{"id":199848,"date":"2017-06-19T19:02:12","date_gmt":"2017-06-19T23:02:12","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/the-occult-roots-of-modernism-the-new-yorker\/"},"modified":"2017-06-19T19:02:12","modified_gmt":"2017-06-19T23:02:12","slug":"the-occult-roots-of-modernism-the-new-yorker","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/modern-satanism\/the-occult-roots-of-modernism-the-new-yorker\/","title":{"rendered":"The Occult Roots of Modernism &#8211; The New Yorker"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><p>      In the Paris of the early      eighteen-nineties, at the height of the Decadence, the man of      the moment was the novelist, art critic, and would-be guru      Josphin Pladan, who named himself Le Sr, after the ancient      Akkadian word for king. He went about in a flowing white      cloak, an azure jacket, a lace ruff, and an Astrakhan hat,      which, in conjunction with his bushy head of hair and      double-pointed beard, gave him the aspect of a Middle Eastern      potentate. He was in the midst of writing a twenty-one-volume      cycle of novels, titled La Dcadence Latine, which follows      the fantastical adventures of various enchanters, adepts,      femmes fatales, androgynes, and other enemies of the      ordinary. His bibliography also includes literary tracts,      explications of Wagnerian mythology, and a self-help tome      called How One Becomes a Magus. He let it be known that he      had completed the syllabus. He informed Flix Faure, the      President of the Republic, that he had the gift of seeing      and hearing at the greatest distances, useful in controlling      enemy councils and suppressing espionage. He began one      lecture by saying, People of Nmes, I have only to pronounce      a certain formula for the earth to open and swallow you all.      In 1890, he established the Order of the Catholic Rose +      Croix of the Temple and the Grail, one of a number of      end-of-century sects that purported to revive lost arts of      magic. The peak of his fame arrived in 1892, when he launched      an annual art exhibition called the Salon de la Rose + Croix,      which embraced the Symbolist movement, with an emphasis on      its more eldritch guises. Thousands of visitors passed      through, uncertain whether they were witnessing a colossal      breakthrough or a monumental joke.    <\/p>\n<p>      The spell wore off quickly. At the      time of Pladans death, in 1918, he was already seen as an      absurd relic of a receding age. He is now known mainly to      scholars of Symbolism, connoisseurs of the occult, and      devotees of the music of Erik Satie. (I first encountered      Pladan in connection with Saties unearthly 1891 score Le      Fils des toiles, or The Son of the Stars; it was written      for Pladans play of that title, which is set in Chaldea in      3500 B.C.) His contemporary Joris-Karl Huysmans remains a      cult figureAgainst the Grain, Huysmanss 1884 novel, is      still read as a primer of the Decadent aestheticbut none of      Pladans novels have been translated into English. So when      an exhibition entitled Mystical Symbolism: The Salon de la      Rose + Croix in Paris, 1892-1897 opens at the Guggenheim      Museum, on June 30th, most visitors will be entering unknown      territory. The show occupies one of the tower galleries, in      rooms painted oxblood red, with furniture of midnight-blue      velvet. On the walls, the Holy Grail glows, demonic angels      hover, women radiate saintliness or lust. The dark kitsch of      the fin de sicle beckons.    <\/p>\n<p>      For all the faded creepiness, the      moment is worth revisiting, because mystics like Pladan      prepared the ground for the modernist revolution of the early      twentieth century. John Bramble, in his 2015 book, Modernism      and the Occult, writes that the Salon de la Rose + Croix was      the first attempt at a (semi-)internationalist religion of      modern artan aesthetic order with Pladan as high      priest. In the years that followed, radical artistic thinking      and obscure spiritual strivings intersected in everything      from Kandinskys abstractions to Eliots The Waste Land and      the atonal music of Schoenberg. In Yeatss The Second      Coming, the rough beast that slouches toward Bethlehem,      half man and half lion, is no metaphor. Classic accounts of      modernism tended to repress such influences, often out of      intellectual discomfort. In recent decades, though,      fin-de-sicle mysticism has returned to scholarly vogue. In      1917, Max Weber said that the rationalization of Western      society had brought about the disenchantment of the world.      Pladan, and those who took up his mantle, wished to enchant      it once again.     <\/p>\n<p>      The occult mania that crested in the      decades before the First World War had been intensifying      throughout the nineteenth century. Its manifestations      included Theosophy, Spiritism, Swedenborgianism, Mesmerism,      Martinism, and Kabbalismelaborations of arcane rituals that      had been cast aside in a secular, materialist age.      