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Authored Book

Open Secrets: The Popular Fiction of Britain¡¯s Occult Revival

Details

Citation

Ferguson C (2025) Open Secrets: The Popular Fiction of Britain¡¯s Occult Revival. Oxford Studies in Western Esotericism. New York. https://global.oup.com/academic/product/open-secrets-9780197651599?cc=gb&lang=en&#

Abstract
Opens Secrets examines the popular genre fiction produced by leading figures within Britain¡¯s occult revival from the 1840s to the 1930s, including Edward Bulwer Lytton, Emma Hardinge Britten, Marie Corelli, Mabel Collins, Arthur Machen, Charles Fort, Aleister Crowley, and Dion Fortune. In taking the spiritual stakes of such works seriously, it claims them for the recent ¡°religious turn¡± within Victorian and modernist studies, and counters the longstanding reduction of occult fiction¡¯s supernaturalism to the status of metaphor or anxiogenic cultural symptom. At the same time, it shows how the revival¡¯s popular fictional output was always more than just a reflection of, or mode of propaganda for, unorthodox authorial belief or initiatory intention; rather, it demonstrates how this fascinating corpus became a charged site for genre innovation and formal experimentation. The rich spiritual and literary affordances of revival fiction, Open Secrets reveals, were deeply interlinked and mutually transformative. As embraced by occult revivalists, popular literary genres such as the Bildungsroman, the romance, the journalistic article, and the detective tale worked to emplot new narrative routes towards the unseen world, ones that alternately championed, tested, and challenged the new religious philosophies and paranormal theories that inspired them.

Notes
Output status: Forthcoming

StatusPublished
Title of seriesOxford Studies in Western Esotericism
Publication date31/12/2025
Publication date online30/09/2025
Publisher URL
Place of publicationNew York
ISBN9780197651599

People (1)

Professor Christine Ferguson

Professor Christine Ferguson

Professor in English, English Studies