Sociology of Tarot
Sociology of Tarot
Sociology of Tarot
Mike Sosteric
Résumé. Cet article vise à établir une sociologie des sciences occultes en général
et une sociologie du tarot en particulier. Le tarot comprend 78 cartes et a été
inventé en Italie au XVe siècle. De ses débuts modestes en tant que jeu, le tarot
s’est vu associé aux sciences occultes, mystiques, divines et spirituelles, prenant
même une signification psychologique. Cette dimension s’est inscrite dans une
plus grande stratégie de discipline et d’endoctrinement dans le but de faciliter la
transition des structures préindustrielles du pouvoir et de l’autorité à des struc-
tures industrielles et bureaucratiques. Ce tarot, associé à l’émergence de la franc-
maçonnerie d’élite, a contribué aux nouvelles idéologies du pouvoir et des moy-
ens d’exister dans les confins d’organisations très structurées et bureaucratiques.
Mots-clés: Tarot, franc-maçonnerie, discipline et contrôle, idéologie, occulte,
religion.
Introduction
to regain the power they lost as Church authority, and elite authority in
general, were dismantled during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries
as a result of the English, French, and scientific revolutions.
What Is Tarot?
Mountebank
of Fortune
Emperor
Man
kind of playing-card pack.” In a tarot deck, the minor arcana may or may
not be painted with images; however, the major arcana are almost always
illustrated with fanciful, mythological, spiritual, and cultural imagery.
Divination
When the Tarot first came into existence the deck was little more than
a picture book, a system for gaming, possibly a device for gambling
(Dummett 1980) and held no mystical, magical, or divinatory signifi-
cance (Farley 2009). The tarot did, arguably, have allegorical signifi-
cance and Farley (2009) provides a convincing argument that the tarot,
originating within the cultural milieu of the Egyptian Mamlūk caste, was
reinvented as an allegory for the life of the Viscontis, rulers of Milan,
but beyond that there is no evidence (despite protestations of authors
like Place (2005) who erroneously assert the tarot’s mystical credentials
based on its association with the mystical secular art of the Renaissance),
to suggest it was anything other than a simple game of cards. According
to Farley (2009, 3), “It began its life as a game with no purpose beyond
providing mental stimulation. It contained no esoteric wisdom, could
provide no spiritual advice and gave no clue as to how to conduct one’s
life.” These days, however, the tarot has become much more. At its most
sinister, the tarot is an indicator of, and perhaps gateway to, satanic wor-
ship (Rudin 1990).
Some traditional Christians, in particular those of an evangelical
bent, have a powerful belief that the tarot is a book of the devil. This
belief is so powerful that even to mention the word ‘tarot’ causes a vis-
ceral, fear-based reaction (Anon 2012). However, the tarot is not primar-
ily seen in this way. Much more common is a belief that the tarot was
designed for, and can be used as, a tool for cartomancy. In the early days
of tarot mysticism it was thought that the tarot could provide a gate-
way or a channel that would facilitate communion with jinn, angels, and
other exalted heavenly hosts. More recently, the superstition has been
tempered, but the belief in gateways and channels remains, and in some
surprising places. These days, the most respectable way to present the art
of divination would be as an attempt to explain the world where science
seems unable to work (Maitre & Becker 1966), as a tool for developing
the ‘inner eye’ (Noddings & Shore 1984), or perhaps a way to tap into
the knowledge contained in the unconscious (Bala 2008). The tarot also
holds a respected place in Jungian psychology as a way to connect with
“that level of nature that lies behind stars and cards and psyche and is
expressed in all of them” (Spiegelman 1998, 93). For Spiegelman “that
A Sociology of Tarot 361
It is surprising enough that the tarot, a mere pack of cards with pretty
pictures, would become a significant tool in the repository of the Jungian
therapist, but even more surprising is the spiritual import that has been
placed on this not-really-so-ancient pack of cards. For many, the tarot
has become a hermetic or spiritual tool. ‘Hermetic,’ in this instance, is to
be understood both as “a tool of occult science and magic,” and as “hav-
ing a lineage traceable to Hermes Trismegistus.” Thrice-great Hermes
was the mythological author of a corpus of works teaching Hermeti-
cism, a belief that the world can be influenced through contact with and
exploitation of ‘heavenly forces’ — magic in other words. In this view,
the tarot is a book of ‘special’ symbols, a “perfectly simple philosophical
machine” that contains “the whole science” and “that astonishes by the
depth of its results” (Levi 2002, 85). According to this line of thought,
the tarot is not an ‘open’ book; rather, it is a secret book, a hidden book,
one open only to those who undergo a “special training of the mind”
(Ouspensky 1976, 2). With the tarot, it becomes possible to mediate be-
tween humanity and the Godhead, between god/spirit/consciousness and
362 © Canadian Journal of Sociology/Cahiers canadiens de sociologie 39(3) 2014
As Jayanti (2004, ix) notes, “... the images in the true1 tarot are liberating
in their effect as they present the reality behind appearance which is the
search of all aspirants... The tarot is the easiest gateway to the Great Mys-
teries of Life.” In sum, in the magical mystery traditions of the Western
world, the tarot is an esoteric tool of mysticism, a supreme instrument
of divination, a deck of secret knowledge, an ancient Egyptian fountain
of wisdom, a bible of bibles, a bible of humanity containing wisdom
from the time the world was born, a book of Thoth, a book of Adam, a
revelation of ancient civilizations, and the whole cosmic/cosmological/
theological and philosophical ball of wax rolled up into one convenient
package of cheaply illustrated paper cards (see Dummett 1980; 2007).
