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Baron '''Giulio Cesare Andrea Evola''' ({{IPA-it|ˈɛːvola}};<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.dizionario.rai.it/poplemma.aspx?lid=61429&r=90351 |title=Evola cogn. |website=dizionario.rai.it |publisher=] Dizionario d'Ortografia e di Pronunzia |access-date=February 13, 2017}}</ref> 19 May 1898 |
Baron '''Giulio Cesare Andrea Evola ''' ({{IPA-it|ˈɛːvola}};<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.dizionario.rai.it/poplemma.aspx?lid=61429&r=90351 |title=Evola cogn. |website=dizionario.rai.it |publisher=] Dizionario d'Ortografia e di Pronunzia |access-date=February 13, 2017}}</ref> 19 May 1898 – 11 June 1974), better known as '''Julius Evola''' ({{IPAc-en|ˈ|ʤ|u|l|j|ə|s|_|ɛ|ˈ|v|oʊ|l|ə}}), was an Italian ], painter, and ]. According to the scholar Franco Ferraresi, "Evola’s thought can be considered one of the most radical and consistent anti-egalitarian, anti-liberal, ], and anti-popular systems in the twentieth century. It is a singular (though not necessarily original) blend of several schools and traditions, including ], Eastern doctrines, traditionalism, and the all-embracing ] of the interwar ] with which Evola had a deep personal involvement."<ref>Ferraresi, Franco. ''Threats to Democracy: The Radical Right in Italy after the War''. Princeton University Press, 2012. p. 44</ref> | ||
Historian Aaron Gillette described Evola as "one of the most influential fascist racists in Italian history."<ref name="Aaron Gillette 2002">Aaron Gillette. ''''. London: Routledge, 2003.</ref> Evola was admired by the Italian ] leader ].<ref name=HorowitzMussolini>Horowitz, Jason. "". ], February 2017</ref> He idolized the |
Historian Aaron Gillette described Evola as "one of the most influential fascist racists in Italian history."<ref name="Aaron Gillette 2002">Aaron Gillette. ''''. London: Routledge, 2003.</ref> Evola was admired by the Italian ] leader ].<ref name=HorowitzMussolini>Horowitz, Jason. "". ], February 2017</ref> He idolized the ]. He admired SS head ], whom he knew personally.<ref name="Aaron Gillette 2002" /> Evola spent ] working for the Nazi ].<ref name=Coogan/> During his trial in 1951, Evola denied being a Fascist and instead referred to himself as a ‘superfascist’. Concerning this statement, historian Elisabetta Cassina Wolff wrote that "It is unclear whether this meant that Evola was placing himself above or beyond Fascism."<ref name=Wolff/> | ||
Evola was the "chief ideologue" of Italy's terrorist radical right after World War II.<ref name=Payne/> He continues to influence contemporary ] movements |
Evola was the "chief ideologue" of Italy's terrorist radical right after World War II.<ref name=Payne/> He continues to influence contemporary ] movements.<ref name=Payne>Stanley G. Payne. ''A History of Fascism, 1914–1945''. University of Wisconsin Press, 1996</ref><ref name="ReferenceA">]. ''Black Sun: Aryan Cults, Esoteric Nazism, and the Politics of Identity''. NYU Press, 2001</ref><ref>Jake Romm. "". ]. February 2017</ref><ref name=HorowitzGlobe>Jason Horowitz. "". ]. February 2017</ref> | ||
Many of Evola's theories and writings were centered on his idiosyncratic ], occultism, and esoteric religious studies,<ref name="Furlong 2011" /><ref name=occult/><ref name=Coogan/> and this aspect of his work has influenced ]ists and |
Many of Evola's theories and writings were centered on his idiosyncratic ], ], and esoteric religious studies,<ref name="Furlong 2011" /><ref name=occult/><ref name=Coogan/> and this aspect of his work has influenced ]ists and esotericists. Evola also advocated domination and rape of women because he saw it "as a natural expression of male desire"; this ] outlook stemmed from his extreme right views on ]s, which demanded absolute submission from women.<ref name="Furlong 2011" /><ref name=occult/><ref name=Coogan/><ref name=Merelli/> | ||
== |
==Early Years== | ||
Giulio Cesare Andrea Evola was born in Rome to a minor aristocratic family of Sicilian origins. He was a ]. Little is known about his early upbringing except that he considered it irrelevant. Evola studied engineering in Rome, but did not complete his studies because he "did not want to be associated in any way with ] academic recognition and titles such as doctor and engineer."<ref name="Furlong 2011">Paul Furlong, ''''. London: Routledge, 2011. {{ISBN|9780203816912}}</ref>{{rp|3}}<ref name="Evola, Cinabro">Julius Evola, Il Camino del Cinabro, 1963</ref> | |||
In his teenage years, Evola immersed himself in painting—which he considered one of his natural talents—and literature, including ] and ]. He was introduced to philosophers such as ] and ]. Other early philosophical influences included ] and ].<ref>Roger Griffin, Matthew Feldman. ''Fascism: Post-war fascisms''. Taylor & Francis, 2004. p. 219</ref> | |||
===Early years=== | |||
Giulio Cesare Andrea Evola was born in Rome to a ] family of minor aristocracy. He was occasionally attributed with the title "Baron". Little is known about his early upbringing except that he considered it irrelevant. Evola studied engineering in Rome and was involved in the Italian social and artistic ] movement until he broke with a leading figure. He did not complete his studies on the grounds that he "did not want to be associated in any way with ] academic recognition and titles such as doctor and engineer."<ref>Furlong, Paul. "Social and Political Thought of Julius Evola". Routledge, 2011, p. 12.</ref> He joined the artillery as an officer in the First World War. Returning to civilian life, Evola was a painter and poet in the ] movement.<ref name ="Furlong 2011">Paul Furlong, ''''. London: Routledge, 2011. ISBN 9780203816912</ref>{{rp|3}}<ref name="Evola, Cinabro">Julius Evola, Il Camino del Cinabro, 1963</ref> | |||
Evola served in ] as an ] ] on the ]. He was attracted to the ] and after the war, Evola briefly associated with ]'s ] movement. He became a prominent representative of ]ism in Italy through his painting, poetry, and collaboration on the briefly published journal, ''Revue Bleu''. In 1922, after concluding that avant-garde art was becoming ] and stiffened by academic conventions, he reduced his focus on artistic expression such as painting and poetry.<ref>G.Evola, ''Il Camino del Cinabro'', 1963</ref>{{primary inline|date=July 2017}} | |||
Evola's early philosophical influences included ], ], ], and ].<ref>Roger Griffin, Matthew Feldman. ''Fascism: Post-war fascisms''. Taylor & Francis, 2004. p. 219</ref> | |||
==Works== | |||
A keen mountaineer, Evola described the experience as a source of revelatory spiritual experience. After his return from the war, Evola experimented with drugs and magic until, around age 23, Evola considered suicide. He claimed that he avoided suicide thanks to a revelation he had while reading an early Buddhist text, which dealt with shedding all forms of identity other than absolute transcendence.<ref name="Furlong 2011" /> Evola would later publish the text ''The Doctrine of Awakening'', which he regarded as a repayment of his debt to the doctrine of the ] for saving him from suicide.<ref name=forum/> | |||
===Pagan Imperialism=== | |||
In 1928, Evola wrote a violent attack on Christianity titled ''Pagan Imperialism'', which proposed transforming fascism into a system consonant with ancient Roman values and the ancient Mystery traditions. Evola proposed that fascism should be vehicle for reinstating the caste-system and aristocracy of antiquity. Although Evola invoked the term fascism in this text, his diatribe against the Catholic Church was criticized by both the fascist regime and the Vatican itself. ] argued that the text was an attack on fascism as it stood at the time of writing, but noted that ] made use of it in order to threaten the Vatican with the possibility of an "anti-clerical fascism".<ref name="Furlong 2011" /><ref name=gregorpagan>Gregor, A James ''The Search for Neofascism: The Use and Abuse of Social Science''. Cambridge University Press, 2006. pp. 89–91</ref> On account of Evola's sentiment, the Vatican backed right-wing Catholic journal ''Revue Interlationale de Sociétés Secretètes'' published an article in April 1928 entitled "Un Sataniste Italien: Julius Evola."<ref name=Coogan/> | |||
===Revolt Against the Modern World=== | |||
===Occultism and Esotericism=== | |||
Evola's '']'' is a text that promotes the mythology of an ancient ]. In this work, Evola attempted to describe the features of his idealized traditional society. Evola argued that modernity represented a serious decline from an ideal society. He argued in that in the postulated Golden age, religious and temporal power were united. He wrote that society had not been founded on priestly rule, but by warriors expressing spiritual power. In mythology, he saw evidence of the West's superiority over the East. Moreover, he claimed that the traditional elite had the ability to access power and knowledge through a hierarchical version of magic which differed from the lower "superstitious and fraudulent" forms of magic.<ref name="Furlong 2011" /> Evola insists on "nonmodern forms, institutions, and knowledge" as being necessary to produce a "real renewal ... in those who are still capable of receiving it."<ref name=Versluis/> The text was "immediately recognized by ] and other intellectuals who allegedly advanced ideas associated with Tradition."<ref name=Wolff/> ], one of Evola's closest friends, was a fascist sympathizer associated with the Romanian fascist ]. <ref name=Coogan/> Evola was aware of the importance of myth from his readings of ], one of the key intellectual influences on fascism.<ref name=Coogan/> ] described ''Revolt Against the Modern World'' as "really dangerous."<ref name=Sedgwick>Mark Sedgwick. ''Against the Modern World: Traditionalism and the Secret Intellectual History of the Twentieth Century''. Oxford University Press, 2009</ref> | |||
====Magical Idealism==== | |||
] wrote that "Evola's first philosophical works from the 'twenties were dedicated to reshaping neo-Idealism from a philosophy of Absolute Spirit and mind into a philosophy of the "absolute individual" and action."<ref name=Sheehan/> Accordingly, Evola developed the doctrine of "magical idealism", which held that "the Ego must understand that everything that seems to have a reality independent of it is nothing but an illusion, caused by its own deficiency."<ref name=Sheehan/> For Evola, this ever-increasing unity with the absolute involved expanded participation in the absolute individual understood as unconstrained liberty, and therefore unconditioned power.<ref name="Furlong 2011" /> In his 1925 work ''Essays on Magical Idealism'', Evola declared that "God does not exist. The Ego must create him by making itself divine."<ref name=Sheehan/> | |||
===Mystery of the Grail=== | |||
According to Sheehan, in further developing his theories, Evola discovered the power of metaphysical mythology, leading to his advocacy of supra-rational intellectual intuition over discursive knowledge, since for him, discursive knowledge separates man from Being.<ref name=Sheehan/> Sheehan stated that this was a position which is a theme in certain interpretations of Western philosophers such as ], ], and ], which Evola exaggerated and actualized.<ref name=Sheehan>Thomas Sheehan. ''Myth and Violence: The Fascism of Julius Evola and Alain de Benoist''. Social Research, XLVIII, 1 (Spring, 1981). 45-73</ref> Evola would later write: | |||
Evola's text '']'' discarded Christian interpretations of the ]. Evola wrote that the Grail "symbolizes the principle of an immortalizing and transcendent force connected to the primordial state...The mystery of the Grail is a mystery of a warrior initiation." He held that the Ghibellines, who fought the Guelph for control of Northern and central Italy in the thirteenth century, had within them the residual influences of pre-Christian Celtic and Nordic traditions that represented his conception of the Grail myth. He also held that the ] represented a regression of the castes, since the merchant caste took over from the warrior caste.<ref name=Sedgwick/> In the epilogue to this text Evola argued that the '']'', regardless of whether it was authentic or not, was a cogent representation of modernity.<ref name=Barber>Richard W. Barber. ''The Holy Grail: Imagination and Belief''. Harvard University Press, 2004</ref> Historian ] said: "Evola mixes rhetoric, prejudice, scholarship, and politics into a strange version of the present and future, but in the process he brings together for the first time interest in the esoteric and in conspiracy theory which characterize much of the later Grail literature."<ref name=Barber/> | |||
===Doctrine of Awakening=== | |||
{{blockquote|The truths that allow us to understand the world of Tradition are not those that can be "learned" or "discussed." They either are or are not. We can only ''remember'' them, and that happens when we are freed from the obstacles represented by various human constructions (chief among these are the results and methods of the authorized "researchers") and have awakened the capacity to ''see'' from the nonhuman viewpoint, which is the same as the Traditional viewpoint. ... Traditional truths have always been held to be essentially ''non-human''.<ref name=Sheehan/>}} | |||
In ''The Doctrine of Awakening'', Evola argued that the ] could be held to represent true Buddhism.<ref name=forum/> His interpretation of Buddhism is that it was intended to be anti-democratic. He believed that Buddhism revealed the essence of an "Aryan" tradition that had become corrupted and lost in the West. He believed it coud be interpreted to reveal the superiority of a warrior caste.<ref name=forum/> ] described Evola's work on Buddhism as exhibiting Nietzschean influence,<ref>Harry Oldmeadow. ''Journeys East: 20th Century Western Encounters with Eastern Religious Traditions''. World Wisdom, Inc, 2004. p. 369</ref> but Evola criticized Nietzsche's anti-ascetic prejudice.<ref name=forum>T. Skorupski. ''''. Routledge, 2005</ref> The book "received the official approbation of the Pāli society", and was published by a reputable Orientalist publisher.<ref name=forum/> Evola's interpretation of Buddhism, as put forth in his article "Spiritual Virility in Buddhism", is in conflict with the post-WWII scholarship of the Orientalist ], which argues that the viewpoint that Buddhism advocates universal benevolence is legitimate.<ref>Donald S. Lopez. ''Curators of the Buddha: The Study of Buddhism Under Colonialism''. University of Chicago Press, 1995. p. 177</ref> ] stated that Evola's writing on Buddhism was a vehicle for his own theories, but was a far from accurate rendition of the subject, and he held that much the same could be said of Evola's writing on Hermeticism.<ref name=Versluis>Arthur Versluis. ''Magic and Mysticism: An Introduction to Western Esoteric Traditions''. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2007. p. 144-145</ref> ] was inspired to become a ] from reading Evola's text ''The Doctrine of Awakening'' in 1945 while hospitalized in ].<ref name=forum/> | |||
===Metaphysics of War=== | |||
Evola developed a doctrine of the "two natures", the natural world and the primordial "world of 'Being'", which he believed imposes form and quality on lower matter and creates a hierarchical "great chain of Being."<ref name=Sheehan/> He considered "spiritual virility" to signify orientation towards this postulated transcendent principle.<ref name=Sheehan/> And he held that the State should reflect this "ordering from above" and consequent hierarchical differentiation of individuals according to their "organic preformation" which "gathers, preserves, and refines one's talents and qualifications for determinate functions."<ref name=Sheehan/> | |||
In the posthumously published collection of writings, ''Metaphysics of War'', Evola, in line with the ] ], explored the viewpoint that war could be a spiritually fulfilling experience. He proposed the necessity of a transcendental orientation in a warrior.<ref>Lennart Svensson. ''Ernst Junger – A Portrait''. Manticore Books, 2016. p. 202</ref> | |||
=== |
===American "Civilization"=== | ||
] has written that Evola's 1945 essay ''"American 'Civilization'"'' described America as "the final stage of European decline into the 'interior formlessness' of vacuous individualism, conformity and vulgarity under the universal ] of money-making." According to Goodrick-Clarke, Evola argued that America's "mechanistic and rational philosophy of progress combined with a mundane horizon of prosperity to transform the world into an enormous suburban shopping mall."<ref name="ReferenceA"/> | |||
Evola was introduced to esotericism by the early supporter of fascism Arturo Reghini, who sought to promote a "cultured magic" opposed to Christianity. Reghini introduced Evola to the traditionalist ]. In 1927, Reghini and Evola, along with other Italian esotericists, founded the '']'' (the ] Group).<ref name="Furlong 2011" /> The purpose of this group was to attempt to bring the members' individual identities into such a superhuman state of power and awareness that they would be able to exert a magical influence on the world. The group employed techniques from Buddhist, Tantric, and rare Hermetic texts.<ref>Nevill Drury. ''The Dictionary of the Esoteric: 3000 Entries on the Mystical and Occult Traditions''. Motilal Banarsidass Publ., 2004. p. 96</ref> The group aimed to provide a "soul" to the burgeoning Fascist movement of the time through the revival of ancient Roman ], and influence the fascist regime through esotericism.<ref>Isotta Poggi. "Alternative Spirituality in Italy." In: James R. Lewis, J. Gordon Melton. ''Perspectives on the New Age.'' SUNY Press, 1992. Page 276.</ref><ref name="Furlong 2011" /> Articles on occultism from the Ur Group were later published in the text ''Introduction to Magic''.<ref>Gregor, A James ''The Search for Neofascism: The Use and Abuse of Social Science''. Cambridge University Press, 2006. p. 89</ref><ref name="Gary Lachman 2012. p. 215">Gary Lachman. ''Politics and the Occult: The Left, the Right, and the Radically Unseen''. Quest Books, 2012. p. 215</ref> Reghini's support of ] would however prove a bone of contention for Evola; accordingly, Evola broke with Reghini in 1928.<ref name="Furlong 2011" /> Reghini himself broke from Evola, accusing Evola of plagiarizing his thought in the book ''Pagan Imperialism''.<ref name=Coogan/> Evola on the other hand blamed Reghini for the premature publication of ''Pagan Imperialism''.<ref name="Furlong 2011" /> Evola's later work owed considerable debt to ]'s text ''Crisis of the Modern World'',<ref name=Versluis/> though he diverged from Guénon on the issue of the relationship between warriors and priests.<ref name="Furlong 2011" /> | |||
=== |
===Ride the Tiger=== | ||
EC Wolff noted that in ''Ride the Tiger'' "Evola argued that the fight against modernity was lost. The only thing a ‘real man’ could just do was to ride the tiger of modernity patiently". Evola wrote that the events of the period would have to run their course but he "did not exclude the possibility of action in the future." He argued that one should be ready to intervene when the tiger "is tired of running." <ref name=Wolff/> | |||
] notes that, "Evola sets up the ideal of the “active nihilist” who is prepared to act with violence against modern decadence."<ref name="ReferenceA"/> According to European Studies professor Paul Furlong, this text presents Evola's view that the potential "elite" should immunize itself from modernity and use "right wing anarchism" to rebel against it.<ref name="Furlong 2011" /> | |||
==Occultism and Esoteriscm== | |||
