CHAPTER SIXTY-THREE
THE COUNTERCULTURE AND
THE OCCULT
Erik Davis
P
erhaps the single most important vector for the popularization of occult spirituality
in the twentieth century is the countercultural explosion associated with ‘the
Sixties’—an era whose political and culture dynamics hardly it within the boundaries
of that particular decade. A more useful term was coined by the Berkeley social critic
Theodore Roszak, who used the word ‘counterculture’ to describe a mass youth
culture whose utopianism and hedonic psycho-social experimentation were wedded
to a generalized critique of rationalism, technocracy, and established religious and
social institutions. As such, the counterculture signiicantly overlapped, though also
sometimes resisted, the parallel rise of the New Left and its ideological and occasionally
violent struggle against more-or-less the same ‘System.’ Within a few short years after
its emergence in the middle of the 1960s, the counterculture had transformed social
forms, creative production, personal lifestyles, and religious experience across the
globe. Though the counterculture was a global phenomenon, its origins and many of
its essential dynamics lie in America, which will be the focus of this chapter.
Many of the attitudes and practices associated with the counterculture were drawn
from earlier and more marginal bohemian scenes. Arguably, the key catalyst for the
emergence of a mass counterculture was the widespread availability and use of LSD
and other charismatic psychoactive substances. For many, LSD’s extraordinary
noetic and emotional affects seemed direct evidence that the individual alteration or
expansion of consciousness, coupled with corresponding shifts in the self and its
values, could precipitate a new social and cultural order. These experiences were also
characterized as early as Aldous Huxley’s foundational 1954 mescaline text The
Doors of Perception as having a pronounced mystical or religious dimension. Once
people began ‘turning on’ en masse, an amorphous and visionary spiritual
counterculture almost inevitably emerged.
In line with Catherine Albanese’s argument that the American metaphysical
tradition is essentially recombinant, the new seekers promiscuously and often
supericially comingled Vedantic nondualism, tantric yoga, Zen meditation,
Theosophy, Native American symbolism, and other religious discourses and practices.
This visionary stew included many ‘profane’ elements as well: pulp iction,
parapsychology, ufology, cybernetic social science, and a Reichean hedonism that
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emphasized the erotic freedom from repression and restraint. Indeed, a primary
source for counterculture’s thirst for spirituality was its only apparently paradoxical
embrace of the intensiied body. Permissive and experimental sexuality, coupled with
the ecstatic and drug-fueled collective rituals of live rock shows, helped forge a
Dionysian sensibility that readily looked to and absorbed the imaginal and energetic
transports of occult phantasmagoria and the protocols of mysticism.
Over time, this explosion of esoteric novelty opened up the space for the
crystallization of more deined religious structures and identities, and helps to explain
the rise of new religious movements and ‘cults’ in the late 1960s and especially the
early 1970s. At the same time, the counterculture also hosted a continuously informal
cultic—or ‘occultic’—milieu that included astrology, witchcraft, the I Ching, Tarot,
chakras, reincarnation, Theosophical and ethnopharmacological lore. Though many
of these ideas, symbols, and practices already circulated in the metaphysical fringes
of twentieth-century America, and by no means exclusively among bohemians, the
counterculture brought them more or less onto center stage, so that they helped
deine what we can authentically call a Zeitgeist. By the early 1970s, when the
counterculture had transformed the engines of popular culture, the West found itself
hosting a pervasive and commercialized ‘pop occulture’ whose long shadow we still
live in today, from the New Age to black metal music to personal growth seminars to
rave culture.