1. Not the “fake” Tarot, but the “true” tarot. Ever since the Freemasons took
over tarot imagery there have been attempts to “manifest” the “true” tarot.
Commentators like Crowley and Waite, and all those before, approach the
tarot as if it is a puzzle in need of solution, or a cosmic gestalt in need of
expression. For all these people there is an underlying truth that needs reveal-
ing. Thus each approach is an attempt to uncover the true meanings of the
cards. Truth can be located in mystical gnosis (as the Freemasons attempt to
do) or archetypal revelation (as Jungian therapists to do), but either way there
is an attempt to find the “true” tarot. Of course, the argument of this paper is
essentially there is no “true” tarot. There may be spiritual and gnostic truths to
discover in this world, but these truths are not inherent in the tarot. The tarot
is a human construction and thus the question is not whether we can discover
the “true” tarot, but are we satisfied with the thing that we have constructed.
Personally I am not satisfied with the masonic Tarot and have been working
to see something new, something more progressive, constructed in its place
(see comments in the conclusion of this paper).
A Sociology of Tarot 363
According to Semetsky (2011a, 252) “The tarot images that are laid
down in a particular pattern are thereby ‘selected’ by soul, by the uncon-
scious, and cannot be considered random.” In this way, the tarot becomes
a kind of mystical Rorschach, allowing an individual or therapist access
to deep levels of meaning in the collective memory pool for the purpos-
es of spiritual work, meaning, and mythological revelation (Semetsky
2009; 2011b). “When symbolically represented in Tarot images, the tran-
scendental realm of the psyche is being brought, so to speak, down to
earth by virtue of its embodiment in physical reality.” (Semetsky 2010a,
110, emphasis in the original). In line with this line of thinking Nichol-
son (2003) uses the tarot to illustrate deep wisdom of feminist theology,
and Santarcangeli (1979, 33) informs us of the deep cosmic ‘wisdom’
of the fool. If you believe the psychologists, pregnant with meaning, the
364 © Canadian Journal of Sociology/Cahiers canadiens de sociologie 39(3) 2014
The Reality
At this point the question is begged, what is it about the tarot that has
made it into such a special tool for so many people. More to the point,
why did a simple game of cards become the magical mystery tour de
force that it is today? The first clue to unraveling ‘the mysteries of tarot’
comes in the origin and time line of the tarot deck. The tarot’s origins
can be precisely pinned down, specifically to the royal courts of fifteenth
century Italy (Dummett 1980). After that date, there are no references
to the tarot as anything other than a game (or a vice) until just before
the French Revolution (1789 - 1799), when Protestant priest and Free-
mason Antoine Court de Gébelin published (in 1781) volume eight of Le
Monde primitif (Decker, Depaulis & Dummett 1996). In that volume are
two essays, one by de Gébelin, and the other by M. le C. de M.2 expound-
ing on the mystical, cabbalistic, astrological, and Egyptian significance
of the fifteenth century Italian tarot (Dummett 1980).
Subsequent to the publication of these essays, the tarot was picked up
by famous cartomancers, including Etteilla and Mlle. Marie-Anne Adel-
aide Lenormand, and later still, commented on by magical (and Her-
metic, Rosicrucian, and Masonic) luminaries such as Eliphas Levi, Ar-
thur Edward Waite, Aleister Crowley, and so on (Dummett 1980; Decker
and Dummett 2002; Farley 2009). During the period of effusive impos-
ition of occult significance, the tarot came to be associated with ancient
Egyptian high priests, ancient cabbalistic Jews, Hermes Trismegistus,
the divine Lux (light/spirit) behind reality, the Gypsies (who were said
to be roaming Egyptians), the divine name of God (the Tetragramma-
ton), and the Sephiroth (divine emanations). It was, so they said, created
under the direction of Hermes, devised by seventeen magi, and written
on magical leaves of gold (Dummett 1980, 107). Originally constructed
as a game, or a book of allegories, the tarot was co-opted by esoteric/
secret societies, became associated with their ‘secret knowledge,’ and
eventually came to inscribe not only their magical ‘initiation rituals,’ but
the magical path of the soul as well.
