Review: Acts of Magical Resistance by Phil Hine

While the beginnings of many religious traditions are decidedly focused on the salvation, liberation or empowerment of the individual, they rarely remain as such. Given time to evolve and gaze outwards, many religious traditions develop a greater sense of collective responsibility, where the impact of any apparent awakening demands a response to the “other” and the world around them.

In considering such development, contemporary Paganism is no different and this concise work by Phil Hine provides us with a pacey and inspiring overview of the evolution of the political dimensions of Paganism within the UK scene.


Phil begins by mapping some of the origins of political conservatism within occult and esoteric circles, with writers such as Dion Fortune casting doubts over the spiritual pedigree of those who involve themselves with worldly politics. Such messages helped shape the reluctance within the magical and Pagan circles well into the 1970’s and early 80’s often leading to an absence of challenge to the mainstream positions in a way that translated into activism. For Hine this shifted radically during the ‘Satanic Panic’ that hit the UK in the late 80’s and early 90’s, which seemed to catalyse parts of the Pagan and magical communities into adopting a new radical openness in seeking to challenge the lazy stereotyping and misinformation so widespread in the media.

This work features some inspiring flyers and snippets from ‘zines from this time period that help capture the dynamism and punk rock energy that inspired many Pagans to greater acts of openness and heroism. Phil helpfully tracks a timeline of magical resistance before the late 1980’s as it manifested in Pagan contributions to the Greenham Common anti-nuclear protests, PAN: Pagans Against Nukes, Stop the City and the contribution of the PaganLink Network. These movements alongside seminal works such as Starhawk’s Dreaming the Dark (1982) helped ferment a new questioning as to whether “we are content to be spare bedroom Witches” with a limited vision of what our Paganism has to offer the world.

Moving into the 1990’s Phil paints a vivid picture of the collective ritual workings of the Dragon Environmental Network, Thee Temple ov Psychick Youth and Queer Pagan Camp as they sought to bring people together to challenge both ecological threat and attempts to limit sexual liberty.  These collective actions fostered community and helped create a sense that change was possible. The book provides us with insights into large group rituals such as the ‘Heal the Earth’ working (summer solstice 1987) and smaller sorcerous rites born from his time in the Leeds squat movement where the “magic of need” brought together activists seeking change in their immediate communities. These aren’t simply feel-good pathworkings in the hope of societal change, with rituals such as ‘Unleash the Furies’ illustrating how occult technologies such as Goetic working can be used to name, contain and then redirect contemporary demons such as patriarchal abuse or homophobic violence.

While this work is inescapably a challenge for us to move our magical practice and perspectives out of our spooky-club ghettos, it also manages to avoid the grimness that can feel present in our often near-exhausted activism. What I really enjoy about Phil’s writing is his ability to remain playful and humorous even as he is trying to describe the realities of trying to bring about political change. In a similar way to his ‘Liber Nice’ in his seminal Prime Chaos, he frames many group rituals as having a Discordian and almost Dadaist potential in being able to disrupt and undermine the bloated misuses of power that so often lay at the heart of oppression. When we are able to ‘play’ via our protests, so we model and embody a freedom that can even act as an invitation to those who we are protesting against.

The book concludes with a rich and diverse section on influences and resources to inspire. Phil reminds us of our heroic forebears such as Annie Besant, Florence Farr and those Kali worshippers who invoked her potency in order to challenge British colonialism. These spiritual allies and suggestions all aid what Phil calls “A Space for Wonder”, that can help us when our activism and protest might threaten burn-out or compassion fatigue. How can our Paganisms and practices reawaken creativity, openness and a connection with others? This is surely one of the primary goals of our magic and as such Hine urges us to embrace Wonder’s “alienating presentness”:

“Wonder propels us toward the unfamiliar, to seek new relations, to revel in dizzying complexity and richness. Wonder pulls us into the world beyond a limited horizon, beyond the certain, the familiar, the possible.”

In our current times, Phil’s book is a real grimoire for a magical engagement with our lives, our struggles and our joys. Highly recommended.

Steve Dee

Buy Act of Magical Resistance by Phil Hine



Coming up next…

Baphomet Magic – March 13th and 20th, 7-9pm UK time live and recorded.

Ghost in the Machine – March 25th, 7-8:30pm UK time live and recorded.

Psychotropics & Western Magic – April 3rd, 7-8:30pm UK time live and recorded.

Aleister Crowley & Liber AL – April 8th, 7-8:30pm UK time live and recorded.

Breaking Convention, Europe’s largest and most diverse conference on psychedelic consciousness. 17th-19th April at The University of Exeter.

The History & Practice of Scrying – May 15th, 7-8:30pm UK time live and recorded.