Needless to say, ‘the counterculture,’ ‘spirituality,’ and ‘occultism’ are all highly
complex and multidimensional concepts that describe domains that also feature a
high degree of informality and internal diversity—even contradiction. This makes
compressed generalizations about their interaction particularly fraught. One
particularly signiicant issue is the question of Easternization. The dominant language
of countercultural mysticism in the 1960s was marked by translated Asian concepts
and practices; is it right to think of these as part of ‘occultism’? Without question, the
turn East has been integral to Western occultism since Theosophy and early Crowley;
moreover, Tibetan Buddhism, Taoism, yoga, and even Zen have their own forms of
‘magic.’ Still, while Christopher Partridge has helped to deine a conception of
‘occulture’ broad enough to embrace Asian ingressions alongside Western esoterica,
one must resist collapsing the popular emergence of Western Buddhism and nonethnic Hinduism in the 1960s into the occult per se. For these reasons, it is perhaps
better to consider a broader ‘spiritual counterculture’ within which we can identify
Asian traditions as well as overlapping but also more speciically characterized occult
currents.
THE B OHEMIAN ANTE CE D E NTS O F THE
OCCU LT CO U NTE RCU L TU RE
Depending on the angle and depth of approach, one could identify any number of
crucial antecedents to the counterculture. One direct ancestor of the back-to-nature
hippie is the West Coast ‘Nature Boys’ health-food scene, a subculture that was
directly inspired by ideas and individuals associated with the German Wandervogel
movement, and therefore with the organicist, neo-Romantic, and ‘pagan’ sensibility
forged in the German-speaking esoteric underground of the nineteenth century.
Similarly, the transformative aspirations, Atlantean lore, and Asian-inlected
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mysticism of the Age of Aquarius is inconceivable outside the context of Theosophy’s
spiritual evolutionism. But to track the speciic antecedents for the occult
counterculture, we are better off turning to painters, poets, and other bohemian
artists of the postwar period. The informality (or incoherence) of later hippie
mysticism is in part tied to the fact that the inluences closest to hand were not
spiritual masters or organized sects, but rather artists whose cultivation of personal
idiosyncrasy and singular expression lent their occult and religious explorations an
unsystematic, visionary, and often hedonistic dimension.
One early and emblematic igure was Henry Miller, who was already in his 50s
when he moved to Big Sur in 1944. Miller had already written the experimental
erotic novels that would earn him both fame and infamy, but his inluence on Big Sur
was pivotal, as the place transformed into a minor mecca of artists, sexual adventurers,
and political anarchists. Miller represents a genuine bridge between the generations
and the continents. In 1930s Paris, he was already reading Blavatsky, Rudolph
Steiner, and Gurdjieff. In California, he continued to study astrology and Eastern and
Western spiritual teachers, wrote a book abut the utopian mysticism of Brethren of
the Free Spirit, and transmuted his earlier pornographic obsessions into what Jeffrey
Kripal calls a ‘panerotic nature mysticism.’ He also visited the baths that would later
form the omphalos for the Esalen Institute, whose institutional devotion to mind–
body practices would, starting in the 1970s, bring tai chi, tantra, and other esoteric
practices of the enlightened body into the mainstream of American psychological
culture.
Another singular igure of the postwar proto-counterculture was the polymath,
ethnomusicologist, experimental ilmmaker, and archivist Harry Smith. Raised by
Theosophist parents in the Paciic Northwest, Smith lived in the Bay Area in the
1940s, smoking pot, hanging out in jazz clubs, and making hand-painted abstract
animations inspired in part by esoteric color theory. Smith later moved to Manhattan,
and in 1952, made his most lasting contribution to the counterculture: the Anthology
of American Folk Music, a powerful and uncanny collection of early blues and old
time music that became the Rosetta stone for folkies like Bob Dylan and The Fugs;
among the obsessive notes Smith included quotations from Robert Fludd and
Rudolph Steiner. Smith’s ilms grew more iconographic, and featured animated
montages of Tibetan godforms, interlocking Kabbalistic trees, and Amanita muscaria
mushrooms. Smith was also a serious student of Aleister Crowley, a then-obscure
predilection he shared with Kenneth Anger, a far more inluential West Coast
experimental ilmmaker who started making ilms in 1947. Anger’s shorts, often
marked with occult and homo-erotic symbolism, later became mainstays of the
midnight movie circuit; though no hippie, Anger saw the counterculture as the
fulillment of Crowley’s prophesized Aeon of Horus.
