (like many other neopagans) use it
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only because no other word is available for the more general kind of
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thing of which the neopagan movement and what we generally think of as
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'religion' are special cases.
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Neopaganism is 'religious' in the etymological sense of 're
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ligare', to rebind (to roots, to strengths, to the basics of things),
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and it deals with mythology and the realm of the 'spiritual'. But, as we
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in the Judeo/Christian West have come to understand 'religion' (an
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organized body of belief that connects the 'supernatural' with an
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authoritarian moral code via 'faith') neopaganism is effectively and
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radically anti-religious. I emphasize this because it is important in
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understanding what follows.
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Common characteristics of almost all the groups that describe
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themselves as 'neopagan' (the term is often capitalized) include:
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1. Anti-dogmatism
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Neopagan religions are religions of practice, pragmatism and
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immediate experience. The emphasis is always on what they can help the
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individuals in them to *do* and *experience*; theology and metaphysics
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take a back seat, and very little 'faith' or 'belief' is required or
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expected. In fact many neopagans (including yours truly) are actively
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hostile to 'faith' and all the related ideas of religious authority,
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'divine revelation' and the like.
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2. Compatibility with a scientific world-view
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This tends to follow from the above. Because neopaganism is centered
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in experiences rather than beliefs, it doesn't need or want to do vast
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overarching cosmologies or push fixed Final Answers to the Big Questions
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-- understanding and helping human beings relate to each other and the
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world as we experience it is quite enough for us. Thus, we are generally
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friendly to science and the scientific world-view. Many of us are
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scientists and technologists ourselve (in fact, by some counts, a
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plurality of us are computer programmers!).
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3. Reverence for nature, sensuality, and pleasure
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Most neopaganisms make heavy use of nature symbolism and encourage
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people to be more aware of their ties to all the non-human life on this
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planet. Explicit worship of 'Gaia', the earth ecosphere considered as a
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single interdependent unit, is common. Veneration of nature dieties is
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central to many traditions. Ecological activism is often considered a
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religious duty, though there is much controversy over what form it
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should take.
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By preference, most neopagans hold their ceremonies outdoors under
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sun or moon. Seasonal changes and astronomical rhythms (especially the
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solstices, equinoxes and full and new moons) define the ritual
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calendar.
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Ritual and festive nudity are common; to be naked before nature is
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often considered a holy and integrating act in itself. Sex is considered
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sacramental and sexual energy and symbolisms permeate neopagan practice
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(we like to contrast this with Christianity, in which the central
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sacrament commemorates a murder and climaxes in ritual cannibalism).
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4. Polytheism, pantheism, agnosticism
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Most neopaganisms are explicitly polytheistic -- that is, they
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recognize pantheons of multiple dieties. But the reality behind this is
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more complex than it might appear.
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First, many neopagans are philosophical agnostics or even atheists;
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there is a tendency to regard 'the gods' as Jungian archetypes or
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otherwise in some sense created by and dependent on human belief, and
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thus naturally plural and observer-dependent.
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Secondly, as in many historical polytheisms, there is an implicit
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though seldom-discussed idea that all the gods and goddesses we deal
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with are 'masks', refractions of some underlying unity that we cannot or
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should not attempt to approach directly.
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And thirdly, there is a strong undercurrent of pantheism, the belief
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that the entire universe is in some important sense a responsive,
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resonating and sacred whole (or, which is different and subtler, that it
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is proper for human beings to view it that way).
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Many neopagans hold all three of these beliefs simultaneously.
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5. Decentralized, non-authoritarian organization; no priestly elite
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Neopagans have seen what happens when a priesthood elite gets
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temporal power; we want none of that. We do not take collections, build
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temples, or fund a full-time clergy. In fact the clergy-laity
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distinction is pretty soft; in many traditions, all members are
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considered 'in training' for it, and in all traditions every participant
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in a ritual is an active one; there are and can be no pew-sitting
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passive observers.
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Most neopagan traditions are (dis)organized as horizontal networks
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of small affinity groups (usually called 'circles', 'groves', or
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'covens' depending on the flavor of neopagan involved). Priests and
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priestesses have no real authority outside their own circles (and
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sometimes not much inside them!), though some do have national
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reputations.
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Many of us keep a low profile partly due to a real fear of
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persecution. Too many of our spiritual ancestors were burned, hung,
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flayed and shot by religions that are still powerful for a lot of us to
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feel safe in the open. Down in the Bible Belt the burnings and beatings
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are still going on, and the media loves to hang that 'Satanist' label on
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anything it doesn't understand for a good juicy story.
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Also, we never prosyletize. This posting is about as active a
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neopagan solicitation as anyone will ever see; we tend to believe that
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'converts' are dangerous robots and that people looking to be
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'converted' aren't the kind we want. We have found that it works quite
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well enough to let people find us when they're ready for what we
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have to teach.
