The British Empire's Fear and Fascination with the Occult
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.70670/sra.v4i2.2179Keywords:
occultism, British Empire, colonialism, spiritualism, Obeah, epistemic violence, Victorian Britain, postcolonial theoryAbstract
This paper examines how the British Empire's engagement with the occult operated as a structural feature of imperial governance rather than a peripheral curiosity. By comparing metropolitan and colonial contexts, it traces how occult belief was simultaneously legitimized and suppressed along lines of race, class, and gender. At home, elite esotericism found protection under scientific and artistic frameworks, while working-class practitioners faced legal persecution. In the colonies, indigenous spiritual systems were criminalized as seditious or dismissed as irrational superstition, even as British audiences consumed their aesthetics from a safe distance. Drawing on legal history, cultural analysis, postcolonial theory, and primary sources including Victorian occult periodicals, parliamentary records, and colonial ordinances, this paper argues that decisions about whose spiritual knowledge counted as truth were themselves acts of power.
