Witchhunts and drawings

Witches and Wicked Bodies: This exhibition explores the relationship between witches, sorcery and the artistic imagination. Prints and drawings are used to convey how the female gender has been key to the depiction of witches, sirens and harpies in western art. These enduring images reveal how witches have been seen as harbingers of misfortune and horror, objects of misogyny and sexual fantasy, as well as figures of ridicule and caricature.

I was going to be in London for a meeting last month, so on my way there I stopped off at this little show high up on Level 4 at the rear of the British Museum in London. It is on for a few more days, until the 11th January 2015. Go if you can!

Starting at the end of my experience, I left with my head in a whirl, understanding the way that the raw female body served/serves as the projection for all sorts of unacceptable desires on the behalf of society. Feelings of lust, animal sensuality, rejection of the status quo (whether political, cultural or other), become anchored in the fevered imaginings of repressed men, who seek out salacious graphic pictures depicting those acts they declare sinful:

Moral indignation is jealousy with a halo.” HG Wells

Witches have long been portrayed as temptresses, similar iconography accompanies them as the portrayals of sirens, spells cast by wicked women are used to excuse the viewers’ obsessions; with the agency taken away from the bewitched viewers,  they cannot be blamed for their fascination with these pendulous breasts, muscular arms and bare behinds.

Witches' Sabbath, 1510 (Hans Baldung) Showing an obsession with the malevolence of female sexuality.

Witches’ Sabbath, 1510 (Hans Baldung)

One label, on Hans Baldung’s 1510 woodcut Witches’ Sabbath, stated; “This print… shows an obsession with the malevolence of female sexuality… It is likely [it] found a ready market… in the affluent city of Strasbourg… The violent Witches’ Hammer, … was first published in this city in 1487; by 1520 it had been reprinted fourteen times.

Similarly to the prurient outrage of readers of the News of the World poring over pictures of wrong-doers, ‘abnormal’ sexuality is displayed in great detail in many of these 15th/16th century engravings, presumably in part to titillate the purchasers. Obviously it is more nuanced than JUST this, but the prominence of nakedness, same-sex interactions, and generally non-reproductive sex acts depicted does seem to point towards voyeuristic motivations of the sexually curious/repressed. Nakedness itself was used in art of the time to show the people concerned were outside the realm of contemporary cultural mores, and those who practise magick (amongst other marginalised groups) have often had accusations of unacceptable behaviours projected upon them. It is generally agreed that tales of secret meetings where all kinds of bizarre activities take place, are often more revealing of the phantasies of the person ‘revealing’ them, rather than the actuality of what went on.

In my experience most meetings of any group, whether anarchists, community gardeners, magicians, musicians, writers, scientists, or academics, tend to centre around the quality of the coffee and biscuits, with the administrative structure of the group, and when/where to hold the next meeting, as the top three items on the agenda.

Conspiracy theorists existed then as now, as people of limited power and knowledge construct elaborate hidden rationales to explain that forces are arrayed against their own missions, thus thwarting the easy path that Others have to privileged positions in our societies. What other reason could there be for virtuous persons’ lives being imperfect?! Surely, some kind of judgement from an ineffable source.

In reality of course there are many problems with this vision of Those Other people messing up our nice world, and who are adversarial towards us (thus legitimising our defending ourselves against Them). Whilst this dualistic perspective provides emotional comfort, and a strong way of identifying as a group which exists in contrast to Them, it does not help with a constructive approach to mutual understanding of the multiplicity of ways of life, and finding possible common ground to moving forwards together in partnership into the future.

The mindset of the inquisitors of the witchhunts still exists today too, luckily not so often directed in so many places towards those of a non-mainstream religious lifestyle, but couched in terms of race, sexuality, or dress style. Tribal affiliations are often based upon the observable differences rather than the more important basic behavioural and ethical values we tend towards such as being nice to one’s fellow humans, trying to take care of the land we inhabit and lifeforms we interact with, and generally living in a way that maximises good feelings for oneself and others.

I know this is a rather rose tinted view of the state of affairs and that economic/social constraints affect and limit the reification of these ideals into daily practices, but if you take a broad view of all human societies as they actually function, these kinds of values remain core to what would be considered a good life.