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6. Reverence for the female principle
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One of the most striking differences between neopagan groups and the
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religious mainstream is the wide prevalence (and in some traditions
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dominance) of the worship of goddesses. Almost all neopagans revere some
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form of the Great Mother, often as a nature goddess identified with the
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ecosphere, and there are probably more female neopagan clergy than there
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are male.
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Most neopagan traditions are equalist (these tend to pair the Great
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Mother with a male fertility-god, usually some cognate of the Greek
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Pan). A vocal and influential minority are actively feminist, and
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(especially on the West Coast) there have been attempts to present
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various neopagan traditions as the natural 'women's religion' for the
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feminist movement. The effects of this kind of politicization of
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neopaganism are a topic of intense debate within the movement and
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fuel some of its deepest factional divisions.
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7. Respect for art and creativity
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Neopaganism tends to attract artists and musicians as much as it
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attracts technologists. Our myth and ritual can be very powerful at
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stimulating and releasing creativity, and one of the greatest strengths
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of the movement is the rich outgrowth of music, poetry, crafts and arts
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that has come from that. It is quite common for people joining the
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movement to discover real talents in those areas that they never
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suspected.
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Poets and musicians have the kind of special place at neopagan
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festivals that they did in pre-literate cultures; many of our best-known
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people are or have been bards and songsmiths, and the ability to compose
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and improvise good ritual poetry is considered the mark of a gifted
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priest(ess) and very highly respected.
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8. Eclecticism
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"Steal from any source that doesn't run too fast" is a neopagan
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motto. A typical neopagan group will mix Greek, Celtic and Egyptian
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mythology with American Indian shamanism. Ritual technique includes
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recognizable borrowings from medieval ceremonial magic, Freemasonry and
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pre-Nicene Christianity, as well as a bunch of 20th-century inventions.
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Humanistic psychology and some of the more replicable New Age healing
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techniques have recently been influential. The resulting stew is lively
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and effective, though sometimes a bit hard to hold together.
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9. A sense of humor
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Neopagans generally believe that it is more dangerous to take your
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religion too seriously than too lightly. Self-spoofery is frequent and
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(in some traditions) semi-institutionalized, and at least one major
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neopagan tradition (Discordianism, known to many on this net) is
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*founded* on elaborate spoofery and started out as a joke.
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One of the most attractive features of the neopagan approach is that
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we don't confuse solemnity with gloom. Our rituals are generally
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celebratory and joyous, and a humorous remark at the right time
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need not break the mood.
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We generally feel that any religion that can't stand to have fun
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poked at it is in as sad shape as the corresponding kind of person.
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III. What kinds of neopagan are there, and where did they come from?
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Depending on who you talk to and what definitions you use, there
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are between 40,000 and 200,000 neopagans in the U.S.; the true figure is
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probably closer to the latter than the former, and the movement is still
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growing rapidly following a major 'population explosion' in the late
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'70s.
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The numerically largest and most influential neopagan group is the
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'Kingdom of Wicca' -- the modern witch covens. Modern witchcraft has
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nothing to do with Hollywood's images of the cackling, cauldron-stirring
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crone (though Wiccans sometimes joke about that one) and is actively
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opposed to the psychopathic Satanism that many Christians erroneously
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think of as 'witchcraft'. Your author is an initiate Wiccan priest
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and coven leader of long standing.
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Other important subgroups include those seeking to revive Norse,
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Egyptian, Amerind, and various kinds of tribal pantheons other than the
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Greek and Celtic ones that have been incorporated into Wicca. These
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generally started out as Wiccan offshoots or have been so heavily
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influenced by Wiccan ritual technique that their people can usually
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work comfortably in a Wiccan circle and vice- versa.
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There are also the various orders of ceremonial magicians, most
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claiming to be the successors to the turn-of-the-century Golden Dawn or
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one of the groups founded by Alesteir Crowley during his brillant and
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notorious occult career. These have their own very elaborate ritual
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tradition, and tend to be more intellectual, more rigid, and less
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nature-oriented. They are sometimes reluctant to describe themselves as
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neopagans.
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The Discordians (and, more recently, the Discordian-offshoot Church
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of the Sub-Genius) are few in number but quite influential. They are the
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neopagan movement's sacred clowns, puncturing pretense and adding an
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essential note to the pagan festivals. Many Wiccans, especially among
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priests and priestesses, are also Discordians and will look you straight
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in the eye and tell you that the entire neopagan movement is a
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Discordian hoax...
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Neopaganism used to be largely a white, upper-middle-class
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phenomenon, but that has been changing during the last five years. So
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called 'new-collar' workers have come in in droves during the eighties.