The question at this point must be, does the tarot contain esoteric
truths from ancient Egypt? Is it a magical book of books? Did Egyptian
2. Court De Gébelin refers to the author of the second essay as M. le C. de
M.***. As Dummett (1980: 105) notes, Robin Briggs identifies the contribu-
tor as Louis-Raphael-Lucréce de Fayolle, Comte de Mellet. de Fayolle was a
brigadier in the cavalry, a governor, and an “unremarkable court noble.”
A Sociology of Tarot 365
high priests and ancient high gods write the divine wisdom of the cos-
mos onto the gold leaves of tarot? The answer to that is an unequivocal,
no. According to three of the most authoritative figures on the subject,
there is no historical basis to any of the ancient (or modern) occultists’
claims about the significance of the tarot (Decker & Dummett 2002;
Farley 2009). In fact, according to Dummett (1980), historical claims
that the tarot is anything other than an Italian game of trumps are an
uninformed, esoteric mish-mash. The question isn’t how to uncover the
secret mystical knowledge, but rather “Why did a simple pack of cards
come to take on such magical and mysterious import?” This sociological
question remains largely unanswered (Decker & Dummett 2002, 315).
The first clues to unraveling the ‘mystery’ come from the temporal loca-
tion of its emergence as a divinatory tool, specifically, during the French
Revolution. At that time, traditional power structures were crumbling
and New World industrial capitalism was emerging. The popular mind
sees this period as one of general emancipation, but as any sociologist
will know, the history of the French, English and Dutch revolutions and
the emergence of industrial capitalism is not the history of the end of
class oppression. Instead, it is the history of the replacement (more or
less) of one ruling class with another. During the transition, feudal re-
lations of power, feudal ideological institutions, and feudal systems of
control were replaced with industrial ones.
The story of this transformation is understood, at least in general
terms, as a disciplinary revolution. Between the eighteenth century and
middle of the nineteenth, Western institutions changed dramatically
(Kieser 1998) and new forms of behavior were required if industrial
capitalism was to survive and thrive (Weber 2003). It essentially came
down to the creation of new kinds of authority, and new power relations,
as economic, productive, and social crises brought the old feudal order
to its knees (Dobb 1972). It is, in short, about the creation of modern
corporate/ bureaucratic control structures, fitting workers and middle
management with the executive branches, and creating the well-oiled
capitalist machine we have today (Barnard 1968). In the context of the
disintegration of traditional organizations and traditional authority struc-
tures, the issue was one of authority, command, control, and legitimacy
(Weber 2003), especially in emerging industrial production. Modern
corporations and bureaucracies have top-down executive control and
established disciplinary procedures, but these things would have been
366 © Canadian Journal of Sociology/Cahiers canadiens de sociologie 39(3) 2014
absent at the cusp of the revolution. At that time, there would have been
an obvious need to create new organizational structures and civilizing
influences (Elias 1994), and of course, that is what happened. It is a com-
mon story in sociology with the rise of the Protestant ethic (Weber 1987;
2003) and the dispersion of ‘institutional strategies’ for maintaining col-
lective discipline throughout Europe (Gorski 1993, 266).
In the context of ‘institutional strategies’ for maintaining collective
discipline, Freemasonry and other middle-class “men’s huts” (Jewkes,
2005, 47)3 can been analyzed sociologically. According to Jewkes
(2005), freemasonry is part of a male bonding ritual, characterized by
hierarchies and exclusions, and that reproduces and reaffirms patriarchy,
unequal power relations, and ‘male’ hegemony. Jewkes’ comments are
relevant here, not so much for the Masonic performance of patriarchy,
but for the way the Masonic universe reinforces and, more importantly,
re-creates power relations, not in a feudal way, but in a bourgeois one.
When they were first introduced, Masonic lodges were safe places
to explore, proselytize, and convert people to the new social order. “It
was in the lodges and through them that the bourgeoisie acquired a so-
cial form of its own. In imitating both its mystery won a place beside
the ecclesiastical mysteries and the arcane politics of States” (Koselleck
1988, 72, quoted in Horn 2011, 111). According to Kieser (1998, 47),
Freemasonry was part of the shift in control and disciplinary strategies
from feudal organizations, such as guilds, which “encompassed” mem-
bers “in total”) and organizations that required less complete forms of
immersion (i.e. pre-modern bureaucracies). In this context, Freemasonry
was an ideological and pedagogical control strategy, helping to facilitate
not only required changes in behaviour, but also the development and
acceptance of modern command and control structures. As Kieser notes:
3. Men’s huts are “where those men who have earned the right to call them-
selves men, or are in the process of attaining this emblem of privilege, gather”
(Remy 1990, 45, cited in Jewkes 2005, 47). Jewkes goes on to say “[m]en’s
huts for the middle class are institutions such as golf clubs, gentlemen’s clubs,
and Freemason lodges, while working class manifestations include pubs and
betting shops” (2005, 47). Men’s huts exclude women and “uninitiated” men.