Although homosexuality was not featured in the exhibition (well, not that between two males… the bestial lusts of women for women are portrayed as existing within the general depravity of these harlots, out of control and with insatiable physical bodies…) we know that many of those persecuted in the heresy/purification frenzy of the 15th and 16th centuries were executed for the crime of sodomy. Fear of the temptations of female flesh were bad enough (let alone anything worse!) and injunctions in the various holy books of all the Abrahamic religions against all that sinful ‘lying with another man’ business meant that a person’s basic desires were one avenue used to justify murder and torture. [NB ‘Sodomy’ grouped together homosexual and heterosexual anal sex as equivalent to bestiality, amongst other unspecified unnatural acts, but a large proportion of those prosecuted were men who had sex with men consensually. The term and concept of a ‘homosexual’, and also the notion of a ‘heterosexual’, does not appear until relatively recently in our culture.]

This is relevant to our witches because their desire, to have power over their own spheres of influence, were similarly seen as aberrant to the simplistic top down power hierarchy of the time. In the monolithic One Priest above all else pyramid structure, anyone opting out, especially one who opted out in open defiance of the ruling elite, had to be labelled as dangerous, as Other [to the status quo], and destroyed as publically as possible. A mandate from God (whichever one gets named on the contract) cannot withstand the threat from a person who claims to have direct access to supernal connections. Heaven forfend, where would we be with such a world?! Anarchy!!!

Chaos magicians, I suspect, would have little truck with this as a sensible attitude; warfare and throwing insults based upon mere paradigmatical clothing has little to offer in the way of results, apart from a waste of time and energy; and leads at best to an impasse (or, very occasionally to some witty observational comedy), instead of constructive dialogue. There are of course exceptions that prove any rule, and some situations it could be argued do need people to receive a swift blow to the head (e.g. someone materially attacking me, or invading my home).

These thoughts and other musings upon the way those holding political views Other to one’s own tend to be portrayed in mass media cartoons as witches or similar despicable (visually accessible) stereotypes, showed me as in a mirror darkly how this example of a culture’s treatment of magick makers holds deep clues to the ecosystem of paradigms which jostle for position upon the stage of our awareness, and in particular in the media led portrayals of what we the people are allegedly thinking.

Mass confusion over the argument of how to answer that age old question, ‘How does one properly worship God?’, must have unsettled the church authorities mightily once Christianity had won as the dominant religion with power over Europeans. A new collection of Others who could be banded against had to arise, in order to close ranks and enforce conformism amongst what was a ramifying and diversifying series of cults.

In the times of the witch persecutions, some of these Others included rumours of Jews and lepers poisoning wells, rumours which undoubtedly led to thousands of people from these easily identifiable (and already disliked) groups dying horribly by being burned alive. This primal need of humans to know which tribe they are in, so they can feel fine about violence towards Others, is the same cultural fear that the witch pictures, and the depictions of women in particular as malefic, tapped into. They exacerbated social prejudices, by encouraging stereotypical views of those Others upon whom the ‘normal’ populace could vent their anger at whatever the complaints of the day were. Today in western culture we still suffer the presence of the descendants of these cultural depictions of the evil female, which deny female’s any power except via a route of sexually manipulative agency, showing us as physical objectified entities, compared with the proactive self-determined agency of the ‘successful’ male (see representations in advertising and mass media drama etc.). Women were without souls, the carriers of Original Sin, and a scapegoat group par excellence for use by a divisive ruling elite.

That goes beyond what I wanted to write here though; what this exhibition revealed to me, which I knew, but was brought home in a most moving way, is the impact words and pictures can have upon the collective psyche.

The pit of Acheron, or the birth of the plagues of England, 1784 (Thomas Rowlandson)  A satirical comment on the failure of the Fox-North Coalition and the India Bill

The pit of Acheron, or the birth of the plagues of England, 1784 (Thomas Rowlandson)
A satirical comment on the failure of the Fox-North Coalition and the India Bill, reusing the witches from that tour de force of ‘blaming of Other’ propaganda piece which James VI of Scotland commisioned, Macbeth.