Evola wrote prodigiously on Eastern mysticism, tantra, ], the myth of the ] and western esotericism.<ref name="Furlong 2011" /> German Egyptologist and esoteric scholar Florian Ebeling has noted that Evola's text '']'' is viewed as an "extremely important work on Hermeticism" in the eyes of ].<ref>Florian Ebeling. ''The Secret History of Hermes Trismegistus: Hermeticism from Ancient to Modern Times''. Cornell University Press, 2007. p. 138</ref> In the context of his work in this area, Evola gave particular focus to Cesare della Riviera's text ''Il Mondo Magico degli Heroi'', which he later republished in modern Italian, and which he held to be consonant with the goals of "high magic" - the reshaping of the earthly human into a transcendental 'god man'. He held that through this text the alleged "timeless" Traditional science was able to come to lucid expression in spite of the "coverings" added to it in order to prevent the accusations of the church and other "scoria."<ref name=Hermeticism/> The psychologist ] described Evola's ''The Hermetic Tradition'' as a "magisterial account of Hermetic philosophy", though Evola rejected Jung's interpretation of alchemy.<ref name=Hermeticism>''''. BRILL, 2016</ref> The philosopher Glenn Alexander Magee, in ''Hegel and the Hermetic Tradition'', favored Evola's interpretation over that of Jung.<ref>Glenn Alexander Magee. ''Hegel and the Hermetic Tradition''. Cornell University Press, 2008. p. 200</ref> ] was the president of the Nazi-dominated ].<ref>Anton Shekhovtsov. ''. ''Totalitarian Movements and Political Religions'' 9/4 (2008), pp. 491-506.</ref> In 1988, a journal devoted to Hermetic thought published a section of Evola's book and described it as "Luciferian."<ref name=Coogan/> | |||
Around 1920, Evola's interests led him into ], ], and "supra-rational" studies. He began reading various ] texts and gradually delved deeper into the occult, ], ], and ] studies, particularly ]an ] and ] ] ]. A keen mountaineer, Evola described the experience as a source of revelatory spiritual experiences. After his return from the war, Evola experimented with ] and magic. | |||
When he was about 23 years old, Evola considered suicide. He claimed that he avoided suicide thanks to a revelation he had while reading an early Buddhist text that dealt with shedding all forms of identity other than absolute transcendence.<ref name="Furlong 2011" /> Evola would later publish the text ''The Doctrine of Awakening'', which he regarded as a repayment of his debt to the doctrine of ] for saving him from suicide.<ref name=forum/> | |||
Evola's subsequent text '']'' promoted as valid mythology of an ancient ]. He attempted to convey the features of his idealized traditional society, and he argued that modernity represented a serious decline from such a society. He argued in that in the postulated Golden age, religious and temporal power were united, and that society was not founded on rule by priests, but by warriors expressing spiritual power - accordingly he saw in mythology evidence of the alleged superiority of the West over the East. Moreover, he claimed that the traditional elite had the ability to access power and knowledge through a hierarchical version of magic which differed utterly from lower, "superstitious and fraudulent", forms of magic.<ref name="Furlong 2011" /> In this text, Evola dismisses what he calls modern "knowledge" in toto, asserting that he wants nothing to do with what arises from the modern mentality. He insists instead on "nonmodern forms, institutions, and knowledge" as being necessary to produce a "real renewal ... in those who are still capable of receiving it."<ref name=Versluis/> The text was "immediately recognized by ] and other intellectuals who allegedly advanced ideas associated with Tradition."<ref name=Wolff/> ] was a fascist sympathizer associated with the Romanian fascist ], and one of Evola's closest friends, who was imprisoned in 1938 for his support of the ], but managed to avoid execution.<ref name=Coogan/> Evola was aware of the importance of myth from his readings of ], one of the key intellectual influences on fascism.<ref name=Coogan/> Famed author ] in a private letter described this text as "really dangerous."<ref name=Sedgwick/> | |||
Evola wrote prodigiously on Eastern mysticism, Tantra, ], the myth of the ] and ].<ref name="Furlong 2011" /> German Egyptologist and esoteric scholar Florian Ebeling has noted that Evola's '']'' is viewed as an "extremely important work on Hermeticism" in the eyes of ].<ref>Florian Ebeling. ''The Secret History of Hermes Trismegistus: Hermeticism from Ancient to Modern Times''. Cornell University Press, 2007. p. 138</ref> Evola gave particular focus to Cesare della Riviera's text ''Il Mondo Magico degli Heroi'', which he later republished in modern Italian. He held that Riviera's text was consonant with the goals of "high magic" – the reshaping of the earthly human into a transcendental 'god man'. According to Evola, the alleged "timeless" Traditional science was able to come to lucid expression through this text, in spite of the "coverings" added to it to prevent accusations from the church.<ref name=Hermeticism/> Though Evola rejected ]'s interpretation of alchemy, Jung described Evola's ''The Hermetic Tradition'' as a "magisterial account of Hermetic philosophy".<ref name=Hermeticism>''''. BRILL, 2016</ref> In ''Hegel and the Hermetic Tradition'', the philosopher Glenn Alexander Magee favored Evola's interpretation over that of Jung's.<ref>Glenn Alexander Magee. ''Hegel and the Hermetic Tradition''. Cornell University Press, 2008. p. 200</ref> In 1988, a journal devoted to Hermetic thought published a section of Evola's book and described it as "Luciferian."<ref name=Coogan/> | |||
Evola's text '']'' discarded the Christian interpretations of the mythical ], maintaining instead that the Grail "symbolizes the principle of an immortalizing and transcendent force connected to the primordial state and remaining present in the very period of ... involution or decadence ... The mystery of the Grail is a mystery of a warrior initiation." He held that the ], as opponents of the ] merchants and partisans of the ] who fought against them for control of Northern and central Italy in the thirteenth century, had within them residual influences of pre-Christian Celtic and Nordic initiatic traditions representing the Grail myth. He also held that the Guelf victory against the Ghibellines represented a regression of the castes, since the merchant caste took over from the warrior caste.<ref name=Sedgwick/> In the epilogue to this text Evola argued that the ] forgery the '']'', regardless of whether it was authentic or not, was a cogent representation of modernity.<ref name=Barber>Richard W. Barber. ''The Holy Grail: Imagination and Belief''. Harvard University Press, 2004</ref> Historian ] stated that in this book, "Evola mixes rhetoric, prejudice, scholarship, and politics into a strange version of the present and future, but in the process he brings together for the first time interest in the esoteric and in conspiracy theory which characterize much of the later Grail literature."<ref name=Barber/> The Nazi Grail seeker ] admired Julius Evola.<ref name=Rahn/> | |||
Evola later confessed that he was not a Buddhist, and that his text on Buddhism was meant to balance his earlier work on the Hindu ''tantras''.<ref name=forum/> Evola's interest in ] was spurred on by correspondence with Sir ].<ref name="Gary Lachman 2012. p. 215"/> Evola was attracted to the active aspect of tantra, and its claim to provide a practical means to spiritual experience, over the more "passive" approaches in other forms of Eastern spirituality.<ref>Kathleen Taylor. ''Sir John Woodroffe, Tantra and Bengal: 'An Indian Soul in a European Body?' ''. Routledge, 2012. p. 135</ref> In ''Tantric Buddhism in East Asia'', Richard K. Payne, Dean of the Institute of Buddhist Studies, argued that Evola manipulated Tantra in the service of right wing violence, and that the emphasis on "power" in ''The Yoga of Power'' gave insight into his mentality.<ref>Richard K. Payne. ''Tantric Buddhism in East Asia''. Simon and Schuster, 2006. p. 229</ref> | |||
In ''The Doctrine of Awakening'', Evola argued that the ] could be held to represent true Buddhism.<ref name=forum/> His interpretation of Buddhism is that it was intended to be anti-democratic, that it revealed the essence of an "aryan" tradition that had become corrupted and lost in the West, and that it coud be interpreted in such a way as to reveal the superiority of a warrior caste.<ref name=forum/> ] described Evola's work on Buddhism as exhibiting Nietzschean influence.<ref>Harry Oldmeadow. ''Journeys East: 20th Century Western Encounters with Eastern Religious Traditions''. World Wisdom, Inc, 2004. p. 369</ref> However, Evola criticized Nietzsche's anti-ascetic prejudice.<ref name=forum>T. Skorupski. ''''. Routledge, 2005</ref> The book "received the official approbation of the Pāli society", and was published by a reputable Orientalist publisher.<ref name=forum/> However, Evola's interpretation of Buddhism, as put forth in his article "Spiritual Virility in Buddhism", is in conflict with the post-WWII scholarship of the Orientalist ], which argues that the viewpoint that Buddhism advocates universal benevolence is legitimate.<ref>Donald S. Lopez. ''Curators of the Buddha: The Study of Buddhism Under Colonialism''. University of Chicago Press, 1995. p. 177</ref> ] stated that Evola's writing on Buddhism was a vehicle for his own theories, but was a far from accurate rendition of the subject, and he held that much the same could be said of Evola's writing on Hermeticism.<ref name=Versluis>Arthur Versluis. ''Magic and Mysticism: An Introduction to Western Esoteric Traditions''. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2007. p. 144-145</ref> ] was inspired to become a ] from reading Evola's text ''The Doctrine of Awakening'' in 1945 while hospitalized in ].<ref name=forum/> | |||
Evola later confessed that he was not a Buddhist, and that his text on Buddhism was meant to balance his earlier work on the Hindu ''tantras''.<ref name=forum/> Evola's interest in ] was spurred on by correspondence with Sir ].<ref name="Gary Lachman 2012. p. 215"/> Evola was attracted to the active aspect of tantra, and its claim to provide a practical means to spiritual experience, over the more "passive" approaches in other forms of Eastern spirituality.<ref>Kathleen Taylor. ''Sir John Woodroffe, Tantra and Bengal: 'An Indian Soul in a European Body?' ''. Routledge, 2012. p. 135</ref> In ''Tantric Buddhism in East Asia'', Richard K. Payne, Dean of the Institute of Buddhist Studies, argued that Evola manipulated Tantra in the service of right wing violence, and that the emphasis on "power" in ''The Yoga of Power'' gave insight into his mentality.<ref>Richard K. Payne. ''Tantric Buddhism in East Asia''. Simon and Schuster, 2006. p. 229</ref> For Evola, | |||
{{blockquote|The ethics of the path of the Left Hand and the disciplines lead to the destruction of human limitations (pasha), forms of anomia, or of something 'beyond good and evil', which are so extreme that they make Western supporters of the theory of the superman look like innocuous amateurs... We are dealing here with a liberty that... has no equivalent in the history of ideas.<ref name=occult/>}} | |||
Evola advocated that "differentiated individuals" following the ] use dark violent sexual powers against the modern world. For Evola, these "virile heroes" are both generous and cruel, possess the ability to rule, and commit "Dionysian" acts that might be seen as conventionally immoral. For Evola, the Left Hand path embraces violence as a means of transgression.<ref name=occult/>{{rp|217}} | Evola advocated that "differentiated individuals" following the ] use dark violent sexual powers against the modern world. For Evola, these "virile heroes" are both generous and cruel, possess the ability to rule, and commit "Dionysian" acts that might be seen as conventionally immoral. For Evola, the Left Hand path embraces violence as a means of transgression.<ref name=occult/>{{rp|217}} | ||
According to ] Evola's definition of spirituality can be found in ''Meditations on the Peaks'': "what has been successfully actualized and translated into a sense of superiority which is experienced inside by the soul, and a noble demeanor, which is expressed in the body."<ref>Gregor, A James ''The Search for Neofascism: The Use and Abuse of Social Science''. Cambridge University Press, 2006. pp. 101–102</ref> ] wrote that Evola's "rigorous ] spirituality speaks directly to those who reject absolutely the leveling world of democracy, capitalism, multi-racialism and technology at the outset of the twenty-first century. Their acute sense of cultural chaos can find powerful relief in his ideal of total renewal."<ref name="ReferenceA"/> ] wrote that to "read Evola is to take a trip through a weird and fascinating jungle of ancient mythologies, pseudo-ethnology, and transcendental mysticism that is enough to make any southern California consciousness-tripper feel quite at home."<ref name=sheehanterror>Thomas Sheehan. . ''The New York Review of Books'', Volume 27, Number 21 & 22, January 22, 1981</ref> | |||
In the posthumously published collection of writings, ''Metaphysics of War'', Evola, in line with the ] ], explored the viewpoint that war could be a spiritually fulfilling experience. He proposed the necessity of a transcendental orientation in a warrior.<ref>Lennart Svensson. ''Ernst Junger - A Portrait''. Manticore Books, 2016. p. 202</ref> Like Jünger, who coined the term "]", Evola was also very interested in the use of hallucinogenic drugs.<ref name=Coogan/> | |||
===Magical Idealism=== | |||
] sources the text ''Meditations on the Peaks'' for Evola's definition of spirituality as "actually what has been successfully actualized and translated into a sense of superiority which is experienced inside by the soul, and a noble demeanor, which is expressed in the body."<ref>Gregor, A James ''The Search for Neofascism: The Use and Abuse of Social Science''. Cambridge University Press, 2006. pp. 101-102</ref> ] wrote of Evola that his "rigorous ] spirituality speaks directly to those who reject absolutely the leveling world of democracy, capitalism, multiracialism and technology at the outset of the twenty-first century. Their acute sense of cultural chaos can find powerful relief in his ideal of total renewal."<ref name="ReferenceA"/> ] wrote that to "read Evola is to take a trip through a weird and fascinating jungle of ancient mythologies, pseudo-ethnology, and transcendental mysticism that is enough to make any southern California consciousness-tripper feel quite at home."<ref name=sheehanterror/> | |||
] wrote that "Evola's first philosophical works from the 'twenties were dedicated to reshaping neo-idealism from a philosophy of Absolute Spirit and mind into a philosophy of the "absolute individual" and action."<ref name=Sheehan/> Accordingly, Evola developed the doctrine of "magical idealism", which held that "the Ego must understand that everything that seems to have a reality independent of it is nothing but an illusion, caused by its own deficiency."<ref name=Sheehan/> For Evola, this ever-increasing unity with the "absolute individual" was consistent with unconstrained liberty, and therefore unconditional power.<ref name="Furlong 2011" /> In his 1925 work ''Essays on Magical Idealism'', Evola declared that "God does not exist. The Ego must create him by making itself divine."<ref name=Sheehan/> | |||
According to Sheehan, Evola discovered the power of metaphysical mythology while developing his theories. This led to his advocacy of supra-rational intellectual intuition over discursive knowledge. In Evola's view, discursive knowledge separates man from Being.<ref name=Sheehan/> Sheehan stated that this position is a theme in certain interpretations of Western philosophers such as ], ], and ] that was exaggerated by Evola.<ref name=Sheehan>Thomas Sheehan. ''Myth and Violence: The Fascism of Julius Evola and Alain de Benoist''. Social Research, XLVIII, 1 (Spring, 1981). 45–73</ref> Evola would later write: | |||
===Misogyny and Sexual Magic=== | |||
{{blockquote|The truths that allow us to understand the world of Tradition are not those that can be "learned" or "discussed." They either are or are not. We can only ''remember'' them, and that happens when we are freed from the obstacles represented by various human constructions (chief among these are the results and methods of the authorized "researchers") and have awakened the capacity to ''see'' from the nonhuman viewpoint, which is the same as the Traditional viewpoint ... Traditional truths have always been held to be essentially ''non-human''.<ref name=Sheehan/>}} | |||
Julius Evola believed that the alleged higher qualities expected of a man of a particular race were not those expected of a woman of the same race - that male principles are accentuated between races, while those of women are more alike and less differentiated. He held that "just relations between the sexes" involved women acknowledging their "inequality" with men.<ref name="Furlong 2011" /> | |||
Evola developed a doctrine of the "two natures": the natural world and the primordial "world of 'Being'". He believed that these "two natures" impose form and quality on lower matter and create a hierarchical "great chain of Being."<ref name=Sheehan/> He understood "spiritual virility" as signifying orientation towards this postulated transcendent principle.<ref name=Sheehan/> He held that the State should reflect this "ordering from above" and the consequent hierarchical differentiation of individuals according to their "organic preformation". By "organic preformation" he meant that which "gathers, preserves, and refines one's talents and qualifications for determinate functions."<ref name=Sheehan/> | |||
In 1925, Evola wrote the misogynist article "La donna come cosa" (''Woman as Thing'').<ref name=Payne/> Evola later quoted ]'s statement that "Woman cannot be superior except as woman, but from the moment in which she desires to emulate man she is nothing but a monkey." His comment on this statement was "Pure truth, whether or not it pleases the contemporary "feminist movements.""<ref>Roger Griffin, Matthew Feldman. ''Fascism: Post-war fascisms''. Taylor & Francis, 2004. p. 246</ref> Evola believed that ] was "the renunciation by woman of her right to be a woman".<ref>Franco Ferraresi. ''Threats to Democracy: The Radical Right in Italy after the War''. Princeton University Press, 2012. p. 220</ref> He held that a women "could traditionally participate in the sacred hierarchical order only in a mediated fashion through her relationship with a man."<ref name=Coogan/> He held, as a feature of his idealized gender relations, the Hindu ], which for him was a form of sacrifice indicating women's respect for patriarchal traditions.<ref>R. Ben-Ghiat, M. Fuller. ''Italian Colonialism''. Springer, 2016. p. 149</ref> He held that for the "pure, feminine" woman, "man is not perceived by her as a mere husband or lover, but as her lord."<ref name=Merelli/> Evola believed that women would find "true greatness" in "total subjugation to men."<ref name=Coogan/> | |||
===Ur-Group=== | |||
Evola regarded matriarchy and goddess religions as a symptom of decadence, and preferred a hyper-masculine, warrior ethos.<ref>J. Gordon Melton, Martin Baumann. ''Religions of the World: A Comprehensive Encyclopedia of Beliefs and Practices, 2nd Edition : A Comprehensive Encyclopedia of Beliefs and Practices''. ABC-CLIO, 2010. p. 1085</ref> Gillette noted that Evola maintained that: | |||