Towards the Within

Hello Friends

The December solstice approaches and with it the season of Yuletide, a time charged with a multitude of meanings and memories for many of us. The winter sun hangs low at these northern latitudes while the moon rides high in the sky.

On clear nights I’ve been experimenting with using moonlight to make photographic prints, a little artistic side project. I use cyanotype paper onto which I place shells, stones and other found objects. These need to be bathed in moonlight for many hours in order for the exposure to work. The process creates some interesting distorted shapes and, as in this example, the paper also reacts with night time rain when it falls.

My main art project right now is preparing for The Order of the Sun and Moon exhibition which takes place in St Ives, Cornwall next year. Neil Scott, Kate Southworth, Greg Humphries and I are the members of the Order, the name of which is taken from an essay by occultist and artist Ithell Colquhoun. Colquhoun, like many surrealist artists, was a great fan of using natural and automatic processes in her art, I like to think she might have enjoyed my experiments with moonlight, rain and photoreactive paper.

The Order of the Sun and Moon exhibition, runs from Imbolc, the 1st of February, until the 13th. The show includes a day of lectures and performance by some of the leading scholars of Colquhoun’s oeuvre. We’ll also have some examples of her art on show in the gallery alongside our own work, which is a real honour and delight. Colquhoun’s art can also be seen at another gallery in town from the 1st of February to the 5th of May.

I’d love it if you could join us, for our opening on the 1st, the talks on the 2nd, or perhaps for one of the Dreamachine sessions we’re offering. For full details please check out our website.

Meanwhile, over the last few months I’ve been focused on writing. I’m about 40,000 words into my new book, which I hope means I can have the first draft completed by the end of this month. That’s my plan anyhow, as next year is already full of many cool things. Here are some of them in case you’d like to join me.

Opening the New Year – Workshop, 07 Jan, 19:00 – 21:00 UK time. Online and Delayed Viewing. Magical methods for welcoming in 2025, cleansing and banishing the old to make room for the new.

Scrying Skills – Workshop, 14 Jan, 19:00 – 21:00 UK time. Learn the art of seeing visions in a crystal ball, black mirror or a flickering candle flame.

The Beastly Prophet; Aleister Crowley and Thelemic Magick – Talk, 27 Jan, doors open at 6:30pm and talk starts at 7pm, at Viktor Wynd’s Museum, London. A deep dive into the story of the most notorious occultist of the 20th century, tickets include a complimentary glass of Devil’s Botany Absinthe.

The Order of the Sun and Moon, Third Exhibition. 1st Feb – 13th Feb, St Ives, Cornwall.

British Folk Magic – Workshop, 20 Feb, 19:00 – 21:00 UK time. Online and Delayed Viewing. Charms and spells from an array of British folk magic traditions, in theory and practice.

The Magical Body – Talk, 18 Feb, 19:00 – 20:30 UK time. Online and Delayed Viewing. Chakras, auras, meridians and medical astrology are just some of the approaches to the magical body that I’ll be exploring in this lecture.

Ghost in the Machine: Spirit Technology – Talk, 2 Mar, 19:00 – 20:30 UK time. Online and Delayed Viewing. 19:00-20:30 UK time. There are unseen forces in the world, invisible radiations that carry information between minds. This is how your phone works, and the history of this and many other technologies are rooted in occultism.

(The two talks above are with The College of Psychic Studies. Details of these and other lectures, workshops, in person teaching and ceremony will be upload here soon!)

The Thoth Tarot of Aleister Crowley & Frieda Harris – Workshop, 2 & 9 Mar, 7 – 9pm EST. Online and Delayed Viewing.

Baphomet Magic – Workshop, 13 & 20 Mar, 19:00 – 21:00 UK time. Online and Delayed Viewing.

Sigil Magic in Theory and Practice – Workshop, 23 & 30 Mar, 7 – 9pm EST. Online and Delayed Viewing.

Psychotropics and the Western Magical Tradition – Talk, 03 Apr 2025, 19:00 – 20:30 UK time. Online and Delayed Viewing.

…and then it’s Breaking Convention, the largest and most diverse conference on psychedelic consciousness in Europe at The University of Exeter, 17- 19 April. Sign up to the Breaking Convention newsletter to be notified about tickets, the call for contributors and more.

There’s much more deliciousness planned for later in 2025, please keep your eye on my social media for details.

And that other little side project, started during the pandemic, My Magical Thing is still ongoing on my Youtube channel, enjoy!

I hope my friends in the northern hemisphere will be able to successfully navigate this dark time as we turn towards the within. The winter can be a difficult period for many of us so let’s keep the Yule fire burning bright this season as we rest, regenerate and renew ourselves for the wild and weird year ahead.

Sending you Seaons’s greetings and many blessings from sunny Devon!

Julian

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