Astrology and Popular Religion in the Modern West: Prophecy, Cosmology and the New Age MovementThis book explores an area of contemporary religion, spirituality and popular culture which has not so far been investigated in depth, the phenomenon of astrology in the modern west. Locating modern astrology historically and sociologically in its religious, New Age and millenarian contexts, Nicholas Campion considers astrology's relation to modernity and draws on extensive fieldwork and interviews with leading modern astrologers to present an invaluable contribution to our understanding of the origins and nature of New Age ideology. This book challenges the notion that astrology is either 'marginal' or a feature of postmodernism. Concluding that astrology is more popular than the usual figures suggest, Campion argues that modern astrology is largely shaped by New Age thought, influenced by the European Millenarian tradition, that it can be seen as an heir to classical Gnosticism and is part of the vernacular religion of the modern west. |
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'The Christ' isthe teacher, the'master spirit' allotted 'to every world and starand moon and sun'.24 Itwas fromsuch sourcesthatthe twentieth century's two mostinfluential theosophists, Rudolf Steiner andAlice Bailey, borrowed their ...
... student,each according to his orher own capacity (TheWorkof the Astrological Lodgeof London,1940). Activism isalso evident in thewider culture within which much modern astrology is embedded. When Alice Bailey founded her theosophical.
When Alice Bailey founded her theosophical offshoot, the Arcane School, in 1923, she was quiteexplicit that she was creating a group of individuals whose purposewas to bringtheNew Age into being. In 1937 Bailey had discussed the ...
unconsciously for His reappearance.22 Bailey estimated in 1951 that thirty thousand people had passed through the school and ... Forexample,in 1984 an advertisement fortheLucis Trust,the organisation set up to perpetuateAlice Bailey's ...
Inany case, Blavatsky, Bailey andRudolf Steiner all deliberately set outto create organised movements with acommon setofgoals and, even ifwelook at wider NewAge culture as consisting ofseries of networks, itis stillperfectly ...