Evola was introduced to esotericism by Arturo Reghini, who was an early supporter of fascism. Reghini sought to promote a "cultured magic" opposed to Christianity and introduced Evola to the traditionalist ]. In 1927, Reghini and Evola, along with other Italian esotericists, founded the '']'' (the ] Group).<ref name="Furlong 2011" /> The purpose of this group was to attempt to bring the members' individual identities into such a superhuman state of power and awareness that they would be able to exert a magical influence on the world. The group employed techniques from Buddhist, Tantric, and rare Hermetic texts.<ref>Nevill Drury. ''The Dictionary of the Esoteric: 3000 Entries on the Mystical and Occult Traditions''. Motilal Banarsidass Publ., 2004. p. 96</ref> They aimed to provide a "soul" to the burgeoning Fascist movement of the time through the revival of ancient Roman ], and to influence the fascist regime through esotericism.<ref>Isotta Poggi. "Alternative Spirituality in Italy." In: James R. Lewis, J. Gordon Melton. ''Perspectives on the New Age.'' SUNY Press, 1992. Page 276.</ref><ref name="Furlong 2011" /> | |||
Articles on occultism from the Ur Group were later published in ''Introduction to Magic''.<ref>Gregor, A James ''The Search for Neofascism: The Use and Abuse of Social Science''. Cambridge University Press, 2006. p. 89</ref><ref name="Gary Lachman 2012. p. 215">Gary Lachman. ''Politics and the Occult: The Left, the Right, and the Radically Unseen''. Quest Books, 2012. p. 215</ref> Reghini's support of ] would however prove a bone of contention for Evola; accordingly, Evola broke with Reghini in 1928.<ref name="Furlong 2011" /> Reghini himself broke from Evola, accusing Evola of plagiarizing his thoughts in the book ''Pagan Imperialism''.<ref name=Coogan/> Evola on the other hand blamed Reghini for the premature publication of ''Pagan Imperialism''.<ref name="Furlong 2011" /> Evola's later work owed a considerable debt to ]'s text ''Crisis of the Modern World'',<ref name=Versluis/> though he diverged from Guénon on the issue of the relationship between warriors and priests.<ref name="Furlong 2011" /> | |||
{{blockquote|The ages of a civilization were gendered. The noble stages were masculine. Thus, following Otto Weininger, Evola claimed that these stages harmonized with the hierarchical, heroic, warlike, decisive and classical values that characterized men. The later, degenerate phases were feminine. Societies in these phases indulged in a lust of promiscuity, communism, natural rights, and general equality that were characteristic of women.<ref name="Aaron Gillette 2002"/>}} | |||
===Misogyny and Sexual Magic=== | |||
Evola was influenced by ], and was a proponent of the '']'' concept, as a model for his proposed ultra-fascist "Order."<ref name=Coogan/> ] noted the fundamental influence of ]'s misogynist book '']'' on Evola's dualism of male-female spirituality. According to Goodrich-Clarke, "Evola's celebration of virile spirituality was rooted in Weininger's work, which was widely translated by the end of the First World War."<ref name="ReferenceA"/> Unlike Weininger however, Evola believed that women needed to be conquered, not ignored.<ref name=Coogan/> Evola denounced homosexuality as "useless" for his purposes, but did not neglect sado-masochism, so long as sadism and masochism "are magnifications of an element potentially present in the deepest essence of eros."<ref name=Coogan/> Then, it would be possible to "extend, in a transcendental and perhaps ecstatic way, the possibilities of sex."<ref name=Coogan/> | |||
Julius Evola believed that the alleged higher qualities expected of a man of a particular race were not those expected of a woman of the same race. He held that "just relations between the sexes" involved women acknowledging their "inequality" with men.<ref name="Furlong 2011" /> In 1925, he wrote an article titled "La donna come cosa" (''Woman as Thing'').<ref name=Payne/> Evola later quoted ]'s statement that "Woman cannot be superior except as woman, but from the moment in which she desires to emulate man she is nothing but a monkey."<ref>Roger Griffin, Matthew Feldman. ''Fascism: Post-war fascisms''. Taylor & Francis, 2004. p. 246</ref> Evola believed that ] was "the renunciation by woman of her right to be a woman".<ref>Franco Ferraresi. ''Threats to Democracy: The Radical Right in Italy after the War''. Princeton University Press, 2012. p. 220</ref> He held that a woman "could traditionally participate in the sacred hierarchical order only in a mediated fashion through her relationship with a man."<ref name=Coogan/> He held, as a feature of his idealized gender relations, the Hindu ], which for him was a form of sacrifice indicating women's respect for patriarchal traditions.<ref>R. Ben-Ghiat, M. Fuller. ''Italian Colonialism''. Springer, 2016. p. 149</ref> He held that for the "pure, feminine" woman, "man is not perceived by her as a mere husband or lover, but as her lord."<ref name=Merelli/> Evola believed that women would find "true greatness" in "total subjugation to men."<ref name=Coogan/> | |||
Evola regarded matriarchy and goddess religions as a symptom of decadence, and preferred a hyper-masculine, warrior ethos.<ref>J. Gordon Melton, Martin Baumann. ''Religions of the World: A Comprehensive Encyclopedia of Beliefs and Practices, 2nd Edition : A Comprehensive Encyclopedia of Beliefs and Practices''. ABC-CLIO, 2010. p. 1085</ref> | |||
Evola held that women "played" with men, threatened their masculinity, and lured them into a "constrictive" grasp with their sexuality.<ref name="Aaron Gillette 2002" /> He wrote that "It should not be expected of women that they return to what they really are ... when men themselves retain only the semblance of true virility",<ref name=Merelli/> and lamented that "men instead of being in control of sex are controlled by it and wander about like drunkards..."<ref name=occult/> He believed that in Tantra and in ], in which he saw a strategy for aggression, he found the means to counter the "emasculated" West.<ref name=occult>Damon Zacharias Lycourinos. ''Occult Traditions''. Numen Books, 2012</ref> Accordingly, Evola advocated ],<ref name=Merelli/> the "ritual violation of virgins",<ref name=Coogan/> and "whipping women" as a means of "consciousness raising",<ref name=Coogan/> so long as these practices were done to the intensity required to produce the proper "liminal psychic climate."<ref name=Coogan/> He wrote that "as a rule, nothing stirs a man more than feeling the woman utterly exhausted beneath his own hostile rapture."<ref name=Merelli>Annalisa Merelli. "". ]. February 22, 2017</ref> | |||
Evola was influenced by ]; he was a proponent of the '']'' concept as a model for his proposed ultra-fascist "Order."<ref name=Coogan/> ] noted the fundamental influence of ]'s misogynist book '']'' on Evola's dualism of male-female spirituality. According to Goodrich-Clarke, "Evola's celebration of virile spirituality was rooted in Weininger's work, which was widely translated by the end of the First World War."<ref name="ReferenceA"/> Unlike Weininger, Evola believed that women needed to be conquered, not ignored.<ref name=Coogan/> Evola denounced ] as "useless" for his purposes. He did not neglect ], so long as sadism and masochism "are magnifications of an element potentially present in the deepest essence of ]."<ref name=Coogan/> Then, it would be possible to "extend, in a transcendental and perhaps ] way, the possibilities of sex."<ref name=Coogan/> | |||
Evola translated Weininger's ''Sex and Character'' into Italian, but was dissatisfied with this, so he wrote the text ''Eros and the Mysteries of Love: The Metaphysics of Sex'', where his views on sexuality were dealt with at length.<ref name=Coogan/><ref name="Furlong 2011" /> He referred to this text as the principal book he published in the post-war period.<ref name="Furlong 2011" /> ] described this text as Evola's "most interesting" work aside from '']''.<ref name=Versluis/> This book remains popular among many ] adherents.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Conner |first1=Randy P. |last2=Sparks |first2=David Hatfield |last3=Sparks |first3=Mariya |date=1997 |title=Cassell's Encyclopedia of Queer Myth, Symbol, and Spirit: Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and Transgender Lore |publisher=Cassell |page=136}}</ref> | |||
Evola held that women "played" with men, threatened their masculinity, and lured them into a "constrictive" grasp with their sexuality.<ref name="Aaron Gillette 2002" /> He wrote that "It should not be expected of women that they return to what they really are ... when men themselves retain only the semblance of true virility",<ref name=Merelli/> and lamented that "men instead of being in control of sex are controlled by it and wander about like drunkards".<ref name=occult/> He believed that in Tantra and in ], in which he saw a strategy for aggression, he found the means to counter the "emasculated" West.<ref name=occult>Damon Zacharias Lycourinos. ''Occult Traditions''. Numen Books, 2012</ref> According to Annalisa Merelli, Evola "went so far as to justify rape" because he saw it "as a natural expression of male desire".<ref name=Merelli/> Evola also said that the "ritual violation of virgins",<ref name=Coogan/> and "whipping women" were a means of "consciousness raising",<ref name=Coogan/> so long as these practices were done to the intensity required to produce the proper "liminal psychic climate".<ref name=Coogan/> He wrote that "as a rule, nothing stirs a man more than feeling the woman utterly exhausted beneath his own hostile rapture."<ref name=Merelli>Annalisa Merelli. "". ]. February 22, 2017</ref> | |||
===Racism and Mystical Aryanism=== | |||
====National Mysticism==== | |||
Evola translated Weininger's ''Sex and Character'' into Italian. Dissatisfied with simply translating Weininger's work, he wrote the text ''Eros and the Mysteries of Love: The Metaphysics of Sex'', where his views on sexuality were dealt with at length.<ref name=Coogan/><ref name="Furlong 2011" /> ] described this text as Evola's "most interesting" work aside from '']''.<ref name=Versluis/> This book remains popular among many New Age adherents.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Conner |first1=Randy P. |last2=Sparks |first2=David Hatfield |last3=Sparks |first3=Mariya |date=1997 |title=Cassell's Encyclopedia of Queer Myth, Symbol, and Spirit: Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and Transgender Lore |publisher=Cassell |page=136}}</ref> | |||
For his spiritual interpretation of the different racial psychologies, Evola found the work of German race theorist Ludwig Ferdinand Clauss invaluable. Clauss, like Evola, believed that physical race and spiritual race could diverge as a consequence of ].<ref name="Aaron Gillette 2002"/> Evola's racism included racism of the body, soul and spirit, giving primacy to the latter alleged factor, since, for Evola, "races only declined when their spirit failed."<ref name="ReferenceA"/> According to Wolff, | |||
==Racism and Mystical Aryanism== | |||
{{blockquote|Evola's ‘totalitarian’ or ‘spiritual’ racism was no milder than Nazi biological racism. It actually implied far greater consequences because it discriminated not only against the Jews, but all representatives of the modern western world. Evola's ambition was to elaborate an Italian version of racism and antisemitism, one that could be integrated into the Fascist project to create a New Man. Placed in an Italian context, Evola's totalitarian racism was supposed to contribute to a ‘purification process’ that would precede this new type of human being.<ref name=Wolff/>}} | |||
Evola's dissent from standard biological concepts of race had roots in his aristocratic elitism, since Nazi Völkisch ideology inadequately separated aristocracy from "commoners."<ref name=Coogan/> According to Furlong, Evola developed "the law of the regression of castes" in '']'' and other writings on racism from the 1930s and World War II period. In Evola's view "power and civilization have progressed from one to another of the four castes—sacred leaders, warrior nobility, bourgeoisie (economy, 'merchants') and slaves"<ref name="Furlong 2011" /> Furlong explains: "for Evola, the core of racial superiority lay in the spiritual qualities of the higher castes, which expressed themselves in physical as well as in cultural features, but were not determined by them. The law of the regression of castes places racism at the core of Evola's philosophy, since he sees an increasing predominance of lower races as directly expressed through modern mass democracies."<ref name="Furlong 2011" /> | |||
Prior to the end of War, Evola had frquently used the term "Aryan" to mean the nobility, who in his view were imbued with traditional spirituality. <ref name="Furlong 2011" /> Wolff notes that Evola seems to have stopped writing about race in 1945, but adds that the intellectual themes of Evola's writings were otherwise unchanged. Evola continued to write about elitism and his contempt for the weak. His "doctrine of the Aryan-Roman 'super-race was simply restated as a doctrine of the 'leaders of men'...no longer with reference to the SS, but to the mediaeval Teutonic knights of the Knights Templar, already mentioned in Rivolta."<ref name=Wolff/> | |||
Like ], Evola believed that mankind is living in the ] of the ] tradition, the Dark Age of unleashed, materialistic appetites. He argued that both Italian fascism and ] held hope for a reconstitution of the "celestial" ].<ref name=intellectuals>], ''Mussolini's Intellectuals: Fascist Social and Political Thought''. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2005.</ref> He drew on mythology of super-races and their decline, particularly alleged ]ns, and maintained that traces of their influence could be felt in Indo-European man, which he nevertheless felt devolved from those alleged higher forms.<ref name="Furlong 2011" /> Gregor noted: | |||
Evola spoke of "inferior non-European races"<ref name=Coogan>Kevin Coogan. ''Dreamer of the Day: Francis Parker Yockey and the Postwar Fascist International''. Autonomedia, 1999.</ref>. Peter Merkl wrote that "Evola was never prepared to discount the value of blood altogether". Evola wrote: "a certain balanced consciousness and dignity of race can be considered healthy" in a time where "the exaltation of the negro and all the rest, anticolonialist psychosis and integrationist fanatiscm all parallel phenomena in the decline of Europe and the West."<ref>Peter H. Merkl. ''Political Violence and Terror: Motifs and Motivations''. University of California Press, 1986. p. 85</ref> While not totally against race-mixing, in 1957, Evola wrote an article attributing the perceived acceleration of American decadence to the influence of "negroes" and the opposition to segregation. Furlong noted that this article is "among the most extreme in phraseology of any he wrote, and exhibits a degree of intolerance that leaves no doubt as to his deep prejudice against black people."<ref name="Furlong 2011" /> | |||
{{blockquote|In 1942, in the course of the Second World War, Fascist intellectuals published excoriating criticism of Evola’s racism. There were reviews of ''Sintesi di dottrina della razza'' that entirely dismantled the complex structure of Evola’s exposition. The argument was made that if the ''spirit'' of humankind were Evola’s concern, and there were Jews, or perhaps blacks, who displayed the heroic and sublime properties of the Hyperboreans, what difference did it make if that spirit were housed in “non-Aryan bodies”? Of what conceivable importance were physical properties when the real concern is with spirituality? In one of Fascism’s most important theoretical journals, Evola’s critic pointed out that many Nordic-Aryans, not to speak of Mediterranean Aryans, fail to demonstrate any Hyperborean properties. Instead, they make obvious their materialism, their sensuality, their indifference to loyalty and sacrifice, together with their consuming greed. How do they differ from “inferior” races, and why should anyone wish, in any way, to favor them?<ref>Gregor, A James ''The Search for Neofascism: The Use and Abuse of Social Science''. Cambridge University Press, 2006. p. 106</ref>}} | |||
===National Mysticism=== | |||
Concerning the relationship between "spiritual racism" and biological racism, Evola put forth the following viewpoint, which Furlong described as pseudoscientific: | |||
For his spiritual interpretation of the different racial psychologies, Evola found the work of German race theorist Ludwig Ferdinand Clauss invaluable. Like Evola, Clauss believed that physical race and spiritual race could diverge as a consequence of ].<ref name="Aaron Gillette 2002"/> Evola's racism included racism of the body, soul and spirit, giving primacy to the latter factor, writing that "races only declined when their spirit failed."<ref name="ReferenceA"/> | |||
Like ], Evola believed that mankind is living in the ] of the ] tradition—the Dark Age of unleashed, materialistic appetites. He argued that both Italian fascism and ] represented hope that the "celestial" Aryan race would be reconstituted.<ref name=intellectuals>], ''Mussolini's Intellectuals: Fascist Social and Political Thought''. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2005.</ref> He drew on mythological accounts of super-races and their decline, particularly the ]ns, and maintained that traces of hyperborean influence could be felt in Indo-European man. He felt that Indo-European men had devolved from these higher mythological races.<ref name="Furlong 2011" /> Gregor noted that several contemporary criticisms of Evola's theory were published : "In one of Fascism’s most important theoretical journals, Evola’s critic pointed out that many Nordic-Aryans, not to speak of Mediterranean Aryans, fail to demonstrate any Hyperborean properties. Instead, they make obvious their materialism, their sensuality, their indifference to loyalty and sacrifice, together with their consuming greed. How do they differ from 'inferior' races, and why should anyone wish, in any way, to favor them?"<ref>Gregor, A James ''The Search for Neofascism: The Use and Abuse of Social Science''. Cambridge University Press, 2006. p. 106</ref> | |||
{{blockquote|The factor of 'blood' or 'race' has its importance, because it is not psychologically - in the brain or the opinions of the individual - but in the very deepest forces of life that traditions live and act as typical formative energies. Blood registers the effects of this action, and indeed offers, through heredity, a matter that is already refined and pre-formed, such that through the generations, realisations similar to the original may be prepared and may be able to develop in a natural and almost spontaneous way.<ref name="Furlong 2011" />}} | |||
Concerning the relationship between "spiritual racism" and biological racism, Evola put forth the following viewpoint, which Furlong described as pseudo-scientific: "The factor of 'blood' or 'race' has its importance, because it is not psychologically—in the brain or the opinions of the individual—but in the very deepest forces of life that traditions live and act as typical formative energies. Blood registers the effects of this action, and indeed offers, through heredity, a matter that is already refined and pre-formed..."<ref name="Furlong 2011" /> | |||
====Antisemitism==== | |||
===Antisemitism=== | |||