The most direct ancestors of the spiritual counterculture remain the Beat
Generation. Jack Kerouac, Allen Ginsberg, William S. Burroughs, and Gary Snyder
were all seekers, and their earnest explorations of Buddhism, Scientology, magic,
tantra, Zen, psychedelics, and Hinduism came to provide models for readers seeking
a path out of America’s crushing culture of conformity in the 1950s. That said, their
spiritual journeys were divergent, and inlected the rising occult current in different
ways. Kerouac, who often identiied as a Catholic, started reading the Mahayana
sutras in 1954; a year later he met the West Coast poet Snyder, whose deep embrace
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of Zen is immortalized in Kerouac’s 1958 The Dharma Bums. Kerouac turned to the
dharma out of his own painful self-struggle, and was inspired as well by Buddhism’s
rhetoric of immediacy, which resonated with his own formal practices of spontaneous
prose. Wary of Zen, Kerouac found in the classic Mahayana sutras a language of
paradox and visionary display that he later emulated in Mexico City Blues and The
Scripture of Golden Eternity, with its ‘fantastic magic imagination of the lightning,
lash, / plays, dreams…’
Snyder’s embrace of Buddhism was at once more formal and more grounded than
Keruoac’s. He studied for many years at a monastery in Kyoto, and his dharma, like
his more hard-edged poetry, side-stepped Kerouac’s romantic narcissism for a
concrete and uninlected sanctiication of the everyday that had little truck with
hidden or anomalous powers of mind. In this sense, Snyder helps deine the important
difference between the spiritual counterculture, which he directly helped foment, and
the occult revival, whose esoteric undertow he rejected. Nonetheless, even in its most
minimalist forms, Zen did offer Snyder and other bohemian seekers a kind of
illuminism, especially as it was articulated in Alan Watts’ limpid and enormously
inluential texts on Zen.
Of all the Beats, Ginsberg performed the most instrumental role in the spiritual
counterculture. Partly through his youthful visionary experiences, Ginsberg’s work
had an expansive, Blakean dimension from the beginning. Like Synder, his voice also
insisted on a transformation rather than an escape from materiality, and his later
encounters with Hinduism and Buddhism took place within a solidly Whitmaninspired framework that helped deine a more leshy American dharma. In the early
1960s, after a visit to India with Synder and others, Ginsberg publicly adopted the
trappings of a holy man; appearing at readings or protest gatherings in robes, he
would often sing kirtan, chant ‘Hare Krishna,’ and play the harmonium. A mystical
and hedonic bard of conscience, Ginsberg also joined Synder in refusing to honor the
divide that many made between the spiritual counterculture and political activism.
The oldest and least humanist of the Beats, William S. Burroughs anticipated the
darker and more paranoid dimensions of the occult countercultural. Burroughs
distrusted language as a vehicle of self-expression and spontaneity, considering it
more as an occult battleground where the forces of control waged war against
subversive and even nihilistic attempts to break the spell of conventional signs.
Sensitive to the rivalry and paranoia that court magical thinking, Burroughs was, in
the early 1950s, already writing to Ginsberg about the use of curses and ‘black
magic’; he also traveled to South American in a prescient plunge into the serpentine
depths of yage (ayahuasca). In Paris in the late 1950s, when he also studied
Scientology, Burroughs developed the cut-up method of artistic composition invented
by Brion Gysin, linking the sort of oracular juxtapositions already found in Dada and
Surrealism to a postwar model of information processing and media manipulation.
Gysin and Ian Sommerville, a crony of Burroughs’, also constructed the dream
machine in the early 1960s, an inexpensive device whose consciousness-altering
licker effect anticipated the countercultural quest to use drugs and media to, as
Burroughs put it in 1964’s Nova Express, ‘storm the reality studio.’