The metaphor derives from the physical men’s huts found in many hunter-
gatherer societies. Anthropologists have found that the greater the distance
(physical or social) between the men’s hut and the rest of the village, the
poorer the relative position of women within the society (see, for example,
Spain, 1992).
A Sociology of Tarot 367
The entire occultist tarot tradition stems from the work of Antoine Court
de Gébelin (1719 - 1784), a Protestant pastor, Freemason, and savant.
5. Interestingly, the story of the Masonic men’s hut as tool of ideological in-
doctrination of the emerging elites fits well with the historical transformation
that occurred in Freemasonry during the 18th century. Prior to about 1740
Freemasonry was nothing more nor less than a craft union, functioning to
organize stone workers, protect their interests, and protect the craft (Knoop
& Jones, 1947).In the 16th and 17th centuries however Freemasonry was
transformed from “operational” to “accepted,” and finally to a “speculative”
secret society. This transformation occurred as the doors of the organization
where thrown open to individuals outside of the craft itself. It began when
Freemasonry began to “accept” members as brothers despite the fact that they
were not stone masons. Initially acceptance was based on an expressed inter-
ests in architecture or engineering (both loosely related to craft working) but
later, as elite, nobles, merchants, and others were “accepted,” the pretense
was dropped altogether. At a certain point, 1740 to be specific (Knoop &
Jones, 1947), speculative Freemasonry, a Freemasonry based on the creation
of legend, mystery, and “esoteric” secrets, was born..
A Sociology of Tarot 369
Born in Geneva, he was the son of Antoine Court, the most prominent
French Protestant pastor of his day, and lived in Switzerland until he was
40. (1980, 102, emphasis added)
Court de Gébelin initiated the idea of the occult tarot. Following him, the
idea of ‘the tarot as occult masterpiece’ was extended by Freemasons,
clerics, and other members of the emerging elite (Dummett 1980). The
ideological imposition reached a sort of culmination with the work of
prominent Freemason, A.E.Waite in the early twentieth century, but even
down to this day tarot decks are regularly linked to secret societies.6 For
example, authors such as Jayanti (2004, v) reference well-known Free-
masons like Paul Foster Case as teachers. And lest one doubt the inser-
tion of tarot into ideologies of hierarchy and control, Jayanti unselfcon-
sciously discusses major modern decks as derived from elite organiza-
tions participating in the ‘spiritual hierarchies’ (read ‘elite hierarchies’)
of this world:
The true tarot decks that have been published by authentic Mystery
Schools, such as the Order of the Golden Dawn of England with the Rider
deck, and the Builders of the Adytum of the US with the Case deck, are
true in that they most closely approximate the unpublished tarot of the In-
ner School, the Spiritual Hierarchy of the world (Jayanti, 2004: ix).
The Secret Chiefs, the Hidden Masters, the Inner Circle, the Illuminati,
the King of the World: we know them all today, perhaps in different forms
and perhaps by different names. But we know them. They are the ones in
control. They are the ones behind the closed doors and within the locked
rooms. They are the ones with the secret knowledge, who speak a secret
language. They know the magic symbols that unlock the gates that lead to
worlds beyond our own. They have passed through the trials and ordeals
of initiation. They have found the Holy Grail, the Philosopher’s Stone,
the Emerald Tablet, the dreaded Necronomicon and the lost continent of
Atlantis.
The question now becomes, why choose tarot for this purpose and
why incorporate it as a tool of indoctrination when it was merely a card
game at the time? The answer, although lost in the mists of time, likely
revolves around (a) the allegorical meaning of the images, a meaning
linked to the Italian courts of the fifteenth century, (b) their suitability
6. For a more detailed overview of the history of the occult tarot, see http://
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Divinatory tarot (retrieved April 2, 2013).
