| Book
Review
New
Daughters of the Oracle: The Return of Female Prophetic Power
in Our Time
Virginia
Adair
New Paradigm Books, 2001.
www.newpara.com
Review
by Eugenia Macer-Story
New
Daughters of the Oracle is a personal diary resembling
the narrations of Lawrence Durrell in his book Bitter Lemons(1).
Although the author conceptualizes herself as documenting
the mundane situations and personae of women oracles around
the world, everywhere the reflection in Virginia Adair's perceptions
is approximately the same. Is this a study of the oracular
women Adair has visited? Or is this a study of Adair herself,
a person who by her own account was not as interested in her
own "fortune" as in a narration of the fortunes
of the many oracular women she has interviewed?
This is a valuable
book for any psychical researcher to read, exactly for that
obvious, reflective reason. The tradition of "travel
books" from which both Adair and Durrell take their style
assumes that the traveler will be a peripatetic aristocrat
of some sort, either with a retinue or in disguise. Part of
the reader's interest in this tradition of travel literature
is the exotic persona of the narrator of the memoir.
In order to write
such a memoir, the narrator must assume some arbitrary narrative
tone, much as a performer doing a monologue first takes on
a dramatic personality. The monologue is not as interesting
to read in a flat, non-committal narrative style. Adair is
aware of this convention and introduces her narrative voice
as "privileged traveler" quite deliberately and
successfully. Yet this narrative voice is limited. Any reader
will be aware that the many Oracles visited by Adair adapt
themselves in their style of advice to her mentally projected
expectations as "genteel traveler." At one point,
Adair notices this similarity between interviews she has undertaken
with a variety of "Oracles" and wonders why all
of the Oracular interviews from all over the world seem so
similar.
This is actually
an amusing issue which goes far beyond an analysis of the
cultural differences between various fortune tellers Adair
visited all over the world; for one of the gifts of an actual
Oracle is this quality of reflecting the individual destiny
and personal rhythms of the querent. Therefore, all the responses
of the genuine though culturally diverse Oracles will be somewhat
the same or actually identical in basic message. In presenting
public communications, one finds that there are a great variety
of individual interpretations of the same message. Each receptor
will filter the information through his/her own looking glass
window. The task then becomes to clear one's own mechanism
before deliberately attempting to use ESP or spirit contact
to transmit information.
Again, one of
the gifts of an Oracle is this quality of reflecting the individual
destiny and rhythm of the querent. So if all of the Oracles
consulted during a World Tour are accurate, their many readings
will be similar, with variations due to temperament and cultural
experience. Yet is the operative function of the practicing
Oracle simply to serve the querent? What about the function
of the oracular gift in the life of the practitioner herself?
In her excellent
book Other Powers(2), author Barbara Goldsmith puts
forward the thesis that very real extraordinary abilities
in women and oppressed racial and cultural minorities may
arise in situations where otherwise there is "no exit"
from the given cultural conditions.
Goldsmith's social
and political opinions on spiritualism, different from the
opinions of Adair which cite among other factors the accidents
of fate and hereditary ability, arise from Goldsmith's study
of extraordinary female personalities who have practiced as
"spirit mediums." It is significant in this context
that Goldsmith includes in her study speculations about the
sex life of the women she discusses whereas Adair does not
take the bait of popular "psychoanalysis" in this
regard.
Goldsmith has
written a book about the emancipation of women and Adair has
written a book about the social and cultural situation of
female oracles who had her in to tea internationally. But
has either of these authors, who apparently both believe that
"psi" or "spiritualism" is merely a side
effect of certain material and social situations, studied
the "spirit effects" and "psi accuracy"
of the people to whom they allude socially as being "exceptional"?
There are thirty-two
listings under the category of "spiritualism" in
Goldsmith's book Other Powers. Of these listings, about
thirteen relate directly to such issues as "spirit rapping,"
sıances, "mesmerism" and magnetic healing. The rest
are ad hominim or historical references. Mind you,
there is nothing wrong with this balance of focus. For the
history of these "other powers" in women is the
avowed subject of Goldsmith's book. Yet, for the reader simply
interested in spiritualism as an activity, Goldsmith's book
does not contain detailed documentary or informative material.
In the index listings, I looked up "rapping by spirits."
