The Emergence of "Esoteric" as a Comparative Category: Towards a Decentered Historiography

This case study contributes to ongoing debates about religious comparativism by focusing on the emergence of the notion of "esoteric" as a de facto comparative category since the seventeenth century. Scholars have so far restricted their studies to a preconceived "Western esoteric cor...

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Détails bibliographiques
Auteur principal: Strube, Julian 1985- (Auteur)
Type de support: Électronique Article
Langue:Anglais
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Publié: 2023
Dans: Implicit religion
Année: 2021, Volume: 24, Numéro: 3/4, Pages: 353-383
Sujets / Chaînes de mots-clés standardisés:B Ésotérisme / Concept / Religion / Europe / Asie / Égypte / Sciences religieuses comparées / Orientalisme <discipline> / Historiographie / Histoire 1600-1900
RelBib Classification:AA Sciences des religions
AZ Nouveau mouvement religieux
KBA Europe de l'Ouest
KBK Europe de l'Est
KBL Proche-Orient et Afrique du Nord
KBM Asie
TK Époque contemporaine
Sujets non-standardisés:B global religious history
B religion in Asia
B Esotericism
B European religious history
B religious comparativism
B orientalist studies
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Résumé:This case study contributes to ongoing debates about religious comparativism by focusing on the emergence of the notion of "esoteric" as a de facto comparative category since the seventeenth century. Scholars have so far restricted their studies to a preconceived "Western esoteric corpus" that limited our view on the majority of source material. This obfuscated the fact that notions such as "esoteric," "gnosis," or "Cabala" have been widely employed historically to discuss subjects ranging from the Arabic and Persianate world via India to East Asia. Since the eighteenth century, "esoteric" language formed an integral part of orientalist scholarship, which explains its omnipresence in (South) Asianist scholarship today. This immediately relates to broader issues of religious comparativism: I argue for the necessity of a decentered historiography to understand the development of categories such as "esotericism" and "religion," not as a unilateral process of "Western" diffusion and projection but through entangled historical exchanges. Based on the approach of global religious history, I provide preliminary insights into what conditioned and structured these exchanges.
ISSN:1743-1697
Contient:Enthalten in: Implicit religion
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.1558/imre.23260