370 © Canadian Journal of Sociology/Cahiers canadiens de sociologie 39(3) 2014
Figure One: The Emperor and Hierophant (Pope) from the Rider-Waite
Deck
The presence of elite ideology and practice in the already existing tarot
deck would likely have been attractive to the Protestant clerics and Free-
masons who co-opted the deck. After all, they were demonstrably mem-
bers of the elite already. More attractive perhaps would have been the
opportunity to read in additional meaning. Images are worth a thousand
words we are told, but what words those might be are often a matter of
7. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tarot_de_Marseille for a representation of
the Tarot de Marsailles, one of the earliest, and certainly the most influential,
representation. [Retrieved April 3, 2013]
A Sociology of Tarot 371
“This famous Allegory of the Cave reveals themes that reappear through-
out the subsequent history of Western esoteric traditions, above all, the
conflict between the uninitiated and those who have eyes to see” Versluis
(2007, 16)
The Ideology
For five centuries or more tarot cards have been used in Europe, ostensibly
for games and fortune-telling, but really to preserve the essentials of a se-
cret doctrine. They form a symbolic alphabet of the ancient wisdom, and
to their influence upon the minds of a few enlightened thinkers we may
trace the modern revival of interest in that wisdom. (Case 2012, 5)
The tenth trump, the Wheel of Fortune, is Malkuth, the Kingdom. As the
parables of Jesus plainly show, that Kingdom is not a state of life after
death; nor is it, except in a very limited sense, a social order. It is the
method of Spirit in self-expression; and because cyclicity is characteristic
of that method, the tarot symbolizes the Perfect Law as Buddha did, by a
Wheel. (Case 2012, 32)
It is quite interesting that Case drops the word ‘social order’ into his
description of the meaning of this card. What a social order, however
limited, has to do with the self-expression of Spirit is unclear, but it is
apparently related. Case of course doesn’t bring out the nature of the
social order in his text. This is a “secret” tradition after all where the
inner truths of the hearts of men are drawn out in the hidden spaces of
the temple alcove. The meaning of the card, and the nature of the “social
Figureorder,”
Two: isThe Goldenhowever
available Dawn World Cardimagery of the card with clar-
in the visual
ity, precision, and dramatic oomph. Consider the Golden Dawn image
below.
Figure Two: The Golden Dawn World Card
The social order that Case is referring to is quite plain to see in the
card above. Nature below, the gods above, and the wheel of life’s cycles
of (birth and rebirth) in between. This is an elite social order and this
A Sociology of Tarot 375
elite social order is embedded in Western esoteric traditions all the way
back to Plato, as Versluis notes of his Republic, “The Republic also res-
onates with the recurrent idea of creating a spiritual utopia governed
by an enlightened elite, a concept found much later, for example, in
the Rosicrucian movement of the seventeenth century” (Versluis 2007,
16). Looking at the card it is hard not to see the enlightened spiritual
elite governing the unenlightened and primitive masses. The ideology
or ‘message’ embedded in the card is something that should be familiar
to any second year sociology student: the card represents a two-class
social system, and a not very pretty one at that. The upper class is royal
and regal, while the lower class is unevolved, ape-like, and clearly pas-
sive. The Golden Dawn card is remarkable not only for the ‘hide in plain
sight’ way that elite ideology is presented, but also for the remarkable
way the ideology is accepted as part of a package of divine revelation, of
spirit expressing itself in the Kingdom. Elites are justified to rule because
they have access to the ‘light,’ they are ‘evolved,’ and so on. The rhet-
orical turn (reinforced by a visual turn, crucial in pre-literate societies)
represented here should be apparent, and a visceral reaction may even
accompany our realization that the divine, magical, Egyptian, Vedic wis-
dom represented in this card is nothing more than a prettied up version
of Catholic doctrine concerning the divine right of kings. Social class,
hierarchy, command, control, privilege, and the unequal distribution of
power, so typical of the ‘class struggle’ of this world (Marx 1848), is writ
large on this card.
Another reason that is it not hard to ‘read’ the ideology of tarot is
because, at the beginning of the twentieth century, the ‘secrets’ of eso-
teric elitism were fully exposed to the mass consciousness (Decker and
Dummett 2002) and subsequently penetrated into, and become a part of,
the ideological fabric of this planet. Members of the men’s huts of the
time, most notably Crowley and other members the fraternal organiza-
tion he founded, made it a point to expose the ‘secret teachings’ to the
outside world. A scandal at the time, Crowley irked members of Her-
metic Order of Golden Dawn when he self-consciously set himself, and
other members of his very own secret club, as the revealers of all the
secrets. Crowley created the journal The Equinox, and then subsequently
published Golden Dawn secrets and rituals in his open esoteric journal.12
He sets the agenda in the opening editorial of the publication, though not
But the Brothers of the A ∴ A ∴ make no mystery; They [sic] give you not
only the Text, but the Comment; not only the Comment, but the Diction-
ary, the Grammar, and the Alphabet. (Crowley 1909, 1)
13. Let the secrets out? Why? Not to foment the collapse of class structure, but
because the ideology had become refined enough to be exposed to the mass
mind. With publication of A.E. Waite’s tarot deck in 1909, the Masonic ideol-
ogy of the tarot has moved into the popular mass conscious, where it exerts
ideological influence over the masses, just like any other religion or spiritual-
ity. Almost all modern tarot decks derived from Waite’s extremely popular
deck (Farley, 2009). Indeed, it is hard to find a deck that does not have char-
acteristic cards of the Waite deck, and therefore, Masonic influences.
