The Centre for Magic and Esotericism
Some of the past events hosted by the Centre for Magic and Esotericism and its members
2-3 July 2024, ENSIE 2024 Conference: Dreams and Visions in Islam
9th March 2024, Therapeutic Landscapes: ritual, folklore and wellbeing
Drama PGR, Sarah Scaife, presented on her current practice-based research project at: Therapeutic Landscapes: ritual, folklore and wellbeing at the University of Worcester.
Sarahâs paper, Walking within and beyond spells of illness, reflects on her current practice-based research project which takes place in South Devon from deep winter to late spring, 2024. It takes the form of a series of six gentle, walking-based enquiries with people who have lived experience of breast cancer treatment.
This phase of her PhD research, supervised by Dr Bryan Brown, is an artistic- rather than clinical- trial to investigate the efficacy of a walking medicine in community. The series will include gentle but provocative prompts to create conversation and live experience which fertilises radical re-imaginings of our future selves. The enquiry with participants will range from âWhat brought you here?â to âHow might ritual space hold rich and honest dialogue about tender matters?â
You can read more info here: https://cargocollective.com/ragged-robin/Gentle-walking-enquiries-with-Sarah-Em
Nov 21, 2023 Visiting Speaker Professor Noah Gardiner, University of South Carolina
Nov 24, 2023 Magic and Psychedelics part 2
June 23, 2023 Roundtable discussion: âMagic, Esotericism, and the Psychedelicâ
March 8th, 2023 Michael Noble: Reflections on research on the Islamic occult as a window into cosmology and the hard problem of consciousness.
October 19, 2022 co-hosted with the University of Exeterâs Center for Early Modern Studies
Frank Klaassen (University of Saskatchewan), âEncomium nigromantici: A Reconsideration of Conventional Histories of Western Magicâ. Frank is a specialist in this history of medieval and early modern magical texts and will be talking about how they fit into wider histories of western magic.
September 28, 2022 Professor Tim Insoll: The âMagicalâ Properties of Shrines and Figurines in Northern Ghana
The application of the term âmagicâ to the study of West African archaeological and ethnographic material can be problematic in evoking grand evolutionary narratives, within which these materials were often categorized at the bottom of such schema, and essentialized as the âprimitive otherâ. Yet, has the interpretive and descriptive potential of âmagicâ altered and, like the use of âmagicalâ in African contexts now become more acceptable. This will be explored in relation to archaeological and ethnographic research completed on Tallensi shrines, substances, and medicine in the Tong Hills, and on archaeological figurines from Komaland, both in northern Ghana. It will be argued that âmagicâ may have value if considered as part of a âbundleâ of phenomena rather than a unique descriptor.
April 27, 2022 Sarah Scaife, Show not tell: âLa Medicina Incertaâ
March 24th, 2022 Samuel Gillis Hogan: âFairies in Summoning Spells and Occult Philosophy, 1400-1700: The Articulation of a Learned Christian Animism at the Cusp of Modernityâ
February 23, 2022 Professors Catherine Rider and Dionisius Agius: âPopular Healing: Christian and Islamic Medical Practices and the Roman Inquisition in Early Modern Maltaâ
February 2nd, 2022 Howard Gayton, âListening to the Land: Pilgrimage to COP26.â
Nov 29th-30th, 2021 Medicine, Magic and Healing: a workshop organised by Professor Nahyan Fancy: https://www.exeter.ac.uk/news/events/details/index.php?event=11747
October 27th, 2021 Dr. Kara Reilly: A Medium to History: The Lyric Theatre as a Hauntological Site
March 3, 3021 Terri Windling: âThe Modern Fairies Projectâ
February 3, 2021 Dr. Luca Patrizi, âHydromancy in the Ancient, Late Antique, and Medieval Islamic worldâ
December 18, 2020 Michelle Szydlowski leads a conversation about the use and symbolic significance of animals in magic and beyond.
November 17th, 2020 Anna Milon and Crystal Hollis, âPopular Magic: Then and Nowâ : register here: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/popular-magic-then-and-now-tickets-122826516417
October 14, 2020 Professor Brian Rappert, â(In)Authentic Selves: How Magicians Craft Truth and Deception in Autobiographiesâ
May 27th, 2020 Sarah Scaife, âVisions as practise in practice-based research.â
April 3rd, 2020 Dr. Emily Selove, âSiraj al-Din al-Sakkakiâs Dangerous Booksâ
March 18, 2020 Anna Milon, âThe Wildest God: Margaret Murrayâs influence on interpretations of the âSorcererâ cave image.â
January 22, 2020 Samuel Gillis Hogan, âStars in the Hand: British Latin Medieval Chiromancy and its Scholastic and Astrological Influencesâ
December 5th, 2019 Professor Brian Rappert, âA Performance of Dissimulation: The Magic of Deception in Social and Political Lifeâ
November 7th, 2019 Dorka TamĂĄs, âSylvia Plath and the Supernatural: Witches and Magic in Plathâs Poetry and Fictionâ
October 10, 2019 Dr. Earl Fontainelle, âLatin as Diabolical Vox Magica in Horror Cinemaâ
March 6, 2019 Dr. Bryan Brown and Olya Petrakova-Brown: MakeTank and methodologies of the drama department applied to the study of magic.
February 15, 2019 Howard Gayton: How does one place personal experience and epistemologies within the academic study of magic?
January 16, 2019 Anna Milon: âThe Temptation of Margaret Murrayâ
November 14, 2018 Professor Nick Groom: âThe Vampire: A New Historyâ
October 10, 2018 Barbara Dunn: âThe Astrologer and the Physicianâ
May 30, 2018 Professor Marion Gibson: âRediscovering Renaissance Witchcraftâ
March 28, 2018 Dr. Emily Selove, âA Medieval Arabic Handbook of Magicâ
February 21, 2018 Inaugural Meeting