Reinventions or fabrications of medieval sects proliferated:      the Knights Templar, the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn      (the habitat of Yeats), and various Rosicrucian orders.      Pladan belonged to the Rosicrucians, who, following      sixteenth-century tracts of dubious authenticity, believed in      alchemy, necromancy, and other dark arts. The more lite      these groups became, the more they were prone to furious      doctrinal disputes. In 1887, a feud broke out in Paris      between Stanislas de Guata, of the Kabbalistic Order of the      Rose + Croix, and Joseph Boullan, a defrocked priest who was      rumored to have sacrificed his own child during a Black Mass.      When Boullan died, in 1893, Huysmans accused Guata and      Pladan of having killed him with black magic. In Huysmanss      1891 novel, L-bas, a character observes, From exalted      mysticism to raging Satanism is but a step.          <\/p>\n<p>      Pladan was born in Lyon, in 1858,      into a family steeped in esoteric tendencies. His father,      Louis-Adrien, was a conservative Catholic writer who tried to      start a Cult of the Wound of the Left Shoulder of Our Saviour      Jesus Christ. Pladans older brother, Adrien, was the author      of a medical text proposing that the brain subsists on unused      sperm that takes the form of vital fluid. When Adrien died      prematurely, of accidental strychnine poisoning, his brother      perpetuated his ideas, suggesting that the intellect can      thrive only when the sexual impulse is suppressed. The      political views of the Pladans were thoroughly reactionary;      they disdained democracy and called for the restoration of      the monarchy. Pladan differed from many other occultists in      insisting that his Rosicrucian rhetoric was an extension of      authentic Catholic doctrine, which Church institutions had      neglected.    <\/p>\n<p>      He made his name first as an art      critic, railing against naturalism and Impressionism, both of      which he considered banal. I believe in the Ideal, in      Tradition, in Hierarchy, he declared. His model artist was      Pierre Puvis de Chavannes, who rendered neoclassical subjects      in a self-consciously archaic style, flattening perspectives      and whitening colors. What he paints has neither place nor      time, Pladan wrote. It is from everywhere and always. Yet      he also had a taste for lurid, graphic imagery: the eerily      glittering Salom pictures of Gustave Moreau, the diabolical      caricatures of Flicien Rops. Pladan singled out for praise      Ropss Les Sataniques, a series of etchings depicting      visibly aroused demons penetrating and killing women.      Pladans pendulum swings between piety and depravity were      characteristic of his milieu, although in his case the      oscillation was particularly extreme.    <\/p>\n<p>      Rops provided frontispieces for      several of the Dcadence Latine novels, which began      appearing in 1884. The Victory of the Husband, from 1889,      is typical of the cycle, alternating between the lascivious      and the ludicrous. The novel recounts the love of Izel and      Adar: she, the adopted daughter of a wealthy Avignon priest;      he, a young genius who defies the stupidity of the age. They      are married, and honeymoon at the Wagner festival in      Bayreuth. (Pladan had gone there in 1888, and was      overwhelmed.) At a performance of Tristan und Isolde, Izel      and Adar cannot restrain themselves and begin making lovea      feat that will impress anyone who has endured Bayreuths      hard-backed seats. Tristan! Isolde! the lovers cry onstage.      Adar! Izel! the lovers murmur in the audience, possibly to      the irritation of their neighbors. But they clash on the      question of Parsifal, Wagners final opera. For Izel, it is      too chaste, sweet, and calm; for Adar, it opens the door to      a new mystic consciousness, to the realm of the Holy Grail.      He goes to study with a sinister Nuremberg sorcerer named      Doctor Sexthental, and drifts away from his bride.      Sexthental, sensing an opportunity, projects himself astrally      into Izels chambers, in the form of an incubus. The initiate      defeats this incursion, but marital strife persists. Adar      must renounce his powersI resign the august pentacle of the      macrocosmto regain Izels love.     <\/p>\n<p>      That tale is tame next to The      Androgyne and The Gynander, both from 1891, in which      Pladan delves into the world of same-sex love. The first      depicts the coming-of-age of a feminine boy who seems      destined to be gaymale classmates vie for himbut who      escapes those desires by engaging in bouts of mutual      exhibitionism with a mannish maiden. In the second novel,      another androgyne, Tammuz, explores the lesbian underworld.      