A Sociology of Tarot 377
Discussion
The intent of this paper is not to expose in detail the underlying ideology
of the tarot major arcana, that is the task of a subsequent paper entitled
The Ideology of Tarot (Sosteric, in progress), but rather to demonstrate
that such work is both needed and possible. In other words, this article
has tried to establish the need for a sociology of the Western tarot spe-
cifically, and a sociology of the occult more generally. This Sociology
of Tarot includes a sociology of how those who practiced tarot used
the decks in ways that related to changing relations of class, discipline,
power, and ideology. It appears that tarot was invented as a deck of play-
ing cards, reflecting the life and times of significant Italian families, but
became implicated in the double revolutions that collapsed structures
of feudal authority, and legitimated new systems of social authority and
discipline. The tarot deck was a useful tool for this purpose because the
imagery was already linked to elite practice (having been invented in the
courts of Italy), already had suitable iconography (kings, queens, and
popes), was plastic and could be ‘imprinted’ with additional symbolism,
and eventually became used as an initiatory device in secret societies
and new religious sects emerging at this time. Work to establish the oc-
cult authority of the deck was accomplished by prominent Freemasons,
clerics, and members of the transitioning elite. The net result was a deck
of superb ideological brilliance and utility, capable not only of indoc-
trinating members of secret organizations, but also of imprinting mass
consciousness with elite ideology.
Although one might initially feel that a sociology of the tarot would
only be of historical interest, that is not the case. The movement of tarot
ideology into the mass consciousness, as encouraged by Crowley and
his brothers for example, has left an unchallenged (and potentially quite
significant) ideological imprint. Coupled with the recent proliferation of
superstition, ignorance, and irrationalities of modern society as noted by
Bauer (2011), and the uncritical way tarot aficionados (even academic
ones) take up the ideology (e.g. Place 2005), the social impact of tarot
in contemporary society may be taken too lightly. Doering-Manteufell
(2011) found a dramatic spread of superstitions that uses modern com-
munication technologies as a means to proliferate occult (read ideologic-
al) practice. This is particularly evidenced in the proliferation of tarot
decks. Today literally hundreds of tarot decks are in print, all representing
A Sociology of Tarot 379
the author’s particular views, but almost all of them echoing iconic Ma-
sonic imagery and interpretation (Farley 2009). More than ever, socio-
logical analysis in the occult tarot specifically, or occult phenomenon
more generally, seems warranted.
Sociological investigation would include analysis of ideology and
control that might explore links between the tarot and the ideological im-
portance of religion (Weber 2003), or disciplinary control strategies iden-
tified by Foucault (1975) and others. There are also dialogic questions
about the rhetorical strategies used not only to obscure the true nature of
elite ideology embedded in the tarot system, but also to lend occult and
spiritual authority to the tarot (Fairclough 2001). These strategies have
only been touched on in this paper, but other strategies are evident and
need to be exposed.15 Finally, the psychology of the tarot, specifically its
use in dramatic ritual and initiation pageantry, and its utility as a device
of indoctrination, are also interesting questions worthy of sociological
examination.
It is also useful to note that the history of tarot and the occult are not
just class histories, they are histories of patriarchy and racism. As noted
earlier, sexism is imprinted on the very structure of men’s huts, and for
all the mystical wisdom offered up, the sexism is prominent and often of-
fensive, especially in dominant figures like Aleister Crowley [see for ex-
ample the opening words of the Crowley editorial in the inaugural edition
of Equinox (Crowley 1912)]. Racism also figures in the principal texts
of theosophical movement [see Blavatsky 1888; Besant 1907 and 1911),
and Besant & Leadbeater (1913)] where doctrines of spiritual progress,
reincarnation, and karma are based on racial frameworks and derogatory
characterizations of “non-Aryan” racial groups (Staudenmaier 2009, 52).
Even contemporary Masons exclude women from consecrations of their
lodges. In this context, it is important to point out that in the Masonic
tarot, the Fool (the tarot ‘signature’ card representing the subject of the
initiatory/evolutionary journey) is inevitably white, male, and young.
Berger (1969) assumed that Western societies would experience
decline of spiritual and religious belief, and increased secularization.
15. For example, some authors will simply state truths as obvious, self-evident,
and needing no authority, investigation, or elaboration. This questionable
(and one would think academically transparent) rhetorical device is used, for
example, by Place (2005, 75) who makes bald faced rhetorical claims about
contested ideological frameworks without even attempting to back his state-
ments up. For example, referencing the mystical vision of Levi, Place echoes
elite ideology in the form of justifications of gender, and mystical cosmic
dances between good and evil (Sosteric, unpublished), and asserts the ver-
acity of said mystical truths as ‘sophisticated mystical vision’, self-evident,
and requiring ‘no authority to verify its timeless truth.’