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LSD AS CHEMICAL M YS TE RY RE L IG IO N
Along with other psychoactive substances, LSD helped catalyze the transformation of
marginal bohemian esotericism into the pop occulture of the late 1960s and 1970s.
From the beginnings of its dissemination into youth culture, acid came already
‘packaged’ with associations linking it mystical states of consciousness, thanks in
part to The Psychedelic Experience, a popular 1964 trip guide by Timothy Leary,
Richard Alpert, and Ralph Metzger that based its cartography of altered states on
Evans-Wentz’s Theosophical remix of the Tibetan Book of the Dead. More
importantly, the acid experience itself gave immediate evidence of the transrational
capacities of consciousness, states that might range from a sense of unitive vibratory
fusion with the cosmos to a mythopoetic explosion of religious and supernatural
symbolism to a perceptual merry-go-round of trickster synchronicities and paranormal
possibilities. Acid undermined the instrumental schemes of individual agency, and it
returned many users to baseline with a growing taste for loosely associational
thinking, ecstatic states, and spontaneous collective happenings. Unsurprisingly, the
use of LSD and other drugs encouraged a kaleidoscopic engagement with spiritual
practices, metaphysical systems, and occult arcana, all of which came to supplement,
refract, and to some degree substitute for acid’s unsustainable noetic raptures.
The paradoxes of a chemical sacrament—whose sacred states were instrumentally
catalyzed by a commodity molecule—are very much relected in the career of Timothy
Leary, who was as responsible as anyone for turning on the youth generation.
(Ginsberg, to whom Leary irst provided psilocybin, also played a vital role.) When
Leary took psilocybin mushrooms in 1960, and LSD shortly thereafter, he was a
successful professor of psychology who, although rejecting the reigning behaviorism
of the day, was no humanist. Though irmly rooted in impersonal social science, his
experiments with students and faculty led him toward more esoteric discourses and
frameworks. His friend Huston Smith, a professor of religion at MIT, introduced him
to the perennialist notions of a core ‘mystical experience’ lurking beneath the apparent
variety of religious phenomenology, a controversial concept that fundamentally
shaped subsequent psychedelic thinking. After a breakthrough experience at a local
Vedanta temple, Leary’s 60s persona was set: after leaving Harvard and becoming a
countercultural leader, Leary adopted a snappy guru persona and wove Hindu
mystical ideas and other hip esoterica into his rhetoric. But as his ongoing discourse
of DNA and social ‘games’ suggests, he never really abandoned the frameworks of
social science or philosophical materialism, and was spiritually most aligned with the
sometimes manipulative ‘trickster’ approach of Gurdjieff, who Leary started reading
in 1965.
Leary’s elitist East Coast approach to psychedelia is conventionally contrasted
with the more informal and carnivalesque West Coast style of Ken Kesey and the
Merry Pranksters, one of whom memorably referred to Leary’s fascination with the
Tibetan bardos as a ‘crypt trip.’ In contrast, the ‘spirituality’ of the Pranksters can be
seen as an anarchic, demotic, and sometimes goofy suspension of the difference
between sacred and profane—more of a dodge of conventional rationality than a
disciplined transcendence. One key focus for their non-stop happening was
synchronicity, the uncanny phenomenon of strikingly meaningful coincidence irst
described as such by Jung. For the Pranksters and many other heads, synchronicity
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came to be seen as a kind of profane or psychedelic grace—in the fortuitously
meaningful conjunction of ordinary events, synchronicity implies a paranormal order
of correspondence while retaining a quotidian materiality. The multi-media Acid
Tests that the Pranksters staged before California banned LSD in 1966 creatively
deployed sound and light technologies along with jams from the young Grateful
Dead, and thereby laid down a template for the mass psychedelic culture just around
the corner. But the Acid Tests can be understood as social synchronicity machines—
an immersive, cybernetic, and McLuhanesque celebration of Burroughs’ cut-up war
on control.