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We still see fewer non-whites, proportionately, than there are in the
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general population, but that is also changing (though more slowly). With
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the exception of a few nut-fringe 'Aryan' groups detested by the whole
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rest of the movement, neopagans are actively anti-racist; prejudice is
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not the problem, it's more that the ideas have tended to be accepted by
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the more educated segments of society first, and until recently those
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more educated segments were mostly white.
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On the East Coast, a higher-than-general-population percentage of
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neopagans have Roman Catholic or Jewish backgrounds, but figures suggest
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this is not true nationwide. There is also a very significant overlap in
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population with science-fiction fandom and the Society for Creative
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Anachronism.
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Politically, neopagans are distributed about the same as the
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general population, except that whether liberal or conservative they
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tend to be more individualist and less conformist and moralistic than
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average. It is therefore not too surprising that the one significant
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difference in distribution is the presence of a good many more
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libertarians than one would see in a same-sized chunk of the general
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population (I particularly register this because I'm a libertarian
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myself, but non-libertarians have noted the same phenomenon). These
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complexities are obscured by the fact that the most politically active
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and visible neopagans are usually ex-hippie left-liberals from the
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'60s.
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I think the most acute generalization made about pagans as a whole
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is Margot Adler's observation that they are mostly self-made people,
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supreme individualists not necessarily in the assertive or egoist sense
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but because they have felt the need to construct their own culture,
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their own definitions, their own religious paths, out of whatever
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came to hand rather than accepting the ones that the mainstream offers.
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IV. Where do I find out more?
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I have deliberately not said much about mythology, or specific
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religious practice or aims, or the role of magic and to what extent we
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practice and 'believe' in it. Any one of those is a topic for another
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posting; but you can get a lot of information from books. Here's a
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basic bibliography:
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Adler, Margot _Drawing_Down_the_Moon_ (Random House 1979, hc)
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This book is a lucid and penetrating account of who the modern
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neo-pagans are, what they do and why they do it, from a woman who spent
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almost two years doing observer-participant journalism in the neo-pagan
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community. Especially valuable because it combines an anthropologist's
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objectivity with a candid personal account of her own feelings about all
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she saw and did and how her ideas about the neo-pagans changed under the
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impact of the experiences she went through. Recommended strongly as a
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first book on the subject, and it's relatively easy to find. There is
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now a revised and expanded second edition available.
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Starhawk _The_Spiral_Dance_
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An anthology of philosophy, poetry, training exercises, ritual outlines
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and instructive anecdotes from a successful working coven. First-rate as
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an introduction to the practical aspects of magick and running a
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functioning circle. Often findable at feminist bookstores.
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Shea, Robert and Wilson, Robert Anton _Illuminatus!_ (Dell, 1975, pb)
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This work of alleged fiction is an incredible berserko-surrealist
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rollercoaster that _will_ bend your mind into a pretzel with an
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acid-head blitzkrieg of plausible, instructive and enlightening lies and
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a few preposterous and obscure truths. Amidst this eccentric tale of
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world-girdling conspiracies, intelligent dolphins, the fall of Atlantis,
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who _really_ killed JFK, sex, drugs, rock and roll and the Cosmic Giggle
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Factor, you will find Serious Truths about Mind, Time, Space, the Nature
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of God(dess) and What It All Means -- and also learn why you should on
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no account take them Seriously. Pay particular attention to Appendix
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Lamedh ("The Tactics of Magick"), but it won't make sense until you've
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read the rest.
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This was first published in 3 volumes as _The_Eye_In_The_Pyramid_, _The_
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Golden_Apple_ and _Leviathan_, but there's now a one-volume trade
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paperback carried by most chain bookstores under SF.
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Campbell, Joseph W., _The_Masks_of_God_ (Viking Books, 1971, pb)
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One of the definitive analytical surveys of world mythography -- and
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readable to boot! It's in 4 volumes:
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I. _Primitive_Mythology_
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II. _Oriental_Mythology_
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III. _Occidental_Mythology_
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IV. _Creative_Mythology_
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The theoretical framework of these books is a form of pragmatic
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neo-Jungianism which has enormously influenced the neopagans (we can
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accurately be described as the practice for which Campbell and Jung were
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theorizing). Note especially his predictions in vols. I & IV of a
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revival of shamanic, vision-quest-based religious forms. The recent
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Penguin pb edition of this book should be available in the Mythology and
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Folklore selection of any large bookstore.
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Bonewits, Isaac, _Real_Magic_ (Creative Arts Books, 1979, pb)
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A fascinating analytical study of the psychodynamics of ritual and
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magick. This was Bonewits's Ph.D. thesis for the world's only known
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doctorate in Magic and Thaumaturgy (UCLA Berkeley, 1971). Hardest of the
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five to find but well worth the effort -- an enormously instructive,
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trenchant and funny book.
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