380 © Canadian Journal of Sociology/Cahiers canadiens de sociologie 39(3) 2014
Berger himself has retracted the thesis, admitting that the secularization
project has failed miserably, but rather than giving religion, spirituality,
and the occult another look, Berger echoes earlier dismissals by rejecting
spiritual and religious belief as “dripping with reactionary supernatural-
ism,” and draws a boundary around its discussion (except as object of
scholarly derision), excluding it as “beyond the pale at self-respecting
faculty parties” (Berger 1999, 4). This is unfortunate. When talk of the
sociology of occult means that you could risk the respect of your col-
leagues, scholars are likely to accept the canonical status quo and find
other research interests.
This paper defends the need for a new sociology of tarot, occult, and
ideology, and an open discussion of the significance and relevance of
occult knowledge and practices. Note, however, that it is more than just
social class, gender, ethnic, or ideological interest that is at stake here.
There is a sociological question raised by all this: “Why do spiritual-
ity, religion, and the occult continue to hold such traction?” The implicit
and probably unspoken (except at closed faculty parties) assumption of
those who follow Berger probably invokes stupidity, incredulity, and ir-
rationality, but this is hardly an explanation at all. People are not stupid
and they do not, in general, believe things for no reason (Sosteric, Under
Review). Better causes need to be established. Elites seem to believe
in the tarot because it has been constructed by their members to reflect
(and help distribute) an ideology supportive of hierarchy, privilege, and
control.
Still others, like psychologists, have been critical of spiritual be-
liefs since Freud’s (2012) dismissal of religion as an infantile delusion,
yet some adopt the tarot as a fountain of mystical/archetypal wisdom
in pretty much the same way as established by occult elites. There is
also a very long history of very smart people being interested in religion,
spirituality, and mystical phenomenon (Verselius 2007). William James,
father of American psychology, took religion and mystical experience
seriously not as an example of something else (e.g. as a class opiate,
or as providing social solidarity, or as a sacred canopy, or as a stepping
stone from our superstitious past into our rational future), but as some-
thing worthy of direct and engaged investigation (James 1982). Are these
people stupid, irrational, and reactionary as well? Or, moving out of the
realm of scholarly inquiry, why does the tarot remain so popular, or why
do occult beliefs in general enjoy ongoing popularity. Can it all be dis-
missed as naivety or elite ideology, or is there something else going on
with tarot and religion not yet identified by sociologists?
Hints may be offered here. In my sociology of religion class, for ex-
ample, I explore the opportunistic nature of religion and spiritual beliefs.
A Sociology of Tarot 381
It turns out that when one examines the history of religion from a trans-
disciplinary perspective (Lundskow 2008), religious and spiritual beliefs
are, as I argue in the course, opportunistic. That is, it is not just tarot that
becomes a virtual Rorschach suitable for ideological impregnation by
whatever ‘special interest’ group happens to come along; rather, spiritu-
ality and religion in general represent themselves as suitable for the pro-
jection of a political, economic, and other special interests. Religion and
spirituality come to express — always and wherever they are found —
the social order, environmental realities, and even economic exigencies
of a particular society at a particular time. Note however, that elites do
not have unilateral control over the consciousness of the masses. Because
religion is a resource, spirituality is a (arguably poorly) contested realm.
It is the case that progressive or reactionary economic, political, and even
gender interests may be inscribed into religious texts.
There is some work in this area. Owen (2004) has identified the
spiritualism of late Victorian England as a practice and belief system out-
side the dominant patriarchy of the time, and other more contemporary
examples may be found, as for example the grass roots, feminist compat-
ible spirituality of Starhawk (Rigiglioso 2005). Religion and spirituality
as resource may help explain why it remains a continual thorn in the
side of the pundits of secularization. Nevertheless, despite the possibil-
ity of progressive spirituality, the question still remains, “Why do the
masses accept these systems so uncritically?” or “Why do reactionary
belief systems retain traction?” The persistence of the tarot may, as we
have seen, be linked not only to elite machination, infantile fantasy, or
opiate derived delusion, but also to basic human needs, needs that are not
filled by the empty secularity of an ‘enlightened’ world (Sosteric 2013).
