ABSTRACT

Nazi Occultism provides a serious scholarly study of a topic that is often marred by sensationalism and misinformation.

The Morning of the Magicians by Pauwels and Bergier (1960) gave rise to the idea that a secret society with wide powers, the "Thule society", was the hidden and ignored centre of Nazism. The influence of this very real small group is, however, only a fantasy, a myth. The author, a historian specializing in neo-Nazism, looks back on this speculative construction, its origins, its ideological tinkering and the practices which have succeeded in forming a sort of radical and sulphurous counterculture which has created a fascination with esotericism and Nazism and the SS. To better understand it, he also paints a portrait of some of the authors who contributed to this extremist subculture, such as the Italian esotericist Julius Evola, the Argentine anthropologist Jacques-Marie de Mahieu, Chilean neo-Nazi Miguel Serrano, and the writer Jean-Paul Bourre.

This book will appeal to scholars, researchers and activists as well as general readers with an interest in the history of Nazism and the occult.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

part 1|58 pages

Studies

chapter 81|10 pages

The Esoteric Origins of Mein Kampf

Myths and realities

chapter 2|11 pages

Nazi Esotericism

Between Völkisch thought and fantasy

chapter 3|22 pages

Neopaganism and Nazism

part 2|77 pages

Portraits

chapter 6|10 pages

Jacques De Mahieu

Between biological racism and ‘mysterious history’

chapter 7|12 pages

Miguel Serrano

A Chilean neo-Nazi between diplomacy and racial occultism

chapter 8|6 pages

Counter-Culture and ‘Nazi Esoterism’

The example of Wilhelm Landig's Thulean Cycle

chapter 9|9 pages

Between Freak thought and Identitarian World View

The writer Jean-Paul Bourre

chapter 10|12 pages

Michael Moynihan and the Wulfing Kindred

chapter |6 pages

Conclusion