As I finish this blogpost, it is the day after the shooting in Paris of some people who used words and pictures to laugh at religious stereotypes. We would do well to try to understand better how prejudices can flourish in cultural atmospheres of fear and anger, which can in turn then lead to flimsy excuses for nasty acts of violence by individuals who I suspect would probably be best understood as unhappily deranged and dysfunctional. Very angry people with issues do not tend to think things through, whether attacking cartoonists or mosques.

Grouping together Those Other people on grounds of whatever arbitrary attribute happens to be the flavour of the decade does not often prove useful in building a nicer world. As a strategy it offers merely a simplistic and easy to point at a group of scapegoats, upon which to load all sorts of emotional baggage. Thinking about the folly and wisdom of this strategy will be the basis of my next blogpost, which examines mechanisms of simplistic vs complex decision making strategies.

Magicians, especially chaos magicians, consciously choose tools of belief in various situations; in order to do this effectively we could do worse than consider how those choices play out, albeit unconsciously, in wider society, even for those of us primarily interested in the internal clamour of our own psyche’s internal society of voices and opinions.

We should listen to the various discussions prompted by this attack, and learn from our approval (or not) of what they say to learn of our own prejudices, through which we cannot help but lens all we hear. Perhaps, like addictions, prejudices can also be chosen wisely…

NW

Death to Fanatics!

I’ve written before in this blog about the importance of humour and of course laughter plays a key role in the style of occultism known as chaos magick. Embracing ideas cribbed from Discordianism, Terry Prachett and fringe cosmology the chaos current, current 23, should be somewhere were there are few, if any, sacred cows (or ‘caos’). This multi-perspective view hopefully leads to a generosity of spirit rather than a haughty hubris. For even when we think we are ‘liberated’ in some sense from personal, social and spiritual conditioning, we remain part of culture and our narrative continues. One of the insights of chaos magick is that even when we think we have it all sorted out, that this too shall pass: And, if we allow them to, new insights into the ourselves and others can arise; potentially radically re-shaping our views. In the words of the awesome Steve Dee:

Dark Matter flows through gnostic machinery
Metaphysical truths
Now patent absurdities.
Strip it back
Strip it right back,

Chaos magick strives to hold a meta position about the world, summerised by the epithet, ‘Nothing is True, Everything is Permitted’ or, in the latest reformulation, ‘nothing has absolute truth, anything may prove possible’. However in much human culture there are a large number of ‘absolute’ structures which claim to be able to define truth. These range from scientisms through to the subtle ‘givens’ of culture, and the claims at religious truth made by various faiths. Such ‘truths’ become fixed points in the psychic structure of an individual or a group and can easily be used (unconsciously or with pre-meditated malice) to manipulate the world.

The recent attack at the offices of a French satirical magazine is an example of this process in action. This incident put me in mind of an idea I had some years ago about voting. My suggestion is that before being given the right to participate in the democratic process individuals should have to undergo a test to see if they are fit and proper people to engage in collective decision making. My idea is that potential voters enter a booth where some cunningly crafted technology scans their brains and establishes what their most cherished ‘truths’ are. Brilliant computer software then creates an episode of South Park which lampoons that ‘truth’, sending it up, questioning this ‘truth’ through the power of cutting satire. Those people who exit the booth laughing, or at least with a wry grin, are permitted to vote. Those who get angry don’t get the vote until such time as they can pass the test. (Obviously there are a number of paradoxes embedded in this suggestion, but that is to be expected).

"Super Best Friends"

“Super Best Friends”

Going back to the recent attacks in Paris; it’s certainly possible to use humour to mask what one friend called  ‘…vested interests in provocation to make racist statements under the guise of satire.’ As someone who has only a minimal grasp of French it’s hard for me to make any judgement about about the content of the magazine Charlie Hebdo, however the first cartoon they printed featuring an image of the Prophet Muhammad (Peace Be Upon Him) weeping, saying “C’est dur d’être aimé par des cons” (“it’s hard being loved by jerks”). While it’s essential to be mindful of the cultural context (ie European and American relations with the Middle East, and increasingly in reaction to a ‘radicalised’ Islam) I’m not sure that the words of this blasphemous image imply that all Muslims are necessarily bad people, or even that Islam is inherently dangerous, stupid or whatever. Frankly, one could run the same cartoon with Buddha in the lead role (weeping about the civil wars in Myanmar), Moses (weeping over the bodies of Palestinians killed by soldiers wearing shirts like these) or Jesus (crying over, well quite a lot of stuff).