Of the Jews, Evola endorsed the views provided by ], and viewed Jews as corrosive and anti-traditional, though he described ]'s more fanatical anti-Semitism as a paranoid ] which damaged the reputation of the Third Reich.<ref name="ReferenceA"/> In this conception, "The Jews were stigmatized, not as representatives of a biological race, but as the carriers of a world view, a way of being and thinking—simply put, a spirit—that corresponded to the ‘worst’ and ‘most decadent’ features of modernity: democracy, egalitarianism and materialism."<ref name=Wolff/> Evola took seriously a number of ]s and argued that the ] forgery '']'', which he believed to be true in principle if not specifically, accurately reflected the conditions of modernity.<ref name=Barber/><ref name="ReferenceA"/><ref name=religionfascism>Horst Junginger. ''The Study of Religion Under the Impact of Fascism''. BRILL, 2008. p. 136</ref> He believed that the ''Protocols'' "contain the plan for an occult war, whose objective is the utter destruction, in the non-Jewish peoples, of all tradition, class, aristocracy, and hierarchy, and of all moral, religious, and spiritual values."<ref name=religionfascism/> He also wrote the forward to the second Italian edition of the ''Protocols'' published by the Fascist ] in 1938.<ref name=religionfascism/><ref name=Dershowitz/> Following the murder of his friend ], the leader of the Fascist Romanian ], Evola expressed anti-Semitic sentiment in anticipation of a "talmudic, Israelite tyranny."<ref name="ReferenceA"/> However, Evola believed that Jews only had this "power" because of European "decadence" in modernity.<ref name=Coogan/> He also believed that one could be "Aryan", but have a "Jewish" soul, just as one could be "Jewish", but have an "Aryan" soul.<ref>Gary Lachman. ''Politics and the Occult: The Left, the Right, and the Radically Unseen''. Quest Books, 2012. p. 217</ref> Among such Jews of "sufficiently heroic, ascetic, and sacral" character to fit the latter category were, in Evola's view, Otto Weininger and ].<ref name=vitiated>Gregor, A James ''The Search for Neofascism: The Use and Abuse of Social Science''. Cambridge University Press, 2006. p. 105</ref> | |||
Evola endorsed ]{{'}}s views on the Jews. Though Evola viewed Jews as corrosive and anti-traditional, he described ]'s more fanatical anti-Semitism as a paranoid ] that damaged the reputation of the Third Reich.<ref name="ReferenceA"/> Evola's conception did not emphasize the Nazi racial conception of Jews as "representatives of a biological race"—in Evola's view the Jews were "the carriers of a world view...a spirit corresponded to the 'worst' and 'most decadent' features of modernity: democracy, egalitarianism and materialism."<ref name=Wolff/> | |||
Evola argued that '']''—whether or not a forgery—accurately reflect the conditions of modernity.<ref name=Barber/><ref name="ReferenceA"/> He believed that the ''Protocols'' "contain the plan for an occult war, whose objective is the utter destruction, in the non-Jewish peoples, of all tradition, class, aristocracy, and hierarchy, and of all moral, religious, and spiritual values."<ref name=religionfascism>Horst Junginger. ''The Study of Religion Under the Impact of Fascism''. BRILL, 2008. p. 136</ref> He wrote the forward to the second Italian edition of the ''Protocols'', which was published by the Fascist ] in 1938.<ref name=religionfascism/><ref name=Dershowitz>Oren Nimni and Nathan J. Robinson. ''''. ]. November 16, 2016</ref> | |||
====Aryanism==== | |||
Following the murder of his friend ], the leader of the Fascist Romanian ], Evola expressed anticipation of a "talmudic, Israelite tyranny."<ref name="ReferenceA"/> However, Evola believed that Jews had this "power" only because of European "decadence" in modernity.<ref name=Coogan/> He also believed that one could be "Aryan", but have a "Jewish" soul, just as one could be "Jewish", but have an "Aryan" soul.<ref>Gary Lachman. ''Politics and the Occult: The Left, the Right, and the Radically Unseen''. Quest Books, 2012. p. 217</ref> In Evola's view Otto Weininger and ] were Jews of "sufficiently heroic, ascetic, and sacral" character to fit the latter category.<ref name=vitiated>Gregor, A James ''The Search for Neofascism: The Use and Abuse of Social Science''. Cambridge University Press, 2006. p. 105</ref> | |||
Evola otherwise spoke of "inferior non-European races"<ref name=Coogan>Kevin Coogan. ''Dreamer of the Day: Francis Parker Yockey and the Postwar Fascist International''. Autonomedia, 1999.</ref> and as noted by Merkl, "Evola was never prepared to discount the value of blood altogether, and he later wrote: "a certain balanced consciousness and dignity of race can be considered healthy, especially if one thinks of where we are going in our time with the exaltation of the negro and all the rest, with the anticolonialist psychosis, and with the 'integrationist' fanaticism: all parallel phenomena in the decline of Europe and the West.""<ref>Peter H. Merkl. ''Political Violence and Terror: Motifs and Motivations''. University of California Press, 1986. p. 85</ref> In ''Mussolini's Intellectuals'', ] stated that: ", Evola argues that it is out of the creativity of an 'ur-Aryan' and 'solar-Nordic' blood that world culture emerges. Conversely, culture decline is a function of the feckless mixture of Aryan, with lesser, 'animalistic' blood."<ref name=intellectuals/> | |||
==Fascism== | |||
Evola's dissent from standard biological concepts of race had roots in his aristocratic elitism, since Nazi Völkisch ideology inadequately separated aristocracy from "commoners."<ref name=Coogan/> He maintained that "Only of an élite may one say that it is 'of a race,' 'it has race' ... the people are only people, mass."<ref>Ferraresi, Franco. ''Threats to Democracy: The Radical Right in Italy after the War''. Princeton University Press, 2012. p. 46</ref> | |||
Evola has been described as "one of the most influential fascist racists in Italian history." ] read Evola's '']'' (''Sintesi di Dottrina della Razza'') in August 1941, and met with Evola to offer him his praise. Evola later recounted that Mussolini had found in his work a uniquely Roman form of Fascist ] distinct from that found in ]. With Mussolini's backing, Evola launched the minor journal ''Sangue e Spirito'' (Blood and Spirit). While not always in agreement with German racial theorists, Evola traveled to Germany in February 1942 and obtained support for German collaboration on ''Sangue e Spirito'' from "key figures in the German racial hierarchy."<ref name="Aaron Gillette 2002"/> Fascists appreciated the ] value of Evola's "proof" "that the true representatives of the state and the culture of ancient Rome were people of the Nordic race."<ref name="Aaron Gillette 2002"/> Evola eventually became Italy's leading racial philosopher.<ref name=Payne/> He has been described as a "fascist intellectual,"<ref>Cyprian Blamires. ''World Fascism: a historical encyclopedia, vol 1''. ABC-CLIO, 2006. p. 208.</ref> a "radical traditionalist,"<ref>Packer, Jeremy. Secret agents popular icons beyond James Bond. New York, NY: Lang, 2009. p 150.</ref> "antiegalitarian, antiliberal, antidemocratic, and antipopular,”<ref name="Atkins, Stephen E. 2004. p 89">Atkins, Stephen E. Encyclopedia of modern worldwide extremists and extremist groups. Greenwood Publishing Group, 2004. p 89.</ref> and as having been "the leading philosopher of Europe's neofascist movement."<ref name="Atkins, Stephen E. 2004. p 89"/> | |||
Julius Evola wrote for fascist journals, and his racial theories received warm reception from Mussolini in 1941.<ref name="Aaron Gillette 2002" /> Yet, while acknowledging Evola's place among fascist intellectuals, his racism, his anti-semitism and his antipathy towards democracy,<ref>Gregor, A James. ""</ref> ] wrote that "Evola opposed literally every feature of Fascism".<ref>Gregor, A James ''The Search for Neofascism: The Use and Abuse of Social Science''. Cambridge University Press, 2006. p 93.</ref> | |||
In '']'', Evola developed a "general objective law: the law of the regression of the castes", claiming that "he meaning of history from the most ancient times is this: the gradual decline of power and type of civilization from one to another of the four castes - sacred leaders, warrior nobility, bourgeoisie (economy, "merchants") and slaves - which in the traditional civilizations corresponded to the qualitative differentiation in the principal human possibilities."<ref name="Furlong 2011" /> | |||
Evola developed a complex line of argument, closely related to the spiritual orientation of Traditionalist writers such as ] and the political concerns of the European ] Right.<ref name="Furlong 2011" /> Evola's first published political work was an anti-fascist piece in 1925. In this work, Evola called Italy's fascist movement a "laughable revolution," based on empty sentiment and materialistic concerns. He applauded Mussolini's anti-bourgeois orientation and his goal of making Italian citizens into hardened warriors, but criticized Fascist populism, party politics, and elements of leftism that he saw in the fascist regime. Evola saw Mussolini's Fascist Party as possessing no cultural or spiritual foundation. He was passionate about infusing it with these elements in order to make it suitable for his ideal conception of ''Übermensch'' culture which, in Evola's view, characterized the imperial grandeur of pre-Christian Europe.<ref name=occult/> He expressed anti-nationalist sentiment, stating that to become “truly human,” one would have to “overcome brotherly contamination” and “purge oneself” of the feeling that one is united with others “because of blood, affections, country or human destiny.” He also opposed the ] that Italian fascism was aligned with, along with the "plebeian" nature of the movement.<ref>Gregor, A James ''The Search for Neofascism: The Use and Abuse of Social Science'' Cambridge University Press, 2006. p 86.</ref> Accordingly, Evola launched the journal ''La Torre'' (The Tower), to voice his concerns and advocate for a more elitist fascism.<ref name="Aaron Gillette 2002" /> Evola's ideas were poorly received by the fascist mainstream as it stood at the time of his writing.<ref name=Sedgwick/> | |||
As noted by Furlong, | |||
In May, 1951, Evola was arrested and charged with promoting the revival of the Fascist Party, and of glorifying Fascism. Defending himself at trial, Evola stated that his work belonged to a long tradition of anti-democratic writers who certainly could be linked to fascism—at least fascism interpreted according to certain Evolian criteria—but who certainly could not be identified with the Fascist regime under Mussolini. Evola then declared that he was not a Fascist but a ‘superfascist’. He was acquitted.<ref name=Wolff>Wolff, Elisabetta Cassini. "", Patterns of Prejudice, Vol. 50, Issue 4–5, 2016. pp. 478–494</ref> | |||
{{blockquote|It was this caste-based perspective that was developed in the 1930s and during the war in Evola's extensive writings on racism; for Evola, the core of racial superiority lay in the spiritual qualities of the higher castes, which expressed themselves in physical as well as in cultural features but were not determined by them. The law of the regression of castes places racism at the core of Evola's philosophy, since he sees an increasing predominance of lower races as directly expressed through modern mass democracies.<ref name="Furlong 2011" />}} | |||
===The Third Reich=== | |||
Furlong also noted Evola's frequent use of the term "Aryan" to denote the nobility imbued with traditional spirituality prior to the end of World War II, after which he used it very rarely.<ref name="Furlong 2011" /> Wolff noted that: | |||
Finding Italian fascism too compromising, Evola began to seek recognition in the ]. Evola spent a considerable amount of time in Germany in 1937 and 1938, and gave a series of lectures to the German–Italian Society 1938.<ref name="Aaron Gillette 2002" /> Evola took issue with Nazi populism and biological materialism. SS authorities initially rejected Evola's ideas as supranational and aristocratic though he was better received by members of the ].<ref name="ReferenceA"/> The Nazi ] reported that many considered his ideas to be pure “fantasy” which ignored “historical facts.”<ref name="Aaron Gillette 2002" />. Evola admired ], whom he knew personally,<ref name="Aaron Gillette 2002" /> but he had reservations about ] because of Hitler's reliance on Völkisch nationalism.<ref name=Coogan/>Himmler's ] kept a dossier on Evola—dossier document AR-126 described his plans for a "Roman-Germanic Imperium" as "utopian" and described him as a "reactionary Roman," whose goal was an "insurrection of the old aristocracy against the modern world." The document recommended that the SS "stop his effectiveness in Germany" and provide him with no support, particularly because of his desire to create a "secret international order".<ref name=Coogan/><ref>H.T. Hansen, "A Short Introduction to Julius Evola" in Evola, ''Revolt Against the Modern World'', p xviii.</ref><ref name=Umland>A. James Gregor and Andreas Umland. '''' (6 texts). ''Erwägen-Wissen-Ethik'', 2005.</ref> | |||
Despite this opposition, Evola was able to establish political connections with pan-Europeanist elements inside the ].<ref name=Coogan/> Evola subsequently ascended to the inner circles of Nazism as the influence of pan-European advocates overtook that of Völkisch proponents, due to military contingencies.<ref name=Coogan/> Evola wrote the article ''Reich and Imperium as Elements in the New European Order'' for the Nazi-backed journal ''European Review''.<ref name=Coogan/> He spent World War II working for the ].<ref name=Coogan/> The ] bureau Amt VII, a ] research library, helped Evola acquire arcane occult and Masonic texts.<ref name=Rahn>Nigel Graddon. ''Otto Rahn and the Quest for the Grail: The Amazing Life of the Real Indiana Jones''. SCB Distributors, 2013</ref><ref name=forum/><ref name=Coogan/> | |||
{{blockquote|From 1945 the issue of race disappeared from Evola's writings. Nonetheless his ongoing intellectual concerns remained unchanged: anthropological pessimism, elitism and contempt for the weak. The doctrine of the Aryan-Roman ‘super-race’ was simply restated as a doctrine of the ‘leaders of men’, while the Ordine Fascista dell'Impero Italiano was simply relabelled the Ordine, or ‘male society’: no longer with reference to the SS, but to the mediaeval Teutonic Knights or the Knights Templar, already mentioned in Rivolta.<ref name=Wolff/>}} | |||
Italian Fascism went into decline when, in 1943, Mussolini was deposed and imprisoned. At this point, Evola fled to Germany with the help of the ].<ref name=Coogan/> Although not a member of the ], and despite his apparent problems with the Fascist regime, Evola was one of the first people to greet Mussolini when the latter was broken out of prison by ] in 1943.<ref>Roger Griffin, Matthew Feldman. ''Fascism: Post-war fascisms''. Taylor & Francis, 2004. p. 223</ref> Subsequently, Evola helped welcome Mussolini to ]'s ].<ref name=Coogan/> Following this, Evola involved himself in Mussolini's ].<ref name="ReferenceA"/> It was Evola's custom to walk around the city during ]s in order to better 'ponder his destiny'. During one such raid, 1945, a ] fragment damaged his ] and he became ] from the waist down, remaining so for the remainder of his life.<ref name=Guido>Guido Stucco, "Translator's Introduction," in Evola, ''The Yoga of Power'', pp. ix–xv</ref> | |||
While not totally against race-mixing, in 1957, Evola wrote an article attributing the perceived acceleration of American decadence to the influence of "negroes" and the opposition to segregation. Furlong noted that this article is "among the most extreme in phraseology of any he wrote, and exhibits a degree of intolerance that leaves no doubt as to his deep prejudice against black people."<ref name="Furlong 2011" /> | |||
== |
==Post-War== | ||
After World War II, Evola continued his work in esotericism. He wrote a number of books and articles on ] and various other esoteric studies, including ''The Yoga of Power: Tantra, Shakti, and the Secret Way'' (1949), ''Eros and the Mysteries of Love: The Metaphysics of Sex'' (1958), and ''Meditations on the Peaks: Mountain Climbing as Metaphor for the Spiritual Quest'' (1974). He also wrote his two explicitly political books ''Men Among the Ruins: Post-War Reflections of a Radical Traditionalist'' (1953), ''Ride the Tiger: A Survival Manual for the Aristocrats of the Soul'' (1961), and his autobiography,<ref name=Coogan/> ''The Path of Cinnabar'' (1963). He also expanded upon critiques of American civilization and materialism, as well as increasing American influence in Europe, collected in the posthumous anthology ''Civilta Americana''.<ref>{{Cite book|title=Civiltà americana. Scritti sugli Stati Uniti (1930–1968)|last=Evola|first=Julius|publisher=Controcorrente|year=2010|isbn=|location=Napoli|pages=}}</ref> | |||
Evola's occult ontology exerted influence over post-war ].<ref name="Aaron Gillette 2002" /> In the post-war period, Evola's writing evoked interest among the neo-fascist right.<ref name=Wolff/> After 1945, Evola was considered the most important Italian theoretician of the ]<ref name=Wolff/> and the "chief ideologue" of Italy's post-war radical right.<ref name=Payne/> According to Egil Asprem and Kennet Granholm, Evola's most significant post-war political texts are '']'' and ''Men Among the Ruins''.<ref>Egil Asprem, Kennet Granholm. ''Contemporary Esotericism''. Routledge, 2014. p. 245</ref> | |||
Evola has been described as "one of the most influential fascist racists in Italian history."<ref name="Aaron Gillette 2002"/> ] read Evola's '']'' (''Sintesi di Dottrina della Razza'') in August 1941, and met with Evola to offer him his praise. Evola later recounted that Mussolini had found in his work a uniquely Roman form of Fascist ] distinct from that found in ]. With Mussolini's backing, Evola launched the minor journal ''Sangue e Spirito'' (Blood and Spirit). While not always in agreement with German racial theorists, Evola traveled to Germany in February 1942 and obtained support for German collaboration on ''Sangue e Spirito'' from "key figures in the German racial hierarchy."<ref name="Aaron Gillette 2002"/> Fascists appreciated the ] value of Evola's "proof" "that the true representatives of the state and the culture of ancient Rome were people of the Nordic race."<ref name="Aaron Gillette 2002"/> Evola eventually became Italy's leading racial philosopher.<ref name=Payne/> | |||
''Orientamenti'' was a text against "national fascism"—instead, it advocated for a European Community modeled on the principles of the ].<ref name=Coogan/> The Italian Neo-fascist group ] adopted ''Orientamenti'' as a guide for action in postwar Italy.<ref name=Laurelle>Marlene Laruelle. ''Eurasianism and the European Far Right: Reshaping the Europe–Russia Relationship''. Lexington Books, 2015. p. 102</ref> The ], who were affiliated with ], called Evola "Italy's gretest living authoriation philosopher" in the April 1951 issue of their publication ''Frontfighter''<ref name=Coogan/> | |||
===Elitism and Relationship to Fascism=== | |||
During the post-war period, Evola attempted to dissociate himself from totalitarianism, preferring the concept of the "organic" state, which he put forth in his text ''Men Among the Ruins''.<ref name="Furlong 2011" /> Evola sought to develop a strategy for the implementation of a "conservative revolution" in post World War II Europe.<ref name="Furlong 2011" /> He rejected nationalism, advocating instead for a European ''Imperium'', which could take various forms according to local conditions, but should be "organic, hierarchical, anti-democratic, and anti-individual."<ref name="Furlong 2011" /> Evola endorsed ]'s neo-fascist manifesto ''Imperium'', but disagreed with it because he believed that Yockey had a "superficial" understanding of what was immediately possible.<ref name=Coogan/> Evola believed that his conception of neo-fascist Europe could best be implemented by an elite of "superior" men who operated outside normal politics.<ref name=Coogan/> | |||