Synchronicity does not demand explicitly occult interpretations, but it certainly
lends itself to them. One traditional esoteric tool that was popular among the
Pranksters, and that also saturates bohemian and psychedelic culture in general, is
the I Ching. First published in the famed Wilhelm/Baynes edition in 1950, the I
Ching, or the Classic of Change, is an ancient Chinese oracular system which uses the
random throw of yarrow stalks (or, more simply, three coins) to generate igures that
correspond to one of sixty-four hexagrams, each of which comes festooned with a
variety of often enigmatic commentaries. Though presenting a cooler and more
philosophical proile than the Tarot, the I Ching was still used by many as an occult
tool, one that simultaneously rejected conventional notions of ‘chance’ while
embracing an organic system of signs that promised to reigure agency along holistic
cosmic powers rather than instrumentalist lines. Another signiicant divinatory
system was astrology, which became a generally available typological framework and
lingua franca for the counterculture as well as a tool to harmonize that emerging
collective with the cosmic environment. Key astrologers for the counterculture
included the Haight resident Gavin Arthur—who contributed to the Haight Street
Oracle—and Dane Rudhyar, who decisively shaped modern astrology by introducing
more humanistic and Jungian interpretative conventions. Though the popularity of
astrology was by no means restricted to the youth generation—sun sign columns had
been popular in American newspapers since the 1940s—the ‘Age of Aquarius’ became
the most popular tag for that generation’s widespread and gripping sense of an
immanent and epochal shift.
One important popular vehicle for esoteric and occult symbolism was psychedelic
art, particularly as it efloresced through the medium of concert posters, LP designs,
and, to a lesser extent, underground comix. Indeed, if Leary’s bardo manual and
Kesey’s Acid Tests can be understood as the development of psychedelic form, the
semi-commercialized hippie culture they helped engender can be understood more in
terms of developing psychedelic content. Album covers exploited explicitly occultist
and mythopoetic imagery, with the Incredible String Band’s The 5000 Spirits or the
Layers of the Onion and the Jimi Hendrix Experience’s Axis: Bold as Love being
standout examples from 1967. On the other hand, underground comics were
saturated with satiric and pornographic obsessions that made most publications
considerably less mystical than, say, the Steve Ditko-illustrated exploits of Marvel
Comics’ Dr. Strange, which debuted in 1963 and was loved by many heads. One
important exception was Rick Grifin, a comics creator as well as one of the key rock
poster designers of the psychedelic era. Though he cut his teeth on surf art in the early
1960s, Grifin’s mature style—often associated with the Grateful Dead—presented a
heavy and idiosyncratic symbolism that drew from orange crate art, Manly Hall’s
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Secret Teachings of the Ages, blobular modernism, and his own intense imagination.
Grifin remixed Kabbalistic and esoteric Christian imagery for Robert Crumb’s Zap
magazine, while the lying eyeball poster he designed for a Jimi Hendrix Fillmore gig
remains perhaps the single most iconic image of the era, an unnerving mix of pop
surrealism, eldritch nightmare, and divine invasion. Just as many psychedelic posters
played with the tension between two-dimensional patterns and three-dimensional
organic forms, so did Grifin’s popular work superimpose the depths of esoteric
imagery onto the pure surface of commercial design.