He converts dozens of gynandersPladans preferred term      for lesbiansto heterosexuality after he magically generates      replicas of himself. As an orchestra plays Wagner, the women      fall to worshipping a giant phallus. Even as gender roles are      subverted, the dominance of the male is maintained: like so      many male artists of his day, Pladan was profoundly      misogynist. Man puppet of woman, woman puppet of the devil      was one of his most widely quoted slogans.          <\/p>\n<p>      In any other society, such material      would have been unpublishable, but Pladan sparked little      outrage in an environment that had assimilated Baudelaire,      Rimbaud, and Huysmans. Among impressionable youth, he had an      appeal somewhat comparable to that of H. P. Lovecraft.      Writers as various as Paul Valry, Andr Gide, Andr Breton,      and Louis-Ferdinand Cline read him with fascination, as did      Le Corbusier. Verlaine generously summarized him as a man of      considerable talent, eloquent, often      profound... bizarre but of great      distinction. Max Nordau, in his 1892 book, Degeneration, a      mocking survey of fin-de-sicle culture, shows a soft spot      for Pladan, declaring that the conscious factor in him      knows that [mysticism] is all nonsense, but it finds artistic      pleasure in it, and permits the unconscious life to do as it      pleases. This is probably as strong a defense of Pladans      writing as can be mounted.    <\/p>\n<p>      The catalogue for the Guggenheims      Mystical Symbolism show, which was curated by Vivien      Greene, spends little time on Pladans literary career,      focussing instead on his activities as an impresario. In the      lead essay, Greene argues that Pladans flamboyant      manifestos and mixed-media happenings anticipated avant-garde      trends of the following centurynotably, the conception of      the exhibition venue as a space for multidisciplinary      performance and as an immersive aesthetic environment. The      Salons de la Rose + Croix, which unfolded in various      galleries and halls around Paris, were designed less to      present a coherent group of artists than to demonstrate arts      ability to transform the daily world. What Pladan took from      Wagner, above all, was the idea that art could assume the      functions of religion. The artist is a priest, a king, a      magus, he proclaimed.    <\/p>\n<p>      Pladan complicated his task by      freighting the salons with often nonsensical regulations. He      forbade history paintings, still-lifes, seascapes, all      humorous things, and all representations of contemporary      life, private or public. (Lest anyone miss the ban on      naturalism, one poster for the salons showed a Perseus-like      hero holding up the severed head of Zola.) Female artists      were ostensibly excluded, following Magical law, although      at least five women exhibited under pseudonymsamong them the      poet and novelist Judith Gautier, who contributed a relief      sculpture entitled Kundry, Rose of Hell. Furthermore,      Pladan alienated several leading figures, including Puvis de      Chavannes, by prematurely announcing their participation.           <\/p>\n<p>      Still, a number of significant      Symbolists joined Pladans solemn circus, because many of      his principles accorded with their own. Back in the      mid-eighteen-eighties, the Greek-born poet Jean Moras, who      coined the term Symbolism, had renounced the depiction of      concrete phenomena; Symbolist writers, he declared, gestured      instead toward a primordial Idea, which could be conjured by      pure sounds, densely convoluted sentences, and knowingly      organized disorder. Michelle Facos and Thor Mednick, in      their recent anthology The Symbolist Roots of Modern Art,      observe that the Symbolists undermined conventional modes of      representation in an effort to access the divine directly.          <\/p>\n<p>      The most renowned member of the Rose      + Croix group was the Belgian painter Fernand Khnopff, whom      Pladan hailed as the great argument of my thesis, in      defense of the ideal. Khnopff was an artist of exacting      technique who emulated the severity of the old Flemish      masters and the cool sensualism of the Pre-Raphaelites. In      the eighties, he fell under Pladans sway and gravitated      toward Symbolist fantasy. His best-known work, The      Caresses, is inspired by Pladans play Oedipus and the      Sphinx: a lithe, androgynous lad snuggles with a creature      who has a Pre-Raphaelite head and a cheetahs body. The      Sphinx clearly is in control, yet her domination is gentle:      femme-fatale imagery is edging into a more nuanced mode.           <\/p>\n<p>      The Guggenheim is displaying      Khnopffs I Lock My Door Upon Myself, which takes its title      from Christina Rossettis poem Who Shall Deliver Me? A      pale, auburn-haired woman gazes fixedly at the viewer,      surrounded by a proto-Surrealist array of objects: stalks of      orange daylilies in the foreground; an arrow resting on a      draped table; a bust of Hypnos on a shelf; a window giving a      view of a black-shrouded figure on an empty streetan image      that could itself be mistaken for a painting. At first      glance, the work gives a feeling of confinement: the woman      appears to be trapped in the artists cluster of symbols. But      Khnopff seems more sympathetic to his female subject than is      usually the case in Symbolist art. This cryptic space may be      a room of her own, a private world of the imagination.          <\/p>\n<p>      Pladan also deserves credit for      giving early attention to the great Swiss painter Ferdinand      Hodler. The Disappointed Souls, a Hodler canvas included in      the Guggenheim show, is a study in male dejection: five      weathered, barefoot men stare downward, two with their heads      buried in their hands, the middle one with his emaciated      upper body exposed. The hieratic manner and pale color scheme      recall Puvis de Chavannes, yet the imagery is rougher and      starker, hinting at the interior desolation of Expressionism.          <\/p>\n<p>      Perhaps the ultimate Rose + Croix      painter is another Belgian, Jean Delville, who shared the      diseased opulence of Pladans aesthetic. A drawing titled      The Idol of Perversity offers a narrow-eyed Medusa-like      woman with a snake writhing out of her breasts. In The Death      of Orpheus, the musicians severed head rests on his lyre,      floating down a greenish river in which the twinkling of      stars is reflected. When I first saw this canvas, on a visit      to the Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium, in Brussels, it      sent me into an uncomfortable trance: the serenity of the      painted surface pulled me in as the horror of the subject      pushed me away. Precisely because so much Symbolist art seems      dated at first glance, it retains its capacity to shock.           <\/p>\n<p>      Music was integral to the multimedia      conception of the Rose + Croix, although several performances      that Pladan planned in conjunction with the inaugural salon      ran into difficulties. The opening ceremonies were to have      included a Solemn Mass of the Holy Spirit, at St.-Germain      lAuxerrois, with excerpts from Parsifal on the organ. Wary      clerics withheld permission, on the ground that Wagner was      Protestant. A later Wagner concert fell victim to a fracas      between Pladan and his former financial supporter, Antoine      de La Rochefoucauld. While an orchestra was playing the      Siegfried Idyll, an ally of Pladans, ineffectively      disguised by a fake beard, shouted that La Rochefoucauld was      a felon, a coward, a thief. The heckler was ejected,      causing a glass door to shatter and the musicians to fall      silent.    <\/p>\n<p>      Pladans collaboration with Satie,      who was then in his twenties, was rooted in the bohemia of      Montmartre, where both men cut vivid profiles. Satie was best      known as a pianist at the Chat Noir and the Auberge de Clou      cabarets; in 1888, he composed his trio of pensively dancing      Gymnopdies. He heralded a new simplicitymusic without      sauerkrautin defiance of Wagnerian grandeur. He was also an      incorrigible ironist who festooned his scores with      unperformable instructions. (Arm yourself with      clairvoyance, Open your head.) Such exquisite pranks seem      far removed from the dark-velvet world of Pladan, yet Satie,      too, shared in the mystical preoccupations of his generation.      His unadorned sonic textures, often based on Greek modes and      Gregorian chant, can have the quality of cryptic icons.          <\/p>\n<p>      The play Le Fils des toiles, which      elicited Saties most striking Rosicrucian score, follows a      young shepherd-poet as he is initiated as a magus. The      prelude to Act I begins with an astonishing sequence of      six-note chords, consisting of stacked intervals of the      fourth, with a tritone thrown in for good measure. Although      these chords are built on a simple chantlike melody, they are      essentially atonal. Saties score, written more than fifteen      years in advance of Schoenbergs first atonal works,      subsequently reverts to a more conventional language, but the      fabric of harmony has been rent. This time, the composer      gives no sign that he is joking: the opening is marked white      and motionless.    <\/p>\n<p>            The Dawn of            Labor (LAurore du Travail), by Charles Maurin, circa            1891.           <\/p>\n<p>      After the first salon, Satie broke      with Pladan and, in the schismatic fashion of the day,      established a private cult, the Metropolitan Church of the      Art of Jsus Conducteur, from whose pulpit he issued edicts      and anathemas in an apparent parody of Pladans style. (I      must raise My hand to overthrow the oppressors of the Church      and the Art.) The reasons for the split are unknown; perhaps      Saties score for Le Fils des toiles was too peculiar even      for Pladans recondite taste, or, possibly, Satie decided      that his reputation would be better served if he suspended      ties with such a controversial figure. Whatever Saties      calculations, he soon sank back into obscurity; only in the      second decade of the twentieth century would Maurice Ravel      spark a Satie revival by hailing him as a model of      anti-Romantic style.    <\/p>\n<p>      In the mid-twentieth century, Saties      music mesmerized John Cage, who saw it as a challenge not      merely to extant harmony but to the very idea of musical      form. Cage took a special liking to a short, gnomic,      harmonically directionless 1893 piece called Vexations, at      the beginning of which Satie wrote, To play this motif eight      hundred forty times in a row, it would be advisable to      prepare oneself beforehand, in the deepest silence, through      serious immobilities. In 1963, Cage took that instruction at      face value, organizing an epic performance in which a      rotating team of pianists repeated Vexations for nearly      nineteen hours. Because Vexations belongs to Saties      Rosicrucian period, the Guggenheim will stage its own daylong      marathon, in September. Having attended a Vexations event      some years back, I can advise prospective listeners that they      may experience hallucinations of the Sphinx before the      performance is done.    <\/p>\n<p>      Before Pladan vanished from cultural      memory, he received a couple of respectful nods from rising      giants of modernism. In 1906, Ezra Pound embraced Pladans      idea that the medieval troubadour tradition was a repository      of hermetic wisdom. And in 1910 Vasily Kandinsky cited      Pladan in his manifesto On the Spiritual in Art: The      artist is a king, as Pladan says, not only because he has      great power, but also because his responsibility is great.      That sentence, oddly prophetic of the Spider-Man comic      books, is evidence of occultisms lingering reverberations.      Kenneth Silver expands on the connection in a      thought-provoking essay in the Mystical Symbolism      catalogue, entitled Afterlife: The Important and Sometimes      Embarrassing Links between Occultism and the Development of      Abstract Art, ca. 1909-13. The word embarrassing is taken      from the art theorist Rosalind Krauss, who wrote, in 1979,      that now we find it indescribably embarrassing to mention      art and spirit in the same sentence. Yet in the early      twentieth century Kandinsky, Pound, and other modernists      absorbed what Silver calls an amalgam of spiritual      sourcesChristian, Hindu, Buddhist, kabbalistic, alchemical,      and just plain wacky. Assuming the pose of a sorcerer or      guru emboldened more than a few artists and writers in their      quest to explode tradition and create a new order.           <\/p>\n<p>      Pladan had little direct impact on      early modernism: instead, the dominant force was Theosophy,      the half-visionary, half-spurious movement that Helena      Blavatsky and others launched in New York in 1875. Blavatsky      devoured Rosicrucian texts and related Christian esoterica,      and combined their ideas with influences from the East. She      notoriously claimed to be communicating with eternal Indian      Masters. Such hocus-pocus did not prevent the likes of      Kandinsky from appreciating the vigor of Theosophys assault      on materialism in the name of higher truth. Kandinskys      controlled explosions of color bear a striking resemblance to      images that appear in Thought-Forms, a standard      Theosophical text. His paintings can be viewed as opaque      sacred emblems, conduits of spiritual revolution. Silver sees      similar tendencies in the work of Marcel Duchamp, Kazimir      Malevich, Hilma af Klint, and Piet Mondrian. I got      everything from the Secret Doctrine (Blavatsky), Mondrian      wrote, in 1918.    <\/p>\n<p>      Although Yeats is the exemplary case      among occult-oriented modernist writers, T. S. Eliot also      deserves a glance. After Eliot converted to      Anglo-Catholicism, in the late twenties, he chastised Yeats      for having resorted to a highly sophisticated lower      mythology of supernatural lore. Yet The Waste Land begins      with a clutter of Decadent elements: quotations from Tristan      und Isolde, allusions to Verlaine and Mallarm, chatter      about tarot cards and sances, intimations of vegetation      cults. The poem ends with an Easternized version of a Grail      Quest, culminating in a final chant of              shantih shantih shantih       .      