Julius Evola has been described as a "fascist intellectual,"<ref>Cyprian Blamires. ''World Fascism: a historical encyclopedia, vol 1''. ABC-CLIO, 2006. p. 208.</ref> a "radical traditionalist,"<ref>Packer, Jeremy. Secret agents popular icons beyond James Bond. New York, NY: Lang, 2009. p 150.</ref> "antiegalitarian, antiliberal, antidemocratic, and antipopular,”<ref name="Atkins, Stephen E. 2004. p 89">Atkins, Stephen E. Encyclopedia of modern worldwide extremists and extremist groups. Greenwood Publishing Group, 2004. p 89.</ref> and as having been "the leading philosopher of Europe's neofascist movement."<ref name="Atkins, Stephen E. 2004. p 89"/> Julius Evola wrote for fascist journals, and his racial theories received warm reception from Mussolini in 1941.<ref name="Aaron Gillette 2002" /> Yet, while acknowledging Evola's place among fascist intellectuals, his racism, his anti-semitism and his antipathy towards democracy,<ref>Gregor, A James. ""</ref> ] wrote that "Evola opposed literally every feature of Fascism".<ref>Gregor, A James ''The Search for Neofascism: The Use and Abuse of Social Science''. Cambridge University Press, 2006. p 93.</ref> In a trial in 1951, Evola, who denied being a Fascist, referred to himself as a ‘superfascist’.<ref name=Wolff/> Paul Furlong wrote that "The complete Evola held views that it is fair, if somewhat summary, to categorise as elitist, racist, anti-semitic, misogynist, anti-democratic, authoritarian, and deeply anti-liberal."<ref name="Furlong 2011" /> | |||
Giuliano Salierni was an activist in the neo-Fascist ] during the early 1950s. He later recalled Evola's calls to violence.<ref name="ReferenceA"/> ] and his colleagues in the early 1980s helped the ]{{'}}s "Political Soldiers" forge a militant elitist philosophy based on Evola's "most militant tract", '']''.''The Aryan Doctrine'' called for a “Great Holy War” that would be fought for spiritual renewal and fought in parallel to the physical “Little Holy War” against perceived enemies.<ref name="ReferenceA"/> Wolff attributes extreme-right terrorist actions in Italy in the 1970s and 1980s to the influence of Julius Evola.<ref name=Wolff/> | |||
====Relationship to Fascism==== | |||
Evola's first published political work was an anti-fascist piece in 1925. In this work, Evola called Italy's fascist movement a "laughable revolution," based on empty sentiment and materialistic concerns. He expressed anti-Nationalist sentiment, stating that to become “truly human,” one would have to “overcome brotherly contamination” and “purge oneself” of the feeling that one is united with others “because of blood, affections, country or human destiny.” He also opposed the ] that Italian fascism was aligned with, along with the "plebeian" nature of the movement.<ref>Gregor, A James ''The Search for Neofascism: The Use and Abuse of Social Science'' Cambridge University Press, 2006. p 86.</ref> | |||
Evola saw Mussolini's Fascist Party as possessing no cultural or spiritual foundation, and was passionate about infusing it with these elements in order to make it suitable for his ideals of the alleged ''Übermensch'' culture which, according to Evola, characterized the imperial grandeur of pre-Christian Europe.<ref name=occult/> In 1928 Evola wrote the text ''Pagan Imperialism'', a violent attack on Christianity, which proposed the transformation of Fascism into a system consonant with ancient Roman values and the ancient Mystery traditions, and which proposed that Fascism transform itself into a vehicle for re-instating the caste-system and aristocracy of antiquity. This text was a diatribe in the name of Fascism against the Catholic Church, which nevertheless led to Evola being criticized by the Fascist regime, as well as by the Vatican itself. ] argued that this text was an attack on Fascism as it stood at the time of writing, but noted that ] made use of it in order to threaten the Vatican with the possibility of an "anti-clerical Fascism" for political advantage.<ref name="Furlong 2011" /><ref name=gregorpagan>Gregor, A James ''The Search for Neofascism: The Use and Abuse of Social Science''. Cambridge University Press, 2006. pp. 89-91</ref> On account of Evola's sentiment, the Vatican backed right-wing Catholic journal ''Revue Interlationale de Sociétés Secretètes'' published an article in April 1928 entitled "Un Sataniste Italien: Julius Evola."<ref name=Coogan/> ] translated the 1933 version of Evola’s ''Pagan Imperialism'' into Russian in 1981 and distributed it in ].<ref name=laurelle>Marlene Laruelle. '''' Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars. OCCASIONAL PAPER #294.</ref> | |||
Evola developed a complex line of argument, synthesizing and adapting the spiritual orientation of Traditionalist writers such as ] with the political concerns of the European ] Right.<ref name="Furlong 2011" /> Evola applauded Mussolini's anti-bourgeois orientation and his goal of making Italian citizens into hardened warriors. However, he criticized Fascist populism, party politics, and elements of leftism that he saw in the Fascist regime. Accordingly, Evola launched the journal ''La Torre'' (The Tower), to voice his concerns and advocate for a more elitist Fascism.<ref name="Aaron Gillette 2002" /> Evola's ideas were poorly received by the Fascist mainstream as it stood at the time of his writing.<ref name=Sedgwick/> Finding Italian Fascism too compromising, Evola began to seek recognition in the ], where he lectured from 1934 onward. He held hope in the Nazi SS, but took issue with Nazi populism and biological materialism. SS authorities initially rejected Evola's ideas as supranational, aristocratic, and thus reactionary, though Evola found better reception from members of the ].<ref name="ReferenceA"/> | |||
Evola idolized the Nazi ] and admired ], whom he knew personally.<ref name="Aaron Gillette 2002" /> However, he had reservations about ] because of Hitler's reliance on Völkisch nationalism.<ref name=Coogan/> Evola spent a considerable amount of time in Germany in 1937 and 1938, and gave a series of lectures to the German–Italian Society 1938, but these were poorly received, and the Nazi ] reported that many considered his ideas to be pure “fantasy” which ignored “historical facts.”<ref name="Aaron Gillette 2002" /> Himmler's ] kept a dossier on him, and in dossier document AR-126 described his plans for a "Roman-Germanic Imperium" as "utopian" and described him as a "reactionary Roman," with a secret goal of "an insurrection of the old aristocracy against the modern world." It recommended that the SS "stop his effectiveness in Germany" and provide no support to him, particularly because of his desire to create a "secret international order".<ref name=Coogan/><ref>H.T. Hansen, "A Short Introduction to Julius Evola" in Evola, ''Revolt Against the Modern World'', p xviii.</ref><ref name=Umland>A. James Gregor and Andreas Umland. '''' (6 texts). ''Erwägen-Wissen-Ethik'', 2005.</ref> However, Evola was able to establish political connections with pan-Europeanist elements inside the ].<ref name=Coogan/> | |||
Evola subsequently ascended to the inner circles of Nazism as the influence pan-European advocates overtook that of Völkisch proponents due to military contingencies.<ref name=Coogan/> Evola wrote the article "Reich and Imperium as Elements in the New European Order" for the Nazi backed journal ''European Review''.<ref name=Coogan/> Evola spent World War II working for the ].<ref name=Coogan/> The ] bureau Amt VII, a ] research library, helped Evola acquire arcane occult and Masonic texts.<ref name=Rahn/><ref name=forum/><ref name=Coogan/> | |||
Italian Fascism went into decline when, in 1943, Mussolini was deposed and imprisoned. At this point, Evola fled to Germany with the help of the ].<ref name=Coogan/> Evola, although not a member of the ], and despite his apparent problems with the Fascist regime, was one of the first people to greet Mussolini when the latter was broken out of prison by ] in 1943.<ref>Roger Griffin, Matthew Feldman. ''Fascism: Post-war fascisms''. Taylor & Francis, 2004. p. 223</ref> Subsequently, Evola helped welcome Mussolini to ]'s ].<ref name=Coogan/> Following this, Evola involved himself in Mussolini's ].<ref name="ReferenceA"/> It was Evola's custom to walk around the city during ]s in order to better 'ponder his destiny'. During one such raid, 1945, a ] fragment damaged his ] and he became ] from the waist down, remaining so for the remainder of his life.<ref name=Guido/> | |||
In May, 1951, Evola was arrested and charged with promoting the revival of the Fascist Party, and of glorifying Fascism. Defending himself at trial, Evola stated that his work belonged to a long tradition of anti-democratic writers who certainly could be linked to fascism—at least fascism interpreted according to certain (Evolian) criteria—but who certainly could not be identified with Fascism, namely, the Fascist regime under Mussolini. Evola then declared that he was not a Fascist but a ‘superfascist’. He was acquitted.<ref name=Wolff>Wolff, Elisabetta Cassini. "", Patterns of Prejudice, Vol. 50, Issue 4-5, 2016. pp. 478-494</ref> | |||
====Neo-Fascism==== | |||
After WWII, Evola's writing evoked interest among the neo-fascist right.<ref name=Wolff/> Evola was considered, especially after 1945, as the most important Italian theoretician of the ],<ref name=Wolff/> and as the "chief ideologue" of Italy's terrorist radical right after World War II.<ref name=Payne/> Regarding Evola's concerns during this time period, ] took note of: | |||
{{blockquote|Evola’s 1945 essay “American ‘Civilization,’” which saw America as the final stage of European decline into the “interior formlessness” of vacuous individualism, conformity and vulgarity under the universal aegis of money-making. Its mechanistic and rational philosophy of progress combined with a mundane horizon of prosperity to transform the world into an enormous suburban shopping mall. This anti-American theme was extended by Evola’s ideas on a unified Europe’s need for a spiritual and supranational basis. Only by opposing the current Westernization of the world could Europe challenge both superpowers for global hegemony.<ref name="ReferenceA"/>}} | |||
Goodrich-Clarke noted that "Evola’s contempt for America as the most advanced center of Western alienation from Tradition also interacted with a widespread mood of anti-Americanism during the 1980s."<ref name="ReferenceA"/> | |||
Egil Asprem and Kennet Granholm describe Evola's primary political texts during this time period as '']'' and ''Men Among the Ruins''.<ref>Egil Asprem, Kennet Granholm. ''Contemporary Esotericism''. Routledge, 2014. p. 245</ref> ''Orientamenti'' was a text against "national fascism", advocating instead for a European Community modeled on the principles of the ].<ref name=Coogan/> The Italian Neo-fascist group ] adopted ''Orientamenti'' as a guide for action in postwar Italy.<ref name=Laurelle>Marlene Laruelle. ''Eurasianism and the European Far Right: Reshaping the Europe–Russia Relationship''. Lexington Books, 2015. p. 102</ref> The ] affiliated "European Liberation Front", in the April 1951 issue of its publication ''Frontfighter'', referred to Evola as "Italy's greatest living authoritarian philosopher."<ref name=Coogan/> | |||
Evola's occult ontology exerted influence over post-war ].<ref name="Aaron Gillette 2002" /> Nevertheless, Evola attempted to dissociate himself from totalitarianism, preferring the conception of the "organic" state which he put forth in his text ''Men Among the Ruins''.<ref name="Furlong 2011" /> Evola sought to develop a strategy for the implementation of a "conservative revolution" in post World War II Europe.<ref name="Furlong 2011" /> He rejected nationalism, advocating instead for a European ''Imperium'', which he desired to be expressed in various forms according to local conditions, but be "organic, hierarchical, anti-democratic, and anti-individual."<ref name="Furlong 2011" /> Evola endorsed ]'s neo-fascist manifesto ''Imperium'', but disagreed with it because Yockey had a "superficial" understanding of what was immediately possible.<ref name=Coogan/> Evola also believed that implementation of the proposed neo-fascist Europe could best accomplished by an elite of "superior" men operating outside of normal politics.<ref name=Coogan/> | |||
Giuliano Salierni, an activist in the neo-Fascist ] in the early 1950s, recalled Evola's calls to violence.<ref name="ReferenceA"/> ] and his colleagues in the early 1980s helped ] "Political Soldiers" forge a militant elitist philosophy based on Evola's "most militant tract", '']'', which called for a “Great Holy War” fought for spiritual renewal paralleling the physical “Little Holy War” against perceived enemies.<ref name="ReferenceA"/> Wolff attributes extreme-right terrorist actions in Italy in the 1970s and 1980s to the influence of Julius Evola.<ref name=Wolff/> | |||
] has argued that Evola's work is essential reading for those seeking to understand ], in the same way that knowledge of the writings of ] is necessary for those seeking to understand Communist actions.<ref name=sheehanterror/> | ] has argued that Evola's work is essential reading for those seeking to understand ], in the same way that knowledge of the writings of ] is necessary for those seeking to understand Communist actions.<ref name=sheehanterror/> | ||
==Death== | |||
===Post-World War II=== | |||
After World War II, Evola continued his work in esotericism. He wrote a number of books and articles on ] and various other esoteric studies, including ''The Yoga of Power: Tantra, Shakti, and the Secret Way'' (1949), ''Eros and the Mysteries of Love: The Metaphysics of Sex'' (1958), and ''Meditations on the Peaks: Mountain Climbing as Metaphor for the Spiritual Quest'' (1974). He also wrote his two explicitly political books ''Men Among the Ruins: Post-War Reflections of a Radical Traditionalist'' (1953), ''Ride the Tiger: A Survival Manual for the Aristocrats of the Soul'' (1961), and his autobiography,<ref name=Coogan/> ''The Path of Cinnabar'' (1963). He also expanded upon critiques of American civilization and materialism, as well as increasing American influence in Europe, collected in the posthumous anthology ''Civilta Americana''.<ref>{{Cite book|title=Civiltà americana. Scritti sugli Stati Uniti (1930-1968)|last=Evola|first=Julius|publisher=Controcorrente|year=2010|isbn=|location=Napoli|pages=}}</ref> | |||
Wolff noted that in ''Ride the Tiger'', | |||
{{blockquote|Evola argued that the fight against modernity was lost. The only thing a ‘real man’ could just do was to ride the tiger of modernity patiently: ‘Thus the principle to follow could be that of letting the forces and processes of this epoch take their own course, keeping oneself firm and ready to intervene when “the tiger, which cannot leap on the person riding it, is tired of running”. He chose, in other words, a sort of inner journey and ‘inner emigration’ from the world—using an expression borrowed from Heidegger—that removed him completely from active political engagement. However, he did not exclude the possibility of action in the future.<ref name=Wolff/>}} | |||
Wolff also noted that "as Anna Jellamo declared in 1984, Evola's apoliteia in ''Ride the Tiger'' was in truth only ‘an adjustment and improvement’ to his ‘warrior theory’."<ref name=Wolff/> ] notes that here, "Evola sets up the ideal of the “active nihilist” who is prepared to act with violence against modern decadence."<ref name="ReferenceA"/> Furlong considers this text, in the context of Evola's work contemporary to its writing, as a proposition that a potential elite immunize itself from modernity as they attempt to rebel against it via "right wing anarchism."<ref name="Furlong 2011" /> | |||
===Death=== | |||
Evola died unmarried, without children, on 11 June 1974 in Rome.{{Citation needed|reason=According to Tom Sunic, Evola's ashes were scattered over the Adriatic sea|date=September 2016}} | Evola died unmarried, without children, on 11 June 1974 in Rome.{{Citation needed|reason=According to Tom Sunic, Evola's ashes were scattered over the Adriatic sea|date=September 2016}} | ||
==Books and articles== | |||
==Influence== | |||
===Political Influence=== | |||
{{specific-section|date=February 2017}} | |||
The Italian Fascist leader ], the Nazi Grail seeker ], and the Romanian fascist sympathizer and religious historian ] admired Julius Evola.<ref name=HorowitzMussolini/><ref name=Rahn>Nigel Graddon. ''Otto Rahn and the Quest for the Grail: The Amazing Life of the Real Indiana Jones''. SCB Distributors, 2013</ref><ref name=Wolff/><ref name=Coogan/> After World War II, Evola's writings continued to influence many European far-right political, racist and neo-fascist movements. He is widely translated in French, Spanish and partly in German. Amongst those he has influenced are the American Blackshirts Party, the "esoteric Hitlerist" ],<ref name=Coogan/> ], ], the ] (MSI), ], ]'s ], ], ]'s ], ], ], ], ], the ] (Armed Revolutionary Nuclei), ], ], ], ] and the ].{{citation needed|date=February 2017}} ] referred to him as "our ]—only better."<ref name=sheehanterror>Thomas Sheehan. . ''The New York Review of Books'', Volume 27, Number 21 & 22, January 22, 1981</ref> According to one leader of the neofascist "black terrorist" ], "Our work since 1953 has been to transpose Evola’s teachings into direct political action."<ref>Quoted in Ferraresi, Franco. "The Radical Right in Postwar Italy." ''Politics & Society''. 1988 16:71-119. (p.84)</ref> The now defunct French fascist group ] was also inspired by Evola.<ref>Institute of Race relations. "The far Right in Europe: a guide." ''Race & Class'', 1991, Vol. 32, No. 3:125-146 (p.132).</ref> ], English political activist and chairman of the ], spoke highly of Evola and his ideas and gave lectures on his philosophy. Evola has also influenced today's ] movement,<ref name=HorowitzMussolini/> which has its "origins" in “thinkers as diverse as… ], ], Julius Evola, ], and… ].”<ref name=Dershowitz>Oren Nimni and Nathan J. Robinson. ''''. ]. November 16, 2016</ref> Additionally, Evola has influenced ] advisor<ref name=standard>Zubrin, Steve. . The Weekly Standard, March 2016</ref><ref name=Meyer>Meyer, Henry and Ant, Onur. . Bloomberg, February 2017</ref> ].<ref name=laurelle/><ref name=HorowitzGlobe/> The Greek neo-Nazi party ] includes his works on its suggested reading list, and the leader of ], the Hungarian nationalist party, admires Evola and wrote an introduction to his works.<ref name=HorowitzMussolini/> ] referred to Evola as the "most influential theoretical source of the theories of the new Italian right", and as "one of the most respected fascist gurus".<ref name=Eco>Eco, Umberto. "". ''The New York Review of Books'', Vol. 42, No. 11 (1995), accessed February 12, 2017</ref> ] ]'s chief adviser ] noted Evola's influence on the ] movement;<ref name=Bannon>Feder, J. Lester. "", BuzzFeed 2016</ref><ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2017/02/10/world/europe/bannon-vatican-julius-evola-fascism.html|title=Taboo Italian Thinker Is Enigma to Many, but Not to Bannon|last=Horowitz|first=Jason|date=2017-02-10|newspaper=The New York Times|access-date=2017-02-10|issn=0362-4331}}</ref> accordingly, he has been praised by ] leader ], who said “it means a tremendous amount” that Bannon is aware of Evola.<ref name=HorowitzMussolini/> Some members of the ] have expressed hope that Bannon might be open to Evola's ideas, and that through Bannon, Evola’s ideas can express influence in a possible period of crisis.<ref name=HorowitzMussolini/> | |||
===Non-Political Influence=== | |||
The psychologist ] favorably cited Evola's work on Hermeticism.<ref name=Hermeticism/> German psychotherapist ] based part of his "initiatory therapy" on Evola's work.<ref></ref> | |||
Evola influenced the musicologist and esoteric scholar ], who wrote in defense of Evola.<ref name=Hermeticism/><ref name=occult/> The novelist and essayist ] of the ], paid homage to Evola's text ''The Yoga of Power'', writing her opinion of "the immense benefit which a receptive reader may gain from an exposition such as Evola's",<ref name=Guido>Guido Stucco, "Translator's Introduction," in Evola, ''The Yoga of Power'', pp. ix-xv</ref><ref name=Yourcenar>Marguerite Yourcenar. ''Le temps, ce grand sculpteur'' (Paris: Gallimard, 1983)</ref> and concluded that "the study of The Yoga of Power is particularly beneficial in a time in which every form of discipline is naively discredited."<ref name=Guido/><ref name=Yourcenar/> ] was inspired to become a ] from reading Evola's text ''The Doctrine of Awakening'' in 1945 while hospitalized in ].<ref name=forum/> Famed author ] in a private letter described Evola's text '']'' as "really dangerous."<ref name=Sedgwick>Mark Sedgwick. ''Against the Modern World: Traditionalism and the Secret Intellectual History of the Twentieth Century''. Oxford University Press, 2009</ref> | |||