THE M AG ICAL RE VIVAL
Roszak ends his The Making of a Counter-Culture with the invocation of the shaman
and the creative magic of the embodied visionary imagination. In religious terms, this
spirit is manifested less in hippie interpretations of Zen or Vedantist mysticism than
in the rise of explicitly magical religions: witchcraft, Satanism, and Paganism, the
latter a self-description that itself emerged from the counterculture. Antecedents for
these developments include British Wicca and Victor Anderson’s American Feri
tradition, but any broad view of magical currents in the 1960s must also consider the
pulpier domains of popular culture, which circulated images and atmospheres that
would later materialize as spiritual practice. Particularly important was the market in
fantasy iction established by the tremendous popularity of J.R.R. Tolkien’s The
Lord of the Rings, which became a campus hit after appearing in an unauthorized
paperback edition in 1965. Imprints like Lancer and Ballantine were also repackaging
(in often lurid covers) American weird iction from the previous generation, making
Lovecraft’s alien necromancy and Robert E. Howard’s sword-and-sorcery tales
available. Though comics had long traficked in supernatural powers, they developed
a hipper resonance in the early 1960s; Marvel’s Dr. Strange, whose Western wizard
hero nonetheless draws his wisdom from Tibet, has already been mentioned.
Supernatural horror ilms witnessed a sexy Hollywood revamp; examples include
Roger Corman’s feverish series of Poe adaptations starring Vincent Price.
Indeed, it is an interesting exercise to consider the exact difference between the
Satanic rituals staged in, say, Corman’s Masque of the Red Death and the Satanic
‘psychodramas’ staged by the most famous American occultist of the 1960s, Anton
LaVey. Though too often dismissed as a simple huckster, LaVey mixed his libertarian
philosophy of satisied individualism with a strong sense of subversive showmanship
and more than a touch of sleaze. He founded the Church of Satan in 1966, setting up
sensationalist events at the ‘black house’ in San Francisco, and becoming, along with
the popular British witch and astrologer Sybil Leek, one of the main sources for
journalists writing about the rise of magic. Though LaVey himself was critical of the
hippie drug scene, one of his dynamic co-conspirators was Kenneth Anger, whose
tangled engagement with the Age of Aquarius is relected in his dark and jagged 1969
short ilm Invocation of My Demon Brother, much of which was shot in the Haight.
In one of the creepy synchronicities of the age, the ilm featured Bobby Beausoleil, a
crony of Charles Manson who was later convicted for the Manson-inspired murder
of Gary Hinman. Far more than the trendy devil-dabbling that led the Rolling Stones
(at the urging of Anger) to call their 1967 record Their Satanic Majesties Request,
Charles Manson crystallized, in the social imagination and to some extent in reality,
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the spiritual diabolism potentiated by the counterculture’s wayward plunge into sex,
drugs, and nondual metaphysics.
The infernal side of occult religion—real, imagined, or performed—was paralleled
in the 1960s by more balanced and afirmative nature-based religions, which in part
sacralized the countercultural ethos of the enchanted lesh. British Wicca made inroads across the country, but an arguably more important part of the magical revival
was the counterculture’s willingness to ground spiritual authority in imaginative
invention rather than narratives of unbroken historical transmission. Emerging in
1961 from a prophetic stew of science iction, libertarianism, and Maslow’s
psychology of human potential, the Church of All Worlds was already on its way to
becoming a nature-focused magical group when it became the irst earth religion to
receive a formal charter in 1968. In California, the New Reformed Orthodox Order
of the Golden Dawn formed when college students started mixing Gerald Gardner’s
Witchcraft Today with the radical ideas of Norman O. Brown and the creative
possibilities of group performance and ritual play. Even the secular re-enactment
scenes like the Society for Creative Anachronism and the Renaissance Pleasure Faire
provided cultural context for the fabrication of explicitly Pagan identities. The lesson
from the counterculture was that, magically speaking, the collective performance of
the creative imagination was at least as important as initiation and the replication of
‘tradition.’
