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E-raamat: Children of Lucifer: The Origins of Modern Religious Satanism

(Research Fellow, Radboud University Nijmegen)
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Children of Lucifer explores the historical origins of Satanism, the "anti-religion" that adopts Satan, the Judeo-Christian representative of evil, as an object of veneration. Ruben van Luijk traces its development from a concept invented by the Christian church to demonize its internal and external competitors, to a positive (anti-)religious identity embraced to varying degrees by groups in the modern West.

Van Luijk offers a comprehensive intellectual history of this long and unpredictable trajectory; a story that involves Romantic poets, radical anarchists, eccentric esotericists, Decadent writers, and schismatic exorcists, among others, culminating in the establishment of the Church of Satan by carnival entertainer Anton Szandor LaVey. Yet, he argues, this story is more than just a collection of colorful characters and unlikely historical episodes. The emergence of new attitudes towards Satan proves to be intimately linked to the Western Revolution--the ideological struggle for emancipation that transformed the West and is epitomized by the American and French Revolutions. It is also closely connected to secularization, that other exceptional historical process during which western culture spontaneously renounced its traditional gods in order to enter into a self-imposed state of religious indecision.Children of Lucifer, thus, makes the case that the emergence of Satanism presents a shadow history of the evolution of modern civilization as we know it.

Arvustused

Children of Lucifer is a tour de force and the best book on the historical development of Satanism out there. * Lukas Pokorny, Religious Studies Review * Ruben van Luijk's Children of Lucifer: The Origins of Modern Religious Satanism is the most readable of a current rush of books on Satanism [ it's] a highly valuable and immensely enjoyable book. * Numen * [ T]he prose is engaging and would pose little problem for those unfamiliar with the shibboleths of academia...Children of Lucifer is best at exploring the wider field of Satanic discourse, namely the interplay between literature about Satanism and more explicitly religious manifestations of Satanic practice. * Ethan Doyle White, Correspondences * Van Luijk is an eminent specialist of the Belle Époque, and a master storyteller. All the chapters of his book about late 19th-century France are rich in details nobody else...found before him, and the story is told in such a vivid prose that even those who have no special interest in esotericism or Satanism would find the book extremely entertaining...Van Luijk's book is...indispensable for understanding the Belle Époque and the medieval and early modern precursors of modern Satanism. * Massimo Introvigne, Aries - Journal for the Study of Western Esotericism * I recommend Children of Lucifer not only for its engrossing history, but also because Luijk engages criticallyproblematizing and theorizing througha vast oeuvre of well-known nineteenth- and twentieth-century authors, poets, philosophers, theologians, and occultists. This scope will surely appeal to graduate students, literary critics, and scholars of Christianity, Western Esotericism, and New Religious Movements. * Tarryl Janik, Nova Religio * This book provides sweeping treatment of a fascinating and challenging theme that might well provoke its readers into rethinking the intellectual foundations of Western modernity. * Stephen W. Angell, The Journal of the American Academy of Religion *

Muu info

Winner of Winner of the 2017 Best First Book in the History of Religions award by the American Academy of Religion.
Acknowledgments xi
Practical Indications for the Reader xiii
Introduction: Mostly for Academic Readers 1(15)
Defining Satanism
2(5)
Available Literature
7(4)
Hypothesis, Framework, and Methodology of This Study
11(5)
1 The Christian Invention of Satanism
16(53)
A Short Biography of the Devil
16(5)
Constructing Worshippers of Satan
21(10)
Exorcising the Devil's Fifth Column
31(4)
The Satanist Conspiracy of Witchcraft
35(5)
Black Magic and the Black Mass
40(5)
The Affair of the Poisons
45(11)
Satanists before the Modern Age?
56(13)
Intermezzo 1 The Eighteenth Century: Death of Satan?
2 The Romantic Rehabilitation of Satan
69(44)
The Satanic School of Poetry
69(7)
God, Satan, and Revolution
76(11)
Poetry, Myth, and Man's Ultimate Grounds of Being
87(4)
Satan's New Myths: Blake and Shelley
91(8)
Satan's New Myths: Byron and Hugo
99(9)
How Satanist Were the Romantic Satanists?
108(5)
3 Satan in Nineteenth-Century Counterculture
113(51)
Sex, Science, and Liberty
114(2)
Satan the Anarchist
116(5)
(Re)constructing Historical Satanism
121(5)
Satan in Nineteenth-Century Occultism
126(21)
Children of Lucifer
147(17)
Intermezzo 2 Charles Baudelaire: Litanies to Satan
4 Huysmans and Consorts
164
"Down There"
164(4)
Huysmans Discovers Satanism
168(3)
Peladan, Guaita, and Papus
171(4)
Joseph Boullan
175(10)
The Remarkable Case of Chaplain Van Haecke and Canon Docre
185(3)
Intermediary Conclusions
188(6)
Competing Concepts of Satanism
194(6)
Aftermath
200(7)
5 Unmasking the Synagogue of Satan
207(1)
The Unveiling of Freemasonry
208(8)
Taxil before Palladism
216(4)
Excursus: Taxil's Sources
220(3)
The Rise and Fall of Palladism
223(8)
The Great Masonic Conspiracy
231(8)
How Freemasons Became Satanists
239(3)
6 Unmasking the Synagogue of Satan: Continued and Concluded
242(52)
Fighting Democracy by Democratic Means
244(5)
Hidden Temples, Secret Grottos, and International Men of Mystery
249(14)
A Few Words on Satan in Freemasonry, and on Neo-Palladism
263(7)
The Jewish Question
270(8)
By Way of Conclusion
278(16)
Intermezzo 3 Nineteenth-Century Religious Satanism: Fact or Fiction?
7 Paths into the Twentieth Century
294(92)
The Church of Satan
295(4)
Precursors and Inspirations
299(7)
Aleister Crowley, or the Great Beast 666
306(8)
The Other Tradition: Attribution
314(7)
The Heritage of Romantic Satanism
321(7)
The Paradox of Antireligious Religion
328(8)
Reviving "Black" Magic
336(8)
S. Tribulations of the Early Church
344(1)
Satan and Set; LaVey and Aquino
344(12)
The Satanism Scare, or, The Virulence of Old Legends
356(8)
Nazism, the Western Revolution, and Genuine Satanist Conspiracies
364(13)
LaVey's Last Years
377(9)
Intermezzo 4 Adolescent Satanism, Metal Satanism, Cyber-Satanism
Conclusion
386(23)
Attribution
388(3)
Rehabilitation
391(4)
Appropriation
395(6)
Application
401(8)
Notes 409(158)
Bibliography 567(40)
Index 607
Ruben van Luijk was born in Rotterdam, the Netherlands. Children of Lucifer is based on his research as a PhD student at the Faculty of Catholic Theology, Tilburg University and as a research fellow at Radboud University, Nijmegen. Van Luijk is also active as a photographer, novelist and artist.