==Selected books and articles== | |||
*''Arte Astratta, posizione teorica'' (1920) | *''Arte Astratta, posizione teorica'' (1920) | ||
*'']'' (1920) | *'']'' (1920) | ||
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*'']'' (1927) | *'']'' (1927) | ||
*''Imperialismo pagano'' (1928; English translation: ''Heathen Imperialism'', 2007) | *''Imperialismo pagano'' (1928; English translation: ''Heathen Imperialism'', 2007) | ||
*''Introduzione alla magia'' ( |
*''Introduzione alla magia'' (1927–1929; 1971; English translation: ''Introduction to Magic: Rituals and Practical Techniques for the Magus'', 2001) | ||
*'']'' (1930) | *'']'' (1930) | ||
*''La tradizione ermetica'' (1931; English translation: ''The Hermetic Tradition: Symbols and Teachings of the Royal Art'', 1995) | *''La tradizione ermetica'' (1931; English translation: ''The Hermetic Tradition: Symbols and Teachings of the Royal Art'', 1995) | ||
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==See also== | ==See also== | ||
* ], also known as Argentine Evola | |||
* ] | * ] | ||
* ] | * ] | ||
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==References== | ==References== | ||
{{more footnotes|section|date=March 2017}} | {{more footnotes|section|date=March 2017}} | ||
*Aprile, Mario (1984), "Julius Evola: An Introduction to His Life and Work," ''The Scorpion'' No. 6 (Winter/Spring): |
*Aprile, Mario (1984), "Julius Evola: An Introduction to His Life and Work," ''The Scorpion'' No. 6 (Winter/Spring): 20–21. | ||
*Coletti, Guillermo (1996), "Against the Modern World: An Introduction to the Work of Julius Evola," ''Ohm Clock'' No. 4 (Spring): |
*Coletti, Guillermo (1996), "Against the Modern World: An Introduction to the Work of Julius Evola," ''Ohm Clock'' No. 4 (Spring): 29–31. | ||
*Coogan, Kevin (1998), ''Dreamer of the Day: Francis Parker Yockey and the Postwar Fascist International'' (Brooklyn, NY: ], ISBN |
*Coogan, Kevin (1998), ''Dreamer of the Day: Francis Parker Yockey and the Postwar Fascist International'' (Brooklyn, NY: ], {{ISBN|1-57027-039-2}}). | ||
* De Benoist, Alain. "Julius Evola, réactionnaire radical et métaphysicien engagé. Analyse critique de la pensée politique de Julius Evola," ''Nouvelle Ecole'', No. 53–54 (2003), pp. 147–69. | * De Benoist, Alain. "Julius Evola, réactionnaire radical et métaphysicien engagé. Analyse critique de la pensée politique de Julius Evola," ''Nouvelle Ecole'', No. 53–54 (2003), pp. 147–69. | ||
*Drake, Richard H. (1986), "Julius Evola and the Ideological Origins of the Radical Right in Contemporary Italy," in Peter H. Merkl (ed.), ''Political Violence and Terror: Motifs and Motivations'' (] Press, ISBN |
*Drake, Richard H. (1986), "Julius Evola and the Ideological Origins of the Radical Right in Contemporary Italy," in Peter H. Merkl (ed.), ''Political Violence and Terror: Motifs and Motivations'' (] Press, {{ISBN|0-520-05605-1}}) 61–89. | ||
*Drake, Richard H. (1988), "Julius Evola, Radical Fascism and the Lateran Accords," '']'' 74: |
*Drake, Richard H. (1988), "Julius Evola, Radical Fascism and the Lateran Accords," '']'' 74: 403–419. | ||
*Drake, Richard H. (1989), "The Children of the Sun," in ''The Revolutionary Mystique and Terrorism in Contemporary Italy'' (Bloomington: ], ISBN |
*Drake, Richard H. (1989), "The Children of the Sun," in ''The Revolutionary Mystique and Terrorism in Contemporary Italy'' (Bloomington: ], {{ISBN|0-253-35019-0}}), 114–134. | ||
*Faerraresi, Franco (1987), "Julius Evola: Tradition, Reaction, and the Radical Right," ''European Journal of Sociology'' 28: |
*Faerraresi, Franco (1987), "Julius Evola: Tradition, Reaction, and the Radical Right," ''European Journal of Sociology'' 28: 107–151. | ||
*Furlong, Paul (2011), ''Introduction to the Social and Political Thought of Julius Evola'' London: Routledge. | *Furlong, Paul (2011), ''Introduction to the Social and Political Thought of Julius Evola'' London: Routledge. | ||
*] (1996), ''Arktos: The Polar Myth in Science, Symbolism, and Nazi Survival'' (Kempton, IL: ], ISBN |
*] (1996), ''Arktos: The Polar Myth in Science, Symbolism, and Nazi Survival'' (Kempton, IL: ], {{ISBN|0-932813-35-6}}), 57–61. | ||
*Gelli, Frank (2012), ''Julius Evola: The Sufi of Rome'' | *Gelli, Frank (2012), ''Julius Evola: The Sufi of Rome'' | ||
*Godwin, Joscelyn (2002), "Julius Evola, A Philosopher in the Age of the Titans," '']'' Volume 1 (Atlanta, GA: Ultra Publishing, ISBN |
*Godwin, Joscelyn (2002), "Julius Evola, A Philosopher in the Age of the Titans," '']'' Volume 1 (Atlanta, GA: Ultra Publishing, {{ISBN|0-9720292-0-6}}), 127–142. | ||
*] (2001), '']'' (New York: ], ISBN |
*] (2001), '']'' (New York: ], {{ISBN|0-585-43467-0}}, {{ISBN|0-8147-3124-4}}, {{ISBN|0-8147-3155-4}}), 52–71. | ||
*] (1985), "Revolts against the Modern World: The Blend of Literary and Historical Fantasy in the Italian New Right," ''Literature and History'' 11 (Spring): |
*] (1985), "Revolts against the Modern World: The Blend of Literary and Historical Fantasy in the Italian New Right," ''Literature and History'' 11 (Spring): 101–123. | ||
*Griffin, Roger (1995) (ed.), '']'' (], ISBN |
*Griffin, Roger (1995) (ed.), '']'' (], {{ISBN|0-19-289249-5}}), 317–318. | ||
*Hansen, H. T. (1994), "A Short Introduction to Julius Evola," ''Theosophical History'' 5 (January): |
*Hansen, H. T. (1994), "A Short Introduction to Julius Evola," ''Theosophical History'' 5 (January): 11–22; reprinted as introduction to Evola, '']'', (Vermont: Inner Traditions, 1995). | ||
*Hansen, H. T. (2002), "Julius Evola's Political Endeavors," introduction to Evola, ''Men Among the Ruins'', (Vermont: Inner Traditions). | *Hansen, H. T. (2002), "Julius Evola's Political Endeavors," introduction to Evola, ''Men Among the Ruins'', (Vermont: Inner Traditions). | ||
*] (2003), "Julius Evola's Combat Manuals for a Revolt Against the Modern World," in ] (ed.), ''Book of Lies: The Disinformation Guide to Magick and the Occult'' (], ISBN |
*] (2003), "Julius Evola's Combat Manuals for a Revolt Against the Modern World," in ] (ed.), ''Book of Lies: The Disinformation Guide to Magick and the Occult'' (], {{ISBN|0-9713942-7-X}}) 313–320. | ||
*] (1991), '']'' (New York: Simon & Schuster, ISBN |
*] (1991), '']'' (New York: Simon & Schuster, {{ISBN|0-13-089301-3}}), 118–120. | ||
*] (2004) ''Against the Modern World: Traditionalism and the Secret Intellectual History of the Twentieth Century'' (Oxford University Press, ISBN |
*] (2004) ''Against the Modern World: Traditionalism and the Secret Intellectual History of the Twentieth Century'' (Oxford University Press, {{ISBN|0-19-515297-2}}). | ||
*Sheehan, Thomas (1981) "Myth and Violence: The Fascism of Julius Evola and ]," ''Social Research'', 48 (Spring): |
*Sheehan, Thomas (1981) "Myth and Violence: The Fascism of Julius Evola and ]," ''Social Research'', 48 (Spring): 45–83. | ||
*Stucco, Guido (1992), "Translator's Introduction," in Evola, ''The Yoga of Power'' (Vermont: Inner Traditions), |
*Stucco, Guido (1992), "Translator's Introduction," in Evola, ''The Yoga of Power'' (Vermont: Inner Traditions), ix–xv. | ||
*Stucco, Guido (1994), "Introduction," in Evola, ''The Path of Enlightenment According to the Mithraic Mysteries'', ''Zen: The Religion of the Samurai'', ''Rene Guenon: A Teacher for Modern Times'', and ''Taoism: The Magic, the Mysticism'' (]: Holmes Publishing Group) | *Stucco, Guido (1994), "Introduction," in Evola, ''The Path of Enlightenment According to the Mithraic Mysteries'', ''Zen: The Religion of the Samurai'', ''Rene Guenon: A Teacher for Modern Times'', and ''Taoism: The Magic, the Mysticism'' (]: Holmes Publishing Group) | ||
*Stucco, Guido (2002). . ''The Occidental Quarterly'' '''3''' (2), pp. 21–44. | *Stucco, Guido (2002). . ''The Occidental Quarterly'' '''3''' (2), pp. 21–44. | ||
*Wasserstrom, Steven M. (1995), "The Lives of Baron Evola," ''Alphabet City'' 4 + 5 (December): |
*Wasserstrom, Steven M. (1995), "The Lives of Baron Evola," ''Alphabet City'' 4 + 5 (December): 84–89. | ||
*] (1990), 'Baron Julius Evola and the Hermetic Tradition', '']'' 14, (Winter): |
*] (1990), 'Baron Julius Evola and the Hermetic Tradition', '']'' 14, (Winter): 12–17. | ||
*{{cite web|title=Bibliografia di J. Evola|url=http://www.fondazionejuliusevola.it/Biblio.htm|website=Fondazione Julius Evola|accessdate=25 April 2015}} | *{{cite web|title=Bibliografia di J. Evola|url=http://www.fondazionejuliusevola.it/Biblio.htm|website=Fondazione Julius Evola|accessdate=25 April 2015}} | ||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
* Brad Reed. . ]. February 10, 2017. | |||
{{Commons category}} | {{Commons category}} | ||
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Revision as of 22:12, 19 August 2017
Julius Evola | |
---|---|
Evola during 1920s | |
Born | Giulio Cesare Andrea Evola (1898-05-19)May 19, 1898 Rome, Italy |
Died | June 11, 1974(1974-06-11) (aged 76) Rome, Italy |
Cause of death | Respiratory-hepatic problems |
Nationality | Italian |
Notable work | Le Parole Obscure du Paysage Interieur (1920) The Hermetic Tradition (1931) Revolt Against the Modern World (1934) The Mystery of the Grail (1937) Synthesis of the Doctrine of Race (1941) The Aryan Doctrine of Battle and Victory (1941) Orientamenti (1950) |
Era | 20th century |
Region | Western philosophy |
School | Traditionalism Actual idealism |
Institutions | School of Fascist Mysticism |
Main interests | History, religion, esotericism |
Notable ideas | Fascist mysticism, spiritual racism |
Website | www |
Baron Giulio Cesare Andrea Evola (Template:IPA-it; 19 May 1898 – 11 June 1974), better known as Julius Evola (/ˈdʒuljəs ɛˈvoʊlə/), was an Italian philosopher, painter, and esotericist. According to the scholar Franco Ferraresi, "Evola’s thought can be considered one of the most radical and consistent anti-egalitarian, anti-liberal, anti-democratic, and anti-popular systems in the twentieth century. It is a singular (though not necessarily original) blend of several schools and traditions, including German idealism, Eastern doctrines, traditionalism, and the all-embracing Weltanschauung of the interwar conservative Revolution with which Evola had a deep personal involvement."
Historian Aaron Gillette described Evola as "one of the most influential fascist racists in Italian history." Evola was admired by the Italian Fascist leader Benito Mussolini. He idolized the Nazi SS. He admired SS head Heinrich Himmler, whom he knew personally. Evola spent World War II working for the Nazi SD. During his trial in 1951, Evola denied being a Fascist and instead referred to himself as a ‘superfascist’. Concerning this statement, historian Elisabetta Cassina Wolff wrote that "It is unclear whether this meant that Evola was placing himself above or beyond Fascism."
Evola was the "chief ideologue" of Italy's terrorist radical right after World War II. He continues to influence contemporary neofascist movements.
Many of Evola's theories and writings were centered on his idiosyncratic mysticism, occultism, and esoteric religious studies, and this aspect of his work has influenced occultists and esotericists. Evola also advocated domination and rape of women because he saw it "as a natural expression of male desire"; this misogynistic outlook stemmed from his extreme right views on gender roles, which demanded absolute submission from women.
Early Years
Giulio Cesare Andrea Evola was born in Rome to a minor aristocratic family of Sicilian origins. He was a baron. Little is known about his early upbringing except that he considered it irrelevant. Evola studied engineering in Rome, but did not complete his studies because he "did not want to be associated in any way with bourgeois academic recognition and titles such as doctor and engineer."
In his teenage years, Evola immersed himself in painting—which he considered one of his natural talents—and literature, including Oscar Wilde and Gabriele d'Annunzio. He was introduced to philosophers such as Nietzsche and Otto Weininger. Other early philosophical influences included Carlo Michelstaedter and Max Stirner.
Evola served in World War I as an artillery officer on the Asiago plateau. He was attracted to the avant-garde and after the war, Evola briefly associated with Filippo Marinetti's Futurist movement. He became a prominent representative of Dadaism in Italy through his painting, poetry, and collaboration on the briefly published journal, Revue Bleu. In 1922, after concluding that avant-garde art was becoming commercialized and stiffened by academic conventions, he reduced his focus on artistic expression such as painting and poetry.
Works
Pagan Imperialism
In 1928, Evola wrote a violent attack on Christianity titled Pagan Imperialism, which proposed transforming fascism into a system consonant with ancient Roman values and the ancient Mystery traditions. Evola proposed that fascism should be vehicle for reinstating the caste-system and aristocracy of antiquity. Although Evola invoked the term fascism in this text, his diatribe against the Catholic Church was criticized by both the fascist regime and the Vatican itself. A. James Gregor argued that the text was an attack on fascism as it stood at the time of writing, but noted that Benito Mussolini made use of it in order to threaten the Vatican with the possibility of an "anti-clerical fascism". On account of Evola's sentiment, the Vatican backed right-wing Catholic journal Revue Interlationale de Sociétés Secretètes published an article in April 1928 entitled "Un Sataniste Italien: Julius Evola."
Revolt Against the Modern World
Evola's Revolt Against the Modern World is a text that promotes the mythology of an ancient Golden Age. In this work, Evola attempted to describe the features of his idealized traditional society. Evola argued that modernity represented a serious decline from an ideal society. He argued in that in the postulated Golden age, religious and temporal power were united. He wrote that society had not been founded on priestly rule, but by warriors expressing spiritual power. In mythology, he saw evidence of the West's superiority over the East. Moreover, he claimed that the traditional elite had the ability to access power and knowledge through a hierarchical version of magic which differed from the lower "superstitious and fraudulent" forms of magic. Evola insists on "nonmodern forms, institutions, and knowledge" as being necessary to produce a "real renewal ... in those who are still capable of receiving it." The text was "immediately recognized by Mircea Eliade and other intellectuals who allegedly advanced ideas associated with Tradition." Mircea Eliade, one of Evola's closest friends, was a fascist sympathizer associated with the Romanian fascist Iron Guard. Evola was aware of the importance of myth from his readings of Georges Sorel, one of the key intellectual influences on fascism. Herman Hesse described Revolt Against the Modern World as "really dangerous."
Mystery of the Grail
Evola's text The Mystery of the Grail discarded Christian interpretations of the Holy Grail. Evola wrote that the Grail "symbolizes the principle of an immortalizing and transcendent force connected to the primordial state...The mystery of the Grail is a mystery of a warrior initiation." He held that the Ghibellines, who fought the Guelph for control of Northern and central Italy in the thirteenth century, had within them the residual influences of pre-Christian Celtic and Nordic traditions that represented his conception of the Grail myth. He also held that the Guelph victory against the Ghibellines represented a regression of the castes, since the merchant caste took over from the warrior caste. In the epilogue to this text Evola argued that the Protocols of Zion, regardless of whether it was authentic or not, was a cogent representation of modernity. Historian Richard Barber said: "Evola mixes rhetoric, prejudice, scholarship, and politics into a strange version of the present and future, but in the process he brings together for the first time interest in the esoteric and in conspiracy theory which characterize much of the later Grail literature."
Doctrine of Awakening
In The Doctrine of Awakening, Evola argued that the Pāli Canon could be held to represent true Buddhism. His interpretation of Buddhism is that it was intended to be anti-democratic. He believed that Buddhism revealed the essence of an "Aryan" tradition that had become corrupted and lost in the West. He believed it coud be interpreted to reveal the superiority of a warrior caste. Harry Oldmeadow described Evola's work on Buddhism as exhibiting Nietzschean influence, but Evola criticized Nietzsche's anti-ascetic prejudice. The book "received the official approbation of the Pāli society", and was published by a reputable Orientalist publisher. Evola's interpretation of Buddhism, as put forth in his article "Spiritual Virility in Buddhism", is in conflict with the post-WWII scholarship of the Orientalist Giuseppe Tucci, which argues that the viewpoint that Buddhism advocates universal benevolence is legitimate. Arthur Versluis stated that Evola's writing on Buddhism was a vehicle for his own theories, but was a far from accurate rendition of the subject, and he held that much the same could be said of Evola's writing on Hermeticism. Nanavira Thera was inspired to become a bhikkhu from reading Evola's text The Doctrine of Awakening in 1945 while hospitalized in Sorrento.
Metaphysics of War
In the posthumously published collection of writings, Metaphysics of War, Evola, in line with the Conservative Revolutionary Ernst Jünger, explored the viewpoint that war could be a spiritually fulfilling experience. He proposed the necessity of a transcendental orientation in a warrior.
American "Civilization"
Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke has written that Evola's 1945 essay "American 'Civilization'" described America as "the final stage of European decline into the 'interior formlessness' of vacuous individualism, conformity and vulgarity under the universal aegis of money-making." According to Goodrick-Clarke, Evola argued that America's "mechanistic and rational philosophy of progress combined with a mundane horizon of prosperity to transform the world into an enormous suburban shopping mall."
Ride the Tiger
EC Wolff noted that in Ride the Tiger "Evola argued that the fight against modernity was lost. The only thing a ‘real man’ could just do was to ride the tiger of modernity patiently". Evola wrote that the events of the period would have to run their course but he "did not exclude the possibility of action in the future." He argued that one should be ready to intervene when the tiger "is tired of running." Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke notes that, "Evola sets up the ideal of the “active nihilist” who is prepared to act with violence against modern decadence." According to European Studies professor Paul Furlong, this text presents Evola's view that the potential "elite" should immunize itself from modernity and use "right wing anarchism" to rebel against it.
Occultism and Esoteriscm
Around 1920, Evola's interests led him into spiritual, transcendental, and "supra-rational" studies. He began reading various esoteric texts and gradually delved deeper into the occult, alchemy, magic, and Oriental studies, particularly Tibetan Lamaism and Vajrayanist Tantric yoga. A keen mountaineer, Evola described the experience as a source of revelatory spiritual experiences. After his return from the war, Evola experimented with hallucinogenic drugs and magic.