In other words, there is a real psychological thing (a rational thing, an
emotional, thing, even a human thing) going on here, and this thing must
be taken at face value to be legitimate. Psychologists of the humanistic
school have taken the thing seriously in acknowledging needs and mo-
tivations beyond food, water, and shelter, at least since Maslow, who
formalized a ‘positive theory of motivation,’ recognized the ‘need’ for
self-actualization and transcendence (Maslow 1943). Others also take it
seriously as well, suggesting, for example, that people enter into esoteric
‘cultic’ communities (tarot being one, generic new age belief systems
being another) for rational reasons; for example, because they are dis-
satisfied with solutions offered by religion and science (Jorgensen 1982;
Laqueur 1996). In this context individuals may gravitate towards and ac-
cept tarot as the “bible of bibles” Freemasons make it out to be, because
they are attempting to satisfy deep needs for spirituality and meaning
382 © Canadian Journal of Sociology/Cahiers canadiens de sociologie 39(3) 2014
(Sosteric 2013), needs not met, or met inadequately, through other av-
enues of spiritual or religious experience.
Finally, a third reason for continued belief in the occult, spiritual,
mystical, esoteric, mystery traditions may be because they represent
real experiences, real revelation, and real gnosis that undermine normal
taken-for-granted reality of our regular 3D world (Lynch 1977; Sosteric
Under Review). This suggestion may strike readers as scientific heresy,
as indeed it is. But the alternative is to dismiss the collective experiences
of billions of people throughout history who have believed in mystical
realms beyond the mundane, but also the individual experiences of schol-
ars who have had some powerful mystical experiences (e.g. Castaneda
1985). I find myself in this group of scholars whose interests were per-
haps not initially scholarly, but mystical, and whose mystical experiences
“broke open the head” (Pinchbeck 2003) and led them to question the
materialist foundation of science. Such experiences are of deep scholarly
interest (Forman 1999), and fit very well into the gnostic experiences
reported by Western mystics down the ages (Versluis 2002).
Just as many other scholars use experience to develop scholarly
insight, my experiences with tarot, mysticism, and gnostic traditions,
have lead me to new sociological understandings. This raises scholarly
questions, none of which can be served by out-of-hand, anti-scholarly
dismissal. Western mystery schools, occult traditions, even established
exoteric institutions like the Roman Catholic Church, all justify their
positions, their tools, their bibles, their tarot books, by ascribing them to
real mystical, magical, experiences. Christian are told to believe in the
bible because it is the word of God, expressed through the mystical rev-
elation of the prophets. Buddhists follow Buddhists tracts because they
represent the mystical revelation of Buddha. Freemasons and Protestant
clerics offer the tarot as the “bible of bibles” and support its authority in
the same way, with claims for its antiquity, and linkages to the mystical
experiences of authoritative personages (e.g. Hermes Trismegistus, the
Egyptian god Thoth, etc.). This is nothing new. James (1982) said that all
religions derive from somebody’s mystical experiences. The point in this
paper is simply that gnostic traditions, the words of the mystics, occult
‘wisdom’ traditions, ‘mystical tools’ like the tarot, deserve serious and
critical inquiry and analysis as such, and there is good reason to apply
sociological analysis here. People who have mystical experiences often
impress upon them their social class, gender, ethnic, political, and eco-
nomic biases. Nowhere do we find ‘pure’ gnostic truth. Everywhere we
find opportunistic imprints on spiritual ‘revelation.’ The problem is, if we
dismiss spirituality and religion as nothing more than ideology, as salve
against existential crises, or as infantile fantasy, not only do we miss an
A Sociology of Tarot 383
a respectful, but critical, turn. Head (2012), for example, embraces tarot
as a way to bring depth to the experience of being queer. He uses tarot
(admittedly the Masonic version) to embrace pride and justify queerness.
The point is, the space is there. As sociologists we have but only to move
in and fill it.
Filling in the religious, spiritual, and occult spaces will no doubt be a
challenge, and perhaps one of the biggest challenges will be overcoming
scholarly prejudice and actually taking the areas of interest seriously.
There have always been attempts to dismiss the investigation of reli-
gion, spirituality, and other boundary phenomenon (Gyimesi 2012; Som-
mer 2012). Nevertheless, while skeptics certainly abound, research into
boundary areas shows remarkable longevity (Kloosterman 2012) with
notable intellectuals often coming down on the side of belief (Sommer
2012). No doubt there will be instances of dismissive ridicule (Stauden-
maier 2009), even outright censure, but such reactions do not represent
serious open minded scientific attitudes, but prejudice and fear of the
kind associated with religion and dogma, and not science and truth. The
whole thing has resulted in a “paucity of responsible scholarship [and]
existing research in this area [that] is thin, often neglected, and of inevit-
ably uneven quality” (Staudenmaier 2009, 48 - 49). For reasons outlined
in this paper and more, it is a good time to begin alleviating this lacuna,
especially now, as there is a growing recognition of the significance of
the sacred, religious, boundary phenomenon which are no longer easy
to dismiss as mere epiphenomena, but must be taken as significant, im-
portant, and in desperate need of analysis, attention, and understanding
(Redden 2011).
Acknowledgements
The author would like to thank Dr. Mike Gismondi and the anonymous
reviewers for their helpful comments on earlier drafts of this article.
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