Perhaps the most audacious public expression of this lesson, one that reached far
beyond witchcraft or even the spiritual counterculture, was the ‘exorcism of the
Pentagon’ that took place in October 1967. Following a massive rally held at the
Lincoln Memorial to protest the Vietnam war, about 50,000 people marched on the
Pentagon. Along with thousands of civil rights activists, peaceniks, and leftists, the
crowd included many colorful and festive representatives of the counterculture. One
protest group that explicitly sought to blend activism with such feral pageantry were
the Yippies, whose co-founder Abbie Hoffman, in an act of knowing theater,
attempted to use the gathered psychic energy to physically levitate the Pentagon, turn
it orange, and end the war. Allan Ginsberg supported the effort with Buddhist chants,
while Hare Krishnas danced and the crowd ‘ommed.’ At another point the New York
underground folk group The Fugs led a (partly?) tongue-in-cheek exorcism of the
Pentagon’s demons, while Kenneth Anger performed Crowleyian magical spells on
his own without the slightest bit of irony. The complex mixture of absurdism and
sincerity that various actors brought to this galvanizing magical protest relects the
degree to which the occult had become a generalized cultural language of collective
possibility and not merely a ‘spiritual’ orientation.
Progressive politics would also come to characterize the evolution of explicitly
magical and pagan currents in the 1970s. The most notable of these was the
development of feminist witchcraft, perhaps the most extreme example of the
widespread feminization of religion and spirituality in the decade. In 1971, Z.
Budapest established the women-only Susan B. Anthony Coven no. 1 along essentialist
feminist lines. Budapest, who was arrested in 1975 for breaking a California law
against ‘fortune telling’ that she later led the effort to overturn, fused the rhetoric of
radical feminism with an exclusive focus on female deities rather than the sexual
polarity of traditional Wicca; for her coven and many others, ‘consciousness raising’
had become the conscious raising of goddess energy. Budapest’s most inluential and
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important student was Starhawk, who widely popularized witchcraft with her 1979
book The Spiral Dance, and whose highly visible and politically active form of pagan
practice channeled the older energies of the counterculture into the embattled political
and environmental landscape of the 1980s and beyond.
POP OCCULT U RE IN THE E ARL Y 1 9 7 0 S
Some peg the end of the counterculture to 1970, when Charles Manson went on trial
for the Tate-LaBianca murders and national guards killed four protesting students at
Kent State. A longer, more inertial view stretches the epoch into the mid-1970s, with
the early 1970s characterized as a hazy twilight of the hippie idols. (Beyond this
point, we may speak of countercultures—squatter punks, travelers, radical
environmentalists, ravers—but the rhetoric of generational unity is over.) The 1960s
had been marked by a pervasive sense of imminent collective transformation, but
then the Age of Aquarius went into eclipse, just as Johnson’s Great Society gave way
to recession, Watergate, and the politics of paranoia. So even as ‘liberated’ or
permissive mores began to transform mainstream social life, the ravages of drug
abuse and the existential confusion introduced by the psycho-social dislocation
endemic to the counterculture became impossible to ignore. Environmental
consciousness grew in intensity—the irst Earth Day was in 1970—but it was
accompanied by the defeatist sense that the only way to keep the dream alive was to
retreat into rural life or an idealized nonhuman nature.
These conditions all help explain the spiritual innovation that characterized the
early 1970s, which from the perspective of the history of religions was an
extraordinarily fertile if sometimes desperate era of discovery and reinvention. The
most notable development was the unprecedented growth of new and transplanted
religious movements, like the Uniication Church, Siddha Yoga, and a wide variety of
Jesus People sects. Accompanying these groups, and the parallel growth of earlier
NRMs like the Hare Krishnas or Scientology, was a growing public discourse around
‘cults.’ Usually led by charismatic teachers or gurus and sometimes relying on the
counterculture’s already established occult sensibility—with the Los Angeles-based
sect around Father Yod/YaHoWha/James Baker representing one group deeply in
debt to Western esotericism—these movements internalized the era’s utopian and
collective expectations while providing crystallized social and metaphysical structures
in the place of existential drift.