Events such as the recent attack can easily lead to ignorant racism and what the writer Jan Cole has called ‘sharpening contradictions‘ where ‘…an insular and hateful minority will take advantage of this deliberately polarizing atrocity to push their own agenda. Europe’s future depends on whether the Marine LePens are allowed to become mainstream. Extremism thrives on other people’s extremism, and is inexorably defeated by tolerance.’

Looked at from an esoteric perspective it’s also interesting to note that the French have a long history of (mis)representing, albeit indirectly, the Prophet Muhammad, sometimes in visual form. In the early 14th century it was two Frenchmen, Pope Clement V and King Phillip ‘The Fair’ IV of France who busted The Knights Templar. They accused the Knights of worshipping an idol and they called this image ‘Baphomet’. It may have been the case that the Templars did use ‘simulated’ idol worship in their Order rituals. Wikipedia teaches that the “…Chinon Parchment suggests that the Templars did indeed spit on the cross,”…that these acts were intended to simulate the kind of humiliation and torture that a Crusader might be subjected to if captured by the Saracens,…they were taught how to commit apostasy “with the mind only and not with the heart”.

The word ‘Baphomet’ has diverse etymologies (remember, ‘nothing is true’ kids!), but perhaps one of the most likely is that it arises from a derivation that goes Muhammad > Mahomet > Baphomet’. Cut to 500 years later and Eliphas Levi is drawing his interpretation of this Chinese whispers game as his famous Goat of Mendes.

Become a Living God!

Prophetic vision

However the French are not the only folks in the business of publishing taboo breaking images derived from Islamic culture. South Park creators Matt Stone and Trey Parker also blaspheme on a regular basis, and have explored the limits of the ban on representing Muhammad in their work. However even as far as the image of Muhammad is concerned it isn’t a simple binary story (of forbidden vs transgressive). In Muslim culture itself this ban does not exist equally in all places and times. As is often the case taking a longer (in time) and wider (in cultural terms) view can help us make sense of things.

Mohammed

Muhammad delivering The Farewell Sermon, 17th-century Ottoman copy of an early 14th-century Persian image.

But the recent situation in France is indeed about manipulation of images. The (variable) prohibition on images of the Muslim Prophet and the desire to break that prohibition (it is claimed in the name of free speech) are being used by people who wish to set up a ‘them and us’ narrative; Islam verses the West. The reasons that some of us desire this division are long and complex, much like the narrative of the Charlie Hebdo case itself. However as magicians perhaps we may have something to offer.

A large part of magick is about learning to use the imagination, to organise it in certain ways. With this in mind an interesting practice could be to imagine yourself into the mindset of one of the attackers. Imagine what it was like, laying in bed the night before the attack, waiting to drift into sleep. What would have been going through your mind? What would have led you to this place and helped you to determine your course of action on the ‘morrow? With such a practice one can begin to see that the actors who killed those cartoonists also have a narrative as individual people and as players within a much larger set of socio-political processes. Moreover while the act of killing cartoonists may seem crazy to you, given the right circumstances the majority of people can be manipulated into any number of ‘monstrous’ acts. And while we all like to think, ‘yes but I wouldn’t be one of those nasty people’ statistically we’re unlikely to be correct about this.

As well as discovering the underlying, and often flawed humanity of the actors in the Charlie Hebdo story through out imaginations perhaps we can be skillful enough to find ways to destabilize the emergence of the Us vs Them discourses? One step in this process may be to step back from the simplistic polarised narratives of about free speech, racism, Islamic radicalization and the rest, and to wonder instead what acts of transformation may be possible? Maintaining a mind which is confident to be in world without falling into simplist (and generally wrong) dualist narratives seems to me to be a crucial starting point.

JV