Latter-day readings of the poem tend to see Eliots intent as      satirical, but, as Leon Surette has suggested, the poem has      the feeling of an initiation ritual, in the course of which      the poet attains mastery of all religious traditions.          <\/p>\n<p>      Fin-de-sicle spiritualism also had a      radicalizing effect on music: Le Fils des toiles was only      the beginning. In the first decade of the century, Alexander      Scriabin reached the border of atonality under the influence      of Theosophy; he devised an ear-burning, six-note mystic      chord that voices a hitherto ineffable divine presence. Jean      Delville supplied an image of a sun deity for the cover of      Scriabins sumptuously dissonant score Prometheus, Poem of      Fire. As for Schoenberg, he was immersed in mystical texts      at the time of his atonal leap: in terminology reminiscent of      Pladan, he explained that whereas conventional major and      minor chords resembled the opposition of the two genders his      new chords could be compared to androgynous angels. Even the      cool intellect of Igor Stravinsky was touched by theurgic      energies: the neo-pagan scenario of The Rite of Spring was      co-created by the Russian Symbolist painter Nicholas Roerich,      who went on to have a spectacularly strange career as a      Theosophical sage.    <\/p>\n<p>      In the wake of two catastrophic world      wars, mysticism lost its lustre. The ecstatic liturgies of      the fin de sicle rang false, and a rite of objectivity took      hold. The supernatural was all but expunged from modernisms      origin story: the great Irish-literature scholar Richard      Ellmann insisted that Yeats employed arcane symbols for      their artistic, not their occult, utility. In the narrative      that so many of us learned in school, the upheavals of the      modernist epoch were, above all, formal developments,      autonomous events within each discipline. Clement Greenberg      spoke of paintings progressive surrender to the resistance      of its medium; Theodor W. Adorno, of the inherent tendency      of the musical material. Such sober formulas fail to capture      the roiling transcendental longings of a Kandinsky or a      Schoenberg.    <\/p>\n<p>      Hence the disreputable allure of      Pladan, who dared to speak aloud what usually remains      implicit in the aesthetic sphere: belief in the artists      alchemical power, in the godlike nature of creation, in the      oracular quality of genius. (Think of how often prewar      Expressionism is said to have anticipated the horrors to      come, as if artists were clairvoyant.) The question we want      to ask a figure like Pladan is whether or not he meant what      he saidwhether, in essence, he was a lunatic or a charlatan.      Robert Duncan wrote a poem about the relationship between      Satie and the silly old man Pladan, in which he imagines      the composer asking:     <\/p>\n<p>        Is there a place for such posing              <\/p>\n<p>        to be containd? for even              <\/p>\n<p>        fakes of God to touch               <\/p>\n<p>        some youthful trembling at the edge        of God?      <\/p>\n<p>      Such questions presuppose a clean      line of demarcation between the real and the fake, and in      matters of the spirit that line can never be fixed. In a      sublimely daft portrait by Delville, Pladan hovers before us      in priestly white garb, his eyes rolled back, his index      finger pointing heavenward. He is the failed prophet of a      nonexistent faith. Nonetheless, his conviction is unnerving.      Entire religions, entire empires, have been founded on much      less.     <\/p>\n<p><!-- Auto Generated --><\/p>\n<p>Read the original: <\/p>\n<p><a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow\" href=\"http:\/\/www.newyorker.com\/magazine\/2017\/06\/26\/the-occult-roots-of-modernism\" title=\"The Occult Roots of Modernism - The New Yorker\">The Occult Roots of Modernism - The New Yorker<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p> In the Paris of the early eighteen-nineties, at the height of the Decadence, the man of the moment was the novelist, art critic, and would-be guru Josphin Pladan, who named himself Le Sr, after the ancient Akkadian word for king.  <a href=\"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/modern-satanism\/the-occult-roots-of-modernism-the-new-yorker\/\">Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[187717],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-199848","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-modern-satanism"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/199848"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=199848"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/199848\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=199848"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=199848"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=199848"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}