When he was about 23 years old, Evola considered suicide. He claimed that he avoided suicide thanks to a revelation he had while reading an early Buddhist text that dealt with shedding all forms of identity other than absolute transcendence. Evola would later publish the text The Doctrine of Awakening, which he regarded as a repayment of his debt to the doctrine of Buddha for saving him from suicide.
Evola wrote prodigiously on Eastern mysticism, Tantra, hermeticism, the myth of the holy grail and western esotericism. German Egyptologist and esoteric scholar Florian Ebeling has noted that Evola's The Hermetic Tradition is viewed as an "extremely important work on Hermeticism" in the eyes of esotericists. Evola gave particular focus to Cesare della Riviera's text Il Mondo Magico degli Heroi, which he later republished in modern Italian. He held that Riviera's text was consonant with the goals of "high magic" – the reshaping of the earthly human into a transcendental 'god man'. According to Evola, the alleged "timeless" Traditional science was able to come to lucid expression through this text, in spite of the "coverings" added to it to prevent accusations from the church. Though Evola rejected Carl Jung's interpretation of alchemy, Jung described Evola's The Hermetic Tradition as a "magisterial account of Hermetic philosophy". In Hegel and the Hermetic Tradition, the philosopher Glenn Alexander Magee favored Evola's interpretation over that of Jung's. In 1988, a journal devoted to Hermetic thought published a section of Evola's book and described it as "Luciferian."
Evola later confessed that he was not a Buddhist, and that his text on Buddhism was meant to balance his earlier work on the Hindu tantras. Evola's interest in tantra was spurred on by correspondence with Sir John Woodroffe. Evola was attracted to the active aspect of tantra, and its claim to provide a practical means to spiritual experience, over the more "passive" approaches in other forms of Eastern spirituality. In Tantric Buddhism in East Asia, Richard K. Payne, Dean of the Institute of Buddhist Studies, argued that Evola manipulated Tantra in the service of right wing violence, and that the emphasis on "power" in The Yoga of Power gave insight into his mentality.
Evola advocated that "differentiated individuals" following the Left-Hand Path use dark violent sexual powers against the modern world. For Evola, these "virile heroes" are both generous and cruel, possess the ability to rule, and commit "Dionysian" acts that might be seen as conventionally immoral. For Evola, the Left Hand path embraces violence as a means of transgression.
According to A. James Gregor Evola's definition of spirituality can be found in Meditations on the Peaks: "what has been successfully actualized and translated into a sense of superiority which is experienced inside by the soul, and a noble demeanor, which is expressed in the body." Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke wrote that Evola's "rigorous New Age spirituality speaks directly to those who reject absolutely the leveling world of democracy, capitalism, multi-racialism and technology at the outset of the twenty-first century. Their acute sense of cultural chaos can find powerful relief in his ideal of total renewal." Thomas Sheehan wrote that to "read Evola is to take a trip through a weird and fascinating jungle of ancient mythologies, pseudo-ethnology, and transcendental mysticism that is enough to make any southern California consciousness-tripper feel quite at home."
Magical Idealism
Thomas Sheehan wrote that "Evola's first philosophical works from the 'twenties were dedicated to reshaping neo-idealism from a philosophy of Absolute Spirit and mind into a philosophy of the "absolute individual" and action." Accordingly, Evola developed the doctrine of "magical idealism", which held that "the Ego must understand that everything that seems to have a reality independent of it is nothing but an illusion, caused by its own deficiency." For Evola, this ever-increasing unity with the "absolute individual" was consistent with unconstrained liberty, and therefore unconditional power. In his 1925 work Essays on Magical Idealism, Evola declared that "God does not exist. The Ego must create him by making itself divine."
According to Sheehan, Evola discovered the power of metaphysical mythology while developing his theories. This led to his advocacy of supra-rational intellectual intuition over discursive knowledge. In Evola's view, discursive knowledge separates man from Being. Sheehan stated that this position is a theme in certain interpretations of Western philosophers such as Plato, Thomas Aquinas, and Martin Heidegger that was exaggerated by Evola. Evola would later write:
The truths that allow us to understand the world of Tradition are not those that can be "learned" or "discussed." They either are or are not. We can only remember them, and that happens when we are freed from the obstacles represented by various human constructions (chief among these are the results and methods of the authorized "researchers") and have awakened the capacity to see from the nonhuman viewpoint, which is the same as the Traditional viewpoint ... Traditional truths have always been held to be essentially non-human.
Evola developed a doctrine of the "two natures": the natural world and the primordial "world of 'Being'". He believed that these "two natures" impose form and quality on lower matter and create a hierarchical "great chain of Being." He understood "spiritual virility" as signifying orientation towards this postulated transcendent principle. He held that the State should reflect this "ordering from above" and the consequent hierarchical differentiation of individuals according to their "organic preformation". By "organic preformation" he meant that which "gathers, preserves, and refines one's talents and qualifications for determinate functions."
Ur-Group
Evola was introduced to esotericism by Arturo Reghini, who was an early supporter of fascism. Reghini sought to promote a "cultured magic" opposed to Christianity and introduced Evola to the traditionalist René Guénon. In 1927, Reghini and Evola, along with other Italian esotericists, founded the Gruppo di Ur (the Ur Group). The purpose of this group was to attempt to bring the members' individual identities into such a superhuman state of power and awareness that they would be able to exert a magical influence on the world. The group employed techniques from Buddhist, Tantric, and rare Hermetic texts. They aimed to provide a "soul" to the burgeoning Fascist movement of the time through the revival of ancient Roman Paganism, and to influence the fascist regime through esotericism.
Articles on occultism from the Ur Group were later published in Introduction to Magic. Reghini's support of Freemasonry would however prove a bone of contention for Evola; accordingly, Evola broke with Reghini in 1928. Reghini himself broke from Evola, accusing Evola of plagiarizing his thoughts in the book Pagan Imperialism. Evola on the other hand blamed Reghini for the premature publication of Pagan Imperialism. Evola's later work owed a considerable debt to René Guénon's text Crisis of the Modern World, though he diverged from Guénon on the issue of the relationship between warriors and priests.
Misogyny and Sexual Magic
Julius Evola believed that the alleged higher qualities expected of a man of a particular race were not those expected of a woman of the same race. He held that "just relations between the sexes" involved women acknowledging their "inequality" with men. In 1925, he wrote an article titled "La donna come cosa" (Woman as Thing). Evola later quoted Joseph de Maistre's statement that "Woman cannot be superior except as woman, but from the moment in which she desires to emulate man she is nothing but a monkey." Evola believed that women's liberation was "the renunciation by woman of her right to be a woman". He held that a woman "could traditionally participate in the sacred hierarchical order only in a mediated fashion through her relationship with a man." He held, as a feature of his idealized gender relations, the Hindu sati, which for him was a form of sacrifice indicating women's respect for patriarchal traditions. He held that for the "pure, feminine" woman, "man is not perceived by her as a mere husband or lover, but as her lord." Evola believed that women would find "true greatness" in "total subjugation to men."
Evola regarded matriarchy and goddess religions as a symptom of decadence, and preferred a hyper-masculine, warrior ethos.
Evola was influenced by Hans Blüher; he was a proponent of the Männerbund concept as a model for his proposed ultra-fascist "Order." Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke noted the fundamental influence of Otto Weininger's misogynist book Sex and Character on Evola's dualism of male-female spirituality. According to Goodrich-Clarke, "Evola's celebration of virile spirituality was rooted in Weininger's work, which was widely translated by the end of the First World War." Unlike Weininger, Evola believed that women needed to be conquered, not ignored. Evola denounced homosexuality as "useless" for his purposes. He did not neglect sadomasochism, so long as sadism and masochism "are magnifications of an element potentially present in the deepest essence of eros." Then, it would be possible to "extend, in a transcendental and perhaps ecstatic way, the possibilities of sex."
Evola held that women "played" with men, threatened their masculinity, and lured them into a "constrictive" grasp with their sexuality. He wrote that "It should not be expected of women that they return to what they really are ... when men themselves retain only the semblance of true virility", and lamented that "men instead of being in control of sex are controlled by it and wander about like drunkards". He believed that in Tantra and in sexual magic, in which he saw a strategy for aggression, he found the means to counter the "emasculated" West. According to Annalisa Merelli, Evola "went so far as to justify rape" because he saw it "as a natural expression of male desire". Evola also said that the "ritual violation of virgins", and "whipping women" were a means of "consciousness raising", so long as these practices were done to the intensity required to produce the proper "liminal psychic climate". He wrote that "as a rule, nothing stirs a man more than feeling the woman utterly exhausted beneath his own hostile rapture."
Evola translated Weininger's Sex and Character into Italian. Dissatisfied with simply translating Weininger's work, he wrote the text Eros and the Mysteries of Love: The Metaphysics of Sex, where his views on sexuality were dealt with at length. Arthur Versluis described this text as Evola's "most interesting" work aside from Revolt Against the Modern World. This book remains popular among many New Age adherents.
Racism and Mystical Aryanism
Evola's dissent from standard biological concepts of race had roots in his aristocratic elitism, since Nazi Völkisch ideology inadequately separated aristocracy from "commoners." According to Furlong, Evola developed "the law of the regression of castes" in Revolt Against the Modern World and other writings on racism from the 1930s and World War II period. In Evola's view "power and civilization have progressed from one to another of the four castes—sacred leaders, warrior nobility, bourgeoisie (economy, 'merchants') and slaves" Furlong explains: "for Evola, the core of racial superiority lay in the spiritual qualities of the higher castes, which expressed themselves in physical as well as in cultural features, but were not determined by them. The law of the regression of castes places racism at the core of Evola's philosophy, since he sees an increasing predominance of lower races as directly expressed through modern mass democracies."
Prior to the end of War, Evola had frquently used the term "Aryan" to mean the nobility, who in his view were imbued with traditional spirituality. Wolff notes that Evola seems to have stopped writing about race in 1945, but adds that the intellectual themes of Evola's writings were otherwise unchanged. Evola continued to write about elitism and his contempt for the weak. His "doctrine of the Aryan-Roman 'super-race was simply restated as a doctrine of the 'leaders of men'...no longer with reference to the SS, but to the mediaeval Teutonic knights of the Knights Templar, already mentioned in Rivolta."
Evola spoke of "inferior non-European races". Peter Merkl wrote that "Evola was never prepared to discount the value of blood altogether". Evola wrote: "a certain balanced consciousness and dignity of race can be considered healthy" in a time where "the exaltation of the negro and all the rest, anticolonialist psychosis and integrationist fanatiscm all parallel phenomena in the decline of Europe and the West." While not totally against race-mixing, in 1957, Evola wrote an article attributing the perceived acceleration of American decadence to the influence of "negroes" and the opposition to segregation. Furlong noted that this article is "among the most extreme in phraseology of any he wrote, and exhibits a degree of intolerance that leaves no doubt as to his deep prejudice against black people."
National Mysticism
For his spiritual interpretation of the different racial psychologies, Evola found the work of German race theorist Ludwig Ferdinand Clauss invaluable. Like Evola, Clauss believed that physical race and spiritual race could diverge as a consequence of miscegenation. Evola's racism included racism of the body, soul and spirit, giving primacy to the latter factor, writing that "races only declined when their spirit failed."
Like René Guénon, Evola believed that mankind is living in the Kali Yuga of the Hindu tradition—the Dark Age of unleashed, materialistic appetites. He argued that both Italian fascism and Nazism represented hope that the "celestial" Aryan race would be reconstituted. He drew on mythological accounts of super-races and their decline, particularly the hyperboreans, and maintained that traces of hyperborean influence could be felt in Indo-European man. He felt that Indo-European men had devolved from these higher mythological races. Gregor noted that several contemporary criticisms of Evola's theory were published : "In one of Fascism’s most important theoretical journals, Evola’s critic pointed out that many Nordic-Aryans, not to speak of Mediterranean Aryans, fail to demonstrate any Hyperborean properties. Instead, they make obvious their materialism, their sensuality, their indifference to loyalty and sacrifice, together with their consuming greed. How do they differ from 'inferior' races, and why should anyone wish, in any way, to favor them?"
Concerning the relationship between "spiritual racism" and biological racism, Evola put forth the following viewpoint, which Furlong described as pseudo-scientific: "The factor of 'blood' or 'race' has its importance, because it is not psychologically—in the brain or the opinions of the individual—but in the very deepest forces of life that traditions live and act as typical formative energies. Blood registers the effects of this action, and indeed offers, through heredity, a matter that is already refined and pre-formed..."
Antisemitism
Evola endorsed Otto Weininger's views on the Jews. Though Evola viewed Jews as corrosive and anti-traditional, he described Adolf Hitler's more fanatical anti-Semitism as a paranoid idée fixe that damaged the reputation of the Third Reich. Evola's conception did not emphasize the Nazi racial conception of Jews as "representatives of a biological race"—in Evola's view the Jews were "the carriers of a world view...a spirit corresponded to the 'worst' and 'most decadent' features of modernity: democracy, egalitarianism and materialism."
Evola argued that The Protocols of Zion—whether or not a forgery—accurately reflect the conditions of modernity. He believed that the Protocols "contain the plan for an occult war, whose objective is the utter destruction, in the non-Jewish peoples, of all tradition, class, aristocracy, and hierarchy, and of all moral, religious, and spiritual values." He wrote the forward to the second Italian edition of the Protocols, which was published by the Fascist Giovanni Preziosi in 1938.
Following the murder of his friend Corneliu Codreanu, the leader of the Fascist Romanian Iron Guard, Evola expressed anticipation of a "talmudic, Israelite tyranny." However, Evola believed that Jews had this "power" only because of European "decadence" in modernity. He also believed that one could be "Aryan", but have a "Jewish" soul, just as one could be "Jewish", but have an "Aryan" soul. In Evola's view Otto Weininger and Carlo Michelstaedter were Jews of "sufficiently heroic, ascetic, and sacral" character to fit the latter category.
Fascism
Evola has been described as "one of the most influential fascist racists in Italian history." Benito Mussolini read Evola's Synthesis of the Doctrine of Race (Sintesi di Dottrina della Razza) in August 1941, and met with Evola to offer him his praise. Evola later recounted that Mussolini had found in his work a uniquely Roman form of Fascist racism distinct from that found in Nazi Germany. With Mussolini's backing, Evola launched the minor journal Sangue e Spirito (Blood and Spirit). While not always in agreement with German racial theorists, Evola traveled to Germany in February 1942 and obtained support for German collaboration on Sangue e Spirito from "key figures in the German racial hierarchy." Fascists appreciated the palingenetic value of Evola's "proof" "that the true representatives of the state and the culture of ancient Rome were people of the Nordic race." Evola eventually became Italy's leading racial philosopher. He has been described as a "fascist intellectual," a "radical traditionalist," "antiegalitarian, antiliberal, antidemocratic, and antipopular,” and as having been "the leading philosopher of Europe's neofascist movement."
Julius Evola wrote for fascist journals, and his racial theories received warm reception from Mussolini in 1941. Yet, while acknowledging Evola's place among fascist intellectuals, his racism, his anti-semitism and his antipathy towards democracy, A James Gregor wrote that "Evola opposed literally every feature of Fascism".
Evola developed a complex line of argument, closely related to the spiritual orientation of Traditionalist writers such as René Guénon and the political concerns of the European Authoritarian Right. Evola's first published political work was an anti-fascist piece in 1925. In this work, Evola called Italy's fascist movement a "laughable revolution," based on empty sentiment and materialistic concerns. He applauded Mussolini's anti-bourgeois orientation and his goal of making Italian citizens into hardened warriors, but criticized Fascist populism, party politics, and elements of leftism that he saw in the fascist regime. Evola saw Mussolini's Fascist Party as possessing no cultural or spiritual foundation. He was passionate about infusing it with these elements in order to make it suitable for his ideal conception of Übermensch culture which, in Evola's view, characterized the imperial grandeur of pre-Christian Europe. He expressed anti-nationalist sentiment, stating that to become “truly human,” one would have to “overcome brotherly contamination” and “purge oneself” of the feeling that one is united with others “because of blood, affections, country or human destiny.” He also opposed the futurism that Italian fascism was aligned with, along with the "plebeian" nature of the movement. Accordingly, Evola launched the journal La Torre (The Tower), to voice his concerns and advocate for a more elitist fascism. Evola's ideas were poorly received by the fascist mainstream as it stood at the time of his writing.
In May, 1951, Evola was arrested and charged with promoting the revival of the Fascist Party, and of glorifying Fascism. Defending himself at trial, Evola stated that his work belonged to a long tradition of anti-democratic writers who certainly could be linked to fascism—at least fascism interpreted according to certain Evolian criteria—but who certainly could not be identified with the Fascist regime under Mussolini. Evola then declared that he was not a Fascist but a ‘superfascist’. He was acquitted.
The Third Reich
Finding Italian fascism too compromising, Evola began to seek recognition in the Third Reich. Evola spent a considerable amount of time in Germany in 1937 and 1938, and gave a series of lectures to the German–Italian Society 1938. Evola took issue with Nazi populism and biological materialism. SS authorities initially rejected Evola's ideas as supranational and aristocratic though he was better received by members of the Conservative Revolutionary movement. The Nazi Ahnenerbe reported that many considered his ideas to be pure “fantasy” which ignored “historical facts.”. Evola admired Heinrich Himmler, whom he knew personally, but he had reservations about Adolf Hitler because of Hitler's reliance on Völkisch nationalism.Himmler's SS kept a dossier on Evola—dossier document AR-126 described his plans for a "Roman-Germanic Imperium" as "utopian" and described him as a "reactionary Roman," whose goal was an "insurrection of the old aristocracy against the modern world." The document recommended that the SS "stop his effectiveness in Germany" and provide him with no support, particularly because of his desire to create a "secret international order".
Despite this opposition, Evola was able to establish political connections with pan-Europeanist elements inside the Reich Main Security Office. Evola subsequently ascended to the inner circles of Nazism as the influence of pan-European advocates overtook that of Völkisch proponents, due to military contingencies. Evola wrote the article Reich and Imperium as Elements in the New European Order for the Nazi-backed journal European Review. He spent World War II working for the SD. The SD bureau Amt VII, a Reich Main Security Office research library, helped Evola acquire arcane occult and Masonic texts.
Italian Fascism went into decline when, in 1943, Mussolini was deposed and imprisoned. At this point, Evola fled to Germany with the help of the SD. Although not a member of the Fascist Party, and despite his apparent problems with the Fascist regime, Evola was one of the first people to greet Mussolini when the latter was broken out of prison by Otto Skorzeny in 1943. Subsequently, Evola helped welcome Mussolini to Adolf Hitler's Wolf's Lair. Following this, Evola involved himself in Mussolini's Italian Social Republic. It was Evola's custom to walk around the city during bombing raids in order to better 'ponder his destiny'. During one such raid, 1945, a shell fragment damaged his spinal cord and he became paralyzed from the waist down, remaining so for the remainder of his life.
