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High Culture: Drugs, Mysticism, and the Pursuit of Transcendence in the Modern World [Hardback]

4.38/5 (25 ratings by Goodreads)
(Professor of Religious Studies, Lancaster University)
  • Format: Hardback, 472 pages, height x width x depth: 163x239x38 mm, weight: 930 g
  • Pub. Date: 12-Jul-2018
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 0190459115
  • ISBN-13: 9780190459116
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  • Format: Hardback, 472 pages, height x width x depth: 163x239x38 mm, weight: 930 g
  • Pub. Date: 12-Jul-2018
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 0190459115
  • ISBN-13: 9780190459116
Other books in subject:
Throughout history, humans have always been fascinated by drugs and altered states. Despite the risk of addiction, many have used drugs as technologies to induce moments of meaning-making transcendence. This book traces the quest for transcendence and meaning through drugs in the modern West. Starting with the Romantic fascination with opium, it goes on to chronicle the discovery of anesthetics, psychiatric and religious interest in hashish, the bewitching power of mescaline and hallucinogenic fungi, as well as the more recent uses of LSD. It fills a major gap in our understanding of contemporary alternative and in the study of countercultures and popular culture. Today we are seeing increased social and scientific attention to both the positive and the negative effects of psychoactive drugs, particularly following the legalization of marijuana for medicinal and/or recreational use in some US states, as well as court cases involving the sacramental use of drugs. This fascinating and wide-ranging exploration of the controversial relationship between drugs and spirituality could not be more timely.

Reviews

High Culture makes for an enjoyable and instructive read, and should belong on the library shelves of scholars and students of religion seeking to understand the particular formation of modern Western drug use as it has manifested in religious and spiritual expressions, and continues to do so to this day. * Misha Kakabadze, Journal for the Study of Western Esotericism *

Acknowledgments xi
Introduction 1(8)
1 Technologies of Transcendence
9(21)
Technologies of the Self
9(3)
Psychedelic Gnosis and the Transcendence of Ordinary Consciousness
12(5)
Perennialism and the Experience of Oneness
17(2)
Shamanism and Ekstasis
19(4)
Concluding Analysis: The Drug Problem?
23(7)
2 Opium Dreams
30(30)
Opium in Britain in the Early Nineteenth Century: Some Background Notes
30(4)
The Art of Dreaming
34(4)
The English Opium-Eater
38(8)
Opium and the Orient: Fear and Fascination
46(10)
Concluding Comments
56(4)
3 Anesthetic Revelation
60(28)
A Ladder to the Heaven of Heavens
61(7)
Syntax, Surgery, and Celestial Visions
68(3)
Benjamin Blood's Anesthetic Revelation
71(3)
Anesthesia and the Society for Psychical Research
74(10)
Concluding Comments
84(4)
4 Hashishdom
88(37)
Cannabis and Clinical Research in the Nineteenth Century
89(6)
The Old Man of the Mountain and the Assassins
95(7)
Artificial Paradises
102(5)
The American Hashish-Eater
107(14)
Concluding Comments
121(4)
5 Occultism in the Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries
125(66)
Mesmerism, Hashish, and Somnambulism
126(10)
Dowameskh, the Orient, and Neoplatonic Esotericism
136(8)
Abstinence and Ambivalence
144(6)
Theosophical Reflection
150(5)
Discourses of Decadence
155(4)
W.B. Yeats, Maud Gonne, Drugs, and Fin de Siecle Occultism
159(7)
The Highs and Lows of a Drug Fiend
166(16)
A Note on Drugs and Post-Crowleyan Thelemic Thought
182(4)
Concluding Comments
186(5)
6 The Antipodes of the Mind
191(34)
Psychedelic Research: Some Background Notes
192(9)
A Mystic and a Scientist
201(12)
Mysticism, Sacred, and Profane
213(11)
Concluding Comments
224(1)
7 Revolution in the Head
225(63)
Adventures in the Chemistry of Consciousness
226(14)
A Religious Set and Setting
240(9)
Notes on the Counterculture
249(3)
Millbrook and Psychedelic Religion
252(9)
The Neo-American Church
261(10)
The Psychedelic Sacrament
271(2)
Turning On and Turning East
273(11)
Concluding Comments
284(4)
8 Psychedelic Shamanism
288(55)
Archaic Techniques of Ecstasy
289(2)
The Long Trip and the Origin of Religion
291(17)
The Sorcerer's Apprentice?
308(10)
Alien Dreamtime
318(16)
Concluding Comments
334(9)
Notes 343(94)
Index 437
Chistopher Partridge is a Professor of Religious Studies at Lancaster University.