Oddcast episode

Charles Stang and Jason Josephson-Storm on Theosophy and the Study of Religions

In our episode introducing Madame Blavatsky with Marina Alexandrova she mentioned that HPB and the early Theosophical movement more generally were instrumental in forming the modern discipline which travels under names like the History of Religions, Religious Studies, Comparative Religions, and so on. In this episode we put that intriguing notion to the test in a detailed way, speaking with historians of religions Charles Stang and Jason Josephson-Storm on precisely this topic. A conference held at Harvard on ‘Theosophy and the Study of Religion’ led to a number of interesting papers being presented, these papers led to a book (Brill, 2024, cited in full below), and the book led to this interview.

The writing-out-of-history of the Theosophical Society remains (despite much excellent research emerging at the moment) one of the great cultural occlusions or acts of forgetting of the twentieth century. The forgetting of the Society’s central role in the foundation of the scientific study of religion means that this episode tells what will be, for many people, a secret history of the field of religious studies.

Interview Bios:

Jason Ānanda Josephson Storm is a historian and philosopher of the Human Sciences. He is currently Professor of Religion and Chair of Science & Technology Studies at Williams College. Storm received his Ph.D. from Stanford University, his MA from Harvard, and has held visiting positions at Princeton, l’École Française d’Extrême-Orient, and Universität Leipzig in Germany. He is the author of award-winning The Invention of Religion in Japan (2012), The Myth of Disenchantment: Magic, Modernity and the Birth of the Human Sciences (2017), as well as Metamodernism: The Future of Theory (2021), all published by University of Chicago Press.

Charles M. Stang is Professor of Early Christian Thought at Harvard Divinity School. His interests include: the development of asceticism, monasticism, and mysticism in Christianity; ancient philosophy, especially Neoplatonism; the Syriac Christian tradition, especially the spread of the East Syrian tradition along the Silk Road; other philosophical and religious movements of the ancient Mediterranean, including Gnosticism, Hermeticism, and Manichaeism; and modern continental philosophy and theology, especially as they intersect with the study of religion.

Works Cited in this Episode:

The Centre for the Study of World Religions at Harvard (pictured above in all its modernist glory) has a website.

Talal Asad. Genealogies of Religion: Discipline and Reasons of Power in Christianity and Islam. Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, MD, 1993.

Robert S. Ellwood. Theosophy: A Modern Expression of the Wisdom of the Ages. Quest Books, Wheaton, IL, 1986.

Idem. The Politics of Myth: A Study of C.G. Jung, Mircea Eliade, and Joseph Campbell. SUNY Press, Albany, NY, 1999.

Stephen C. Finley. The Afro-Theosophics of Robert T. Browne: Race, Theory, and Method in the Study of Religion. In Charles M. Stang and Jason Ananda Josephson Storm, editors, Theosophy and the Study of Religion, pages 174-95. Brill, Leiden, 2024.

Bruce Lincoln. Secrets, Lies, and Consequences: A Great Scholar’s Hidden Past and his Protégé’s Unsolved Murder. The University Press, Oxford, 2024.

Friedrich Max Müller. Theosophy, or, Psychological Religion. Longmans, New York, 1893.

Jonathan Z. Smith. Map Is Not Territory. University of Chicago Press, Chicago, IL/London, 1993. Smith’s critique of the History of Religions as a Protestant project can be found in two places: Jonathan Z. Smith. Imagining Religion: from Babylon to Jonestown. University of Chicago Press, Chicago, IL, 1982, and Idem. On Teaching Religion. Oxford University Press, New York, NY, 2013.

Charles M. Stang and Jason Ananda Josephson Storm, editors. Theosophy and the Study of Religion. Number 34 in Aries Book Series. Brill, Leiden/Boston, MA, 2024.

Charles M. Stang. The Smoldering Superhuman. Harvard Divinity Bulletin, 52 (1 & 2):60-66, 2024.

Jason Ānanda Josephson Storm. Metamodernism: The Future of Theory. University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 2021.

Julian Strube. Global Tantra: Religion, Science, and Nationalism in Colonial Modernity. The University Press, Oxford, 2022.

Max Weber. Der Sinn der ‘Wertfreiheit’ der soziologischen und ökonomischen Wissenschaften. 1917.

Recommended Reading:

SHWEP Oddcast Stang and Storm Recommended Reading

Themes

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