Post-War
After World War II, Evola continued his work in esotericism. He wrote a number of books and articles on sexual magic and various other esoteric studies, including The Yoga of Power: Tantra, Shakti, and the Secret Way (1949), Eros and the Mysteries of Love: The Metaphysics of Sex (1958), and Meditations on the Peaks: Mountain Climbing as Metaphor for the Spiritual Quest (1974). He also wrote his two explicitly political books Men Among the Ruins: Post-War Reflections of a Radical Traditionalist (1953), Ride the Tiger: A Survival Manual for the Aristocrats of the Soul (1961), and his autobiography, The Path of Cinnabar (1963). He also expanded upon critiques of American civilization and materialism, as well as increasing American influence in Europe, collected in the posthumous anthology Civilta Americana.
Evola's occult ontology exerted influence over post-war neo-fascism. In the post-war period, Evola's writing evoked interest among the neo-fascist right. After 1945, Evola was considered the most important Italian theoretician of the Conservative Revolution and the "chief ideologue" of Italy's post-war radical right. According to Egil Asprem and Kennet Granholm, Evola's most significant post-war political texts are Orientamenti and Men Among the Ruins.
Orientamenti was a text against "national fascism"—instead, it advocated for a European Community modeled on the principles of the Waffen-SS. The Italian Neo-fascist group Ordine Nuovo adopted Orientamenti as a guide for action in postwar Italy. The European Liberation Front, who were affiliated with Francis Parker Yockey, called Evola "Italy's gretest living authoriation philosopher" in the April 1951 issue of their publication Frontfighter
During the post-war period, Evola attempted to dissociate himself from totalitarianism, preferring the concept of the "organic" state, which he put forth in his text Men Among the Ruins. Evola sought to develop a strategy for the implementation of a "conservative revolution" in post World War II Europe. He rejected nationalism, advocating instead for a European Imperium, which could take various forms according to local conditions, but should be "organic, hierarchical, anti-democratic, and anti-individual." Evola endorsed Francis Parker Yockey's neo-fascist manifesto Imperium, but disagreed with it because he believed that Yockey had a "superficial" understanding of what was immediately possible. Evola believed that his conception of neo-fascist Europe could best be implemented by an elite of "superior" men who operated outside normal politics.
Giuliano Salierni was an activist in the neo-Fascist Italian Social Movement during the early 1950s. He later recalled Evola's calls to violence. Roberto Fiore and his colleagues in the early 1980s helped the National Front's "Political Soldiers" forge a militant elitist philosophy based on Evola's "most militant tract", The Aryan Doctrine of Battle and Victory.The Aryan Doctrine called for a “Great Holy War” that would be fought for spiritual renewal and fought in parallel to the physical “Little Holy War” against perceived enemies. Wolff attributes extreme-right terrorist actions in Italy in the 1970s and 1980s to the influence of Julius Evola.
Thomas Sheehan has argued that Evola's work is essential reading for those seeking to understand Eurofascism, in the same way that knowledge of the writings of Marx is necessary for those seeking to understand Communist actions.
Death
Evola died unmarried, without children, on 11 June 1974 in Rome.
Books and articles
- Arte Astratta, posizione teorica (1920)
- La parole obscure du paysage intérieur (1920)
- Saggi sull'idealismo magico (1925)
- L'individuo e il divenire del mondo (1926)
- L'uomo come potenza (1927)
- Teoria dell'individuo assoluto (1927)
- Imperialismo pagano (1928; English translation: Heathen Imperialism, 2007)
- Introduzione alla magia (1927–1929; 1971; English translation: Introduction to Magic: Rituals and Practical Techniques for the Magus, 2001)
- Fenomenologia dell'individuo assoluto (1930)
- La tradizione ermetica (1931; English translation: The Hermetic Tradition: Symbols and Teachings of the Royal Art, 1995)
- Maschera e volto dello spiritualismo contemporaneo: Analisi critica delle principali correnti moderne verso il sovrasensibile (1932)
- Rivolta contro il mondo moderno (1934; second edition: 1951; English translation: Revolt Against the Modern World: Politics, Religion, and Social Order in the Kali Yuga, 1995)
- Tre aspetti del problema ebraico (1936; English translation: Three Aspects of the Jewish Problem, 2003)
- Il Mistero del Graal e la Tradizione Ghibellina dell'Impero (1937; English translation: The Mystery of the Grail: Initiation and Magic in the Quest for the Spirit, 1997)
- Il mito del sangue. Genesi del Razzismo (1937)
- Indirizzi per una educazione razziale (1941; English translation: The Elements of Racial Education 2005)
- Sintesi di dottrina della razza (1941; German translation: Grundrisse der Faschistischen Rassenlehre, 1943)
- Die Arische Lehre von Kampf und Sieg (1941; English translation: The Aryan Doctrine of Battle and Victory, 2007)
- Gli Ebrei hanno voluto questa Guerra (1942)
- La dottrina del risveglio (1943; English translations: The Doctrine of Awakening: A Study on the Buddhist Ascesis, 1951; The Doctrine of Awakening: The Attainment of Self-Mastery According to the Earliest Buddhist Texts, 1995)
- Lo Yoga della potenza (1949; English translation: The Yoga of Power: Tantra, Shakti, and the Secret Way, 1992)
- Orientamenti, undici punti (1950)
- Gli uomini e le rovine (1953; English translation: Men Among the Ruins: Post-War Reflections of a Radical Traditionalist, 2002)
- Metafisica del sesso (1958; English translations: The Metaphysics of Sex, 1983; Eros and the Mysteries of Love: The Metaphysics of Sex, 1991)
- L'«Operaio» nel pensiero di Ernst Jünger (1960)
- Cavalcare la tigre (1961; English translation: Ride the Tiger: A Survival Manual for the Aristocrats of the Soul, 2003)
- Il cammino del cinabro (1963; second edition, 1970; English translation: The Path of Cinnabar: An Intellectual Autobiography, 2009)
- Meditazioni delle vette (1974; English translation: Meditations on the Peaks: Mountain Climbing as Metaphor for the Spiritual Quest, 1998)
See also
- José López Rega, also known as Argentine Evola
- Occultism and the far right
- Traditionalist School
Footnotes
- "Evola cogn". dizionario.rai.it. Radio Audizioni Italiane Dizionario d'Ortografia e di Pronunzia. Retrieved February 13, 2017.
- Ferraresi, Franco. Threats to Democracy: The Radical Right in Italy after the War. Princeton University Press, 2012. p. 44
- ^ Aaron Gillette. Racial Theories in Fascist Italy. London: Routledge, 2003.
- Horowitz, Jason. "Bannon Cited Italian Thinker Who Inspired Fascists". New York Times, February 2017
- ^ Kevin Coogan. Dreamer of the Day: Francis Parker Yockey and the Postwar Fascist International. Autonomedia, 1999.
- ^ Wolff, Elisabetta Cassini. "Evola's interpretation of fascism and moral responsibility", Patterns of Prejudice, Vol. 50, Issue 4–5, 2016. pp. 478–494
- ^ Stanley G. Payne. A History of Fascism, 1914–1945. University of Wisconsin Press, 1996
- ^ Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke. Black Sun: Aryan Cults, Esoteric Nazism, and the Politics of Identity. NYU Press, 2001
- Jake Romm. "Meet The Philosopher Who’s A Favorite Of Steve Bannon And Mussolini". Forward. February 2017
- Jason Horowitz. "Thinker loved by fascists like Mussolini is on Stephen Bannon’s reading list". The Boston Globe. February 2017
- ^ Paul Furlong, The Social and Political Thought of Julius Evola. London: Routledge, 2011. ISBN 9780203816912
- ^ Damon Zacharias Lycourinos. Occult Traditions. Numen Books, 2012
- ^ Annalisa Merelli. "Steve Bannon’s interest in a thinker who inspired fascism exposes the misogyny of the alt-right". Quartz. February 22, 2017
- Julius Evola, Il Camino del Cinabro, 1963
- Roger Griffin, Matthew Feldman. Fascism: Post-war fascisms. Taylor & Francis, 2004. p. 219
- G.Evola, Il Camino del Cinabro, 1963
- Gregor, A James The Search for Neofascism: The Use and Abuse of Social Science. Cambridge University Press, 2006. pp. 89–91
- ^ Arthur Versluis. Magic and Mysticism: An Introduction to Western Esoteric Traditions. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2007. p. 144-145
- ^ Mark Sedgwick. Against the Modern World: Traditionalism and the Secret Intellectual History of the Twentieth Century. Oxford University Press, 2009
- ^ Richard W. Barber. The Holy Grail: Imagination and Belief. Harvard University Press, 2004
- ^ T. Skorupski. The Buddhist Forum, Volume 4. Routledge, 2005
- Harry Oldmeadow. Journeys East: 20th Century Western Encounters with Eastern Religious Traditions. World Wisdom, Inc, 2004. p. 369
- Donald S. Lopez. Curators of the Buddha: The Study of Buddhism Under Colonialism. University of Chicago Press, 1995. p. 177
- Lennart Svensson. Ernst Junger – A Portrait. Manticore Books, 2016. p. 202
- Florian Ebeling. The Secret History of Hermes Trismegistus: Hermeticism from Ancient to Modern Times. Cornell University Press, 2007. p. 138
- ^ Lux in Tenebris: The Visual and the Symbolic in Western Esotericism. BRILL, 2016
- Glenn Alexander Magee. Hegel and the Hermetic Tradition. Cornell University Press, 2008. p. 200
- ^ Gary Lachman. Politics and the Occult: The Left, the Right, and the Radically Unseen. Quest Books, 2012. p. 215
- Kathleen Taylor. Sir John Woodroffe, Tantra and Bengal: 'An Indian Soul in a European Body?' . Routledge, 2012. p. 135
- Richard K. Payne. Tantric Buddhism in East Asia. Simon and Schuster, 2006. p. 229
- Gregor, A James The Search for Neofascism: The Use and Abuse of Social Science. Cambridge University Press, 2006. pp. 101–102
- ^ Thomas Sheehan. Italy: Terror on the Right. The New York Review of Books, Volume 27, Number 21 & 22, January 22, 1981
- ^ Thomas Sheehan. Myth and Violence: The Fascism of Julius Evola and Alain de Benoist. Social Research, XLVIII, 1 (Spring, 1981). 45–73
- Nevill Drury. The Dictionary of the Esoteric: 3000 Entries on the Mystical and Occult Traditions. Motilal Banarsidass Publ., 2004. p. 96
- Isotta Poggi. "Alternative Spirituality in Italy." In: James R. Lewis, J. Gordon Melton. Perspectives on the New Age. SUNY Press, 1992. Page 276.
- Gregor, A James The Search for Neofascism: The Use and Abuse of Social Science. Cambridge University Press, 2006. p. 89
- Roger Griffin, Matthew Feldman. Fascism: Post-war fascisms. Taylor & Francis, 2004. p. 246
- Franco Ferraresi. Threats to Democracy: The Radical Right in Italy after the War. Princeton University Press, 2012. p. 220
- R. Ben-Ghiat, M. Fuller. Italian Colonialism. Springer, 2016. p. 149
- J. Gordon Melton, Martin Baumann. Religions of the World: A Comprehensive Encyclopedia of Beliefs and Practices, 2nd Edition : A Comprehensive Encyclopedia of Beliefs and Practices. ABC-CLIO, 2010. p. 1085
- Conner, Randy P.; Sparks, David Hatfield; Sparks, Mariya (1997). Cassell's Encyclopedia of Queer Myth, Symbol, and Spirit: Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and Transgender Lore. Cassell. p. 136.
- Peter H. Merkl. Political Violence and Terror: Motifs and Motivations. University of California Press, 1986. p. 85
- A. James Gregor, Mussolini's Intellectuals: Fascist Social and Political Thought. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2005.
- Gregor, A James The Search for Neofascism: The Use and Abuse of Social Science. Cambridge University Press, 2006. p. 106
- ^ Horst Junginger. The Study of Religion Under the Impact of Fascism. BRILL, 2008. p. 136
- Oren Nimni and Nathan J. Robinson. Alan Dershowitz Takes Anti-Semitism Very Seriously Indeed. Current Affairs. November 16, 2016
- Gary Lachman. Politics and the Occult: The Left, the Right, and the Radically Unseen. Quest Books, 2012. p. 217
- Gregor, A James The Search for Neofascism: The Use and Abuse of Social Science. Cambridge University Press, 2006. p. 105
- Cyprian Blamires. World Fascism: a historical encyclopedia, vol 1. ABC-CLIO, 2006. p. 208.
- Packer, Jeremy. Secret agents popular icons beyond James Bond. New York, NY: Lang, 2009. p 150.
- ^ Atkins, Stephen E. Encyclopedia of modern worldwide extremists and extremist groups. Greenwood Publishing Group, 2004. p 89.
- Gregor, A James. "Julius Evola, Fascism, and Neofascism"
- Gregor, A James The Search for Neofascism: The Use and Abuse of Social Science. Cambridge University Press, 2006. p 93.
- Gregor, A James The Search for Neofascism: The Use and Abuse of Social Science Cambridge University Press, 2006. p 86.
- H.T. Hansen, "A Short Introduction to Julius Evola" in Evola, Revolt Against the Modern World, p xviii.
- A. James Gregor and Andreas Umland. Dugin Not a Fascist? (6 texts). Erwägen-Wissen-Ethik, 2005.
- Nigel Graddon. Otto Rahn and the Quest for the Grail: The Amazing Life of the Real Indiana Jones. SCB Distributors, 2013
- Roger Griffin, Matthew Feldman. Fascism: Post-war fascisms. Taylor & Francis, 2004. p. 223
- Guido Stucco, "Translator's Introduction," in Evola, The Yoga of Power, pp. ix–xv
- Evola, Julius (2010). Civiltà americana. Scritti sugli Stati Uniti (1930–1968). Napoli: Controcorrente.
- Egil Asprem, Kennet Granholm. Contemporary Esotericism. Routledge, 2014. p. 245
- Marlene Laruelle. Eurasianism and the European Far Right: Reshaping the Europe–Russia Relationship. Lexington Books, 2015. p. 102
References
This section includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations. Please help to improve this section by introducing more precise citations. (March 2017) (Learn how and when to remove this message) |
- Aprile, Mario (1984), "Julius Evola: An Introduction to His Life and Work," The Scorpion No. 6 (Winter/Spring): 20–21.
- Coletti, Guillermo (1996), "Against the Modern World: An Introduction to the Work of Julius Evola," Ohm Clock No. 4 (Spring): 29–31.
- Coogan, Kevin (1998), Dreamer of the Day: Francis Parker Yockey and the Postwar Fascist International (Brooklyn, NY: Autonomedia, ISBN 1-57027-039-2).
- De Benoist, Alain. "Julius Evola, réactionnaire radical et métaphysicien engagé. Analyse critique de la pensée politique de Julius Evola," Nouvelle Ecole, No. 53–54 (2003), pp. 147–69.
- Drake, Richard H. (1986), "Julius Evola and the Ideological Origins of the Radical Right in Contemporary Italy," in Peter H. Merkl (ed.), Political Violence and Terror: Motifs and Motivations (University of California Press, ISBN 0-520-05605-1) 61–89.
- Drake, Richard H. (1988), "Julius Evola, Radical Fascism and the Lateran Accords," The Catholic Historical Review 74: 403–419.
- Drake, Richard H. (1989), "The Children of the Sun," in The Revolutionary Mystique and Terrorism in Contemporary Italy (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, ISBN 0-253-35019-0), 114–134.
- Faerraresi, Franco (1987), "Julius Evola: Tradition, Reaction, and the Radical Right," European Journal of Sociology 28: 107–151.
- Furlong, Paul (2011), Introduction to the Social and Political Thought of Julius Evola London: Routledge.
- Godwin, Joscelyn (1996), Arktos: The Polar Myth in Science, Symbolism, and Nazi Survival (Kempton, IL: Adventures Unlimited Press, ISBN 0-932813-35-6), 57–61.
- Gelli, Frank (2012), Julius Evola: The Sufi of Rome
- Godwin, Joscelyn (2002), "Julius Evola, A Philosopher in the Age of the Titans," TYR: Myth—Culture—Tradition Volume 1 (Atlanta, GA: Ultra Publishing, ISBN 0-9720292-0-6), 127–142.
- Goodrick-Clarke, Nicholas (2001), Black Sun: Aryan Cults, Esoteric Nazism and the Politics of Identity (New York: New York University Press, ISBN 0-585-43467-0, ISBN 0-8147-3124-4, ISBN 0-8147-3155-4), 52–71.
- Griffin, Roger (1985), "Revolts against the Modern World: The Blend of Literary and Historical Fantasy in the Italian New Right," Literature and History 11 (Spring): 101–123.
- Griffin, Roger (1995) (ed.), Fascism (Oxford University Press, ISBN 0-19-289249-5), 317–318.
- Hansen, H. T. (1994), "A Short Introduction to Julius Evola," Theosophical History 5 (January): 11–22; reprinted as introduction to Evola, Revolt Against the Modern World, (Vermont: Inner Traditions, 1995).
- Hansen, H. T. (2002), "Julius Evola's Political Endeavors," introduction to Evola, Men Among the Ruins, (Vermont: Inner Traditions).
- Moynihan, Michael (2003), "Julius Evola's Combat Manuals for a Revolt Against the Modern World," in Richard Metzger (ed.), Book of Lies: The Disinformation Guide to Magick and the Occult (The Disinformation Company, ISBN 0-9713942-7-X) 313–320.
- Rees, Philip (1991), Biographical Dictionary of the Extreme Right Since 1890 (New York: Simon & Schuster, ISBN 0-13-089301-3), 118–120.
- Sedgwick, Mark (2004) Against the Modern World: Traditionalism and the Secret Intellectual History of the Twentieth Century (Oxford University Press, ISBN 0-19-515297-2).
- Sheehan, Thomas (1981) "Myth and Violence: The Fascism of Julius Evola and Alain de Benoist," Social Research, 48 (Spring): 45–83.
- Stucco, Guido (1992), "Translator's Introduction," in Evola, The Yoga of Power (Vermont: Inner Traditions), ix–xv.
- Stucco, Guido (1994), "Introduction," in Evola, The Path of Enlightenment According to the Mithraic Mysteries, Zen: The Religion of the Samurai, Rene Guenon: A Teacher for Modern Times, and Taoism: The Magic, the Mysticism (Edmonds, WA: Holmes Publishing Group)
- Stucco, Guido (2002). "The Legacy of a European Traditionalist: Julius Evola in Perspective". The Occidental Quarterly 3 (2), pp. 21–44.
- Wasserstrom, Steven M. (1995), "The Lives of Baron Evola," Alphabet City 4 + 5 (December): 84–89.
- Waterfield, Robin (1990), 'Baron Julius Evola and the Hermetic Tradition', Gnosis 14, (Winter): 12–17.
- "Bibliografia di J. Evola". Fondazione Julius Evola. Retrieved 25 April 2015.
External links
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