More important here, however, is the establishment in the early 1970s of a more
informal but pervasive ‘pop occulture.’ This widespread cultural sensibility was
produced in part by strong commercial forces that had already been building toward
the end of the 1960s, when, for example, the number of newly published books on
occult science and parapsychology increased by more than 100 percent annually.
Similarly, while a number of popular television shows in the 1960s featured occult
powers—examples include the gothic soap Dark Shadows and the comedy I Dream
of Jeannie—the mediascape of the 1970s was saturated with a supernaturalism, from
the rise of heavy metal and progressive rock, to the increasingly cosmic iconography
of comic books and poster art. Esoterica was big business—major publishers like
Doubleday established occult imprints, while US Games issued their popular (and
exclusively copyrighted) version of the famed Rider-Waite Tarot deck in 1971. The
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urge to publish also marked independent and underground outits already identiied
with the spiritual counterculture: Llewellyn issued an American witch’s version of
Gerald Gardner’s legendary Book of Shadows in 1971, while the Church of All
Worlds and other nature religions developed Pagan discourse through a lively
network of periodicals.
As with new religious movements and self-improvement regimens like est, the
explosion of occulture—books, oracular tools, popular narratives, ephemerides,
etc.—helped organize the deterritorialized lux of counterculture consciousness as it
engaged a darker and more paranoid era with its yen for enchantment very much
intact. One notable example of this it are the bestselling series of books by Carlos
Castaneda, in which the UCLA anthropologist described (or, more likely, invented)
his long initiation by the Yaqui ‘Man of Knowledge’ Don Juan Matus, who gives
Castaneda psychedelic drugs along with a variety of intriguing practices. Though the
irst volume appeared in 1968, it was the Don Juan books Castaneda published in the
early 1970s that really resonated, presenting an accessible magical reality that was
populated by somewhat ominous allies and required constant vigilance and selfdiscipline to navigate. This amoral and more traditional ‘shamanic’ view stands in
sharp contrast to earlier and more beatiic Aquarian visions. Though Castaneda’s
books came to be seen by most (but not all) anthropologists as fabrications, this
hardly made a difference to many readers; like Don Juan and many of the ‘crazy
wisdom’ gurus of the era, Castaneda himself could be seen as a trickster capable of
waking you up.
Timothy Leary too sensed the shift in the air. In his short 1973 ‘Starseed’ pamphlet,
written in Folsom prison, Leary advises readers to reject the ‘Hindu trap’ he had
earlier embraced, with its ‘soft, sweet, custard mush’ of unity. Instead, Leary offered
an expansive, futuristic, and increasingly transhuman ‘Psi-Phy’ perspective on the
ongoing possibilities of re-programming the human nervous system. One of Leary’s
most important inluences in this transition was Aleister Crowley, many of whose
most important works (including the extraordinary Book of Thoth) were published
or republished in the late 1960s and early 1970s, sparking a deep interest in Thelema
that has yet to abate and that remains intertwined with certain streams of rock and
other popular cultures. In many ways Crowley stands as the most important ‘ancestor’
of the occult counterculture: he loved drugs, tapped Eastern as well as Western
esoteric sources, spear-headed a dysfunctional commune, and placed sexuality at the
core of his controversial and counter-normative mysticism. His bald head appeared
on the cover of the Beatles 1967 Sgt. Pepper’s Hearts Club Band (along with Jung,
Aldous Huxley, Burroughs, and other counterculture heroes), but the Beast received
his most important rock endorsement from Led Zeppelin guitarist and composer
Jimmy Page, who sold Crowleyania through his occult bookstore and lived for a spell
in the man’s old mansion. The fact that a myriad young fans across the globe were
exposed to a scandalous Edwardian ceremonial magician through the medium of
chart-topping rock and roll is as good a characterization as any for the dynamics of
pop occulture in the 1970s, when the spiritual seeds of the counterculture spread far
and wide, high and low.
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– chapter 63: The Counterculture and the Occult
–
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