The body of this book is 447 pages long and there are only
three pages listed on "spirit rapping," an activity
which was definitely one of the prominent Victorian and early
20th Century "other powers" of both male
and female spirit mediums.
Mention is made
in these three pages of the famous Fox Sisters spirit rappings
in 1848 in Hydesville, NY. But very shortly afterward this
topic is overtaken in the narration by accounts of the link
between Quaker inspirational speaking and the Abolitionist
movement of the late 19th Century.
In the chapter
entitled "The Spiritual Telegraph," there is a description
of a Fox Sisters' sıance taken from historical records. But
emphasis in Goldsmith's book is on the social situation wherein
these women were forced to strip before a female committee
before their "test sıances," lest gadgets of trickery
be concealed in their clothes. The narration goes on very
correctly to link these "Strip the witch!" attitudes
to other, similar discriminatory attitudes toward women in
the late 19th and early 20th Century.
All of this is true and historically relevant(3). But this
description of "psychical investigation witch trials"
does not enlighten the reader as to what details the spirits
might have communicated during these controversial sıances.
In New Daughters
of the Oracle, Adair describes looking for "swan
min" or some practitioner of this ancient art of clairvoyant
divination, while visiting Taipei, Taiwan. Adair was politely
ushered through rooms of traditional artifacts without noticing
she had actually learned anything about the inner life of
the woman representing this hereditary practice of "swan
min." She remarks in her book that she noticed feeling
nothing distinctive personally about the Chinese oracle. Of
course, this would be somewhat disappointing for Adair as
she was intending to focus on a description of the specific
personal characteristics of a variety of female fortunetellers
and spirit mediums.
Yet later in her
hotel room Adair reports having significant musings about
the "mind having it's own delusions" and the idea
that our "conceptions of things come into appearance
by the process of the mind itself." It did not seem to
occur to Adair that these significant realizations might indeed
be due to the "swan min" of the woman whose exterior
appearance she had attempted to describe without paying attention
to possible direct effects of this oracular woman's mind on
Adair's own mental state.
For the actual,
traditional Buddhist practitioner may have no specific personal
life, as we know "personal life" in Western culture.
Books such as The Spirit Rappers by Robert G. Jackson
rightly emphasize the physical aspect of the Fox sisters'
"spirit" phenomena, but other aspects of such situations
are often overlooked by researchers who are not themselves
clairvoyant or the veteran of living in the close vicinity
of friends or relatives with genuine "strange talents."
If the inner life
of the spirit mediums is considered at all, it may be described
"psychologically" as in Goldsmith's excellent historical
narrative about intelligent women using the trappings of spiritualism
to advance themselves rather than more conventional business
trappings of the intellectual or political situation which
were not available to women. Yet, as "psychical research,"
the social discussion of both Adair and Goldsmith is like
describing water by giving a close description of a faucet,
a glass, a bucket or the human body. All of these physical
objects contain water. Yet a description of the container
is not a description of the water itself.
A great variety
of "container systems" for psychic functioning have
been devised in Western culture, ranging from the scholastic
mathematical diagrams of the Hermetic philosophers drawn in
the Middle Ages to more modern forms of these diagrams in
popular books on occult psychology. In the anthology Beyond
Reason there is even "an ingenious delineation of
the age-old magnetism between male and female in which a clock
face is used to chart the 12 libidinal types that attract
and repel"(4). Strange as it may seem, these mental systems
of description are often more accurate than a rigorous roster
of physical, social and political details.
When spirit mediums
are limited to describing only the physical aspects of their
experiences, they often seem deceptive and, ultimately, like
the Fox Sisters of 19th Century Rochester, NY,
fail to sustain any convincing spirit manifestations. This
is because it is actually deceptive to invoke only physical
proofs and demonstrations of allegedly extra-sensory and "spirit"
or "non-local" information transfer.
In these investigations,
there emerges a difficulty with Adair's travelogue of lady
oracles. She has subtitled her book "the return of female
prophetic power in our time," and yet in descriptions
such as of the Turkish psychic "Serna" reading the
coffee dregs for the author, Adair sidesteps any specific
record of her personal fortunes or their accuracy of prediction.
Adair simply states that Serna was "surprisingly accurate"
and that it would be "interesting to see if her predictions
for my future were also on target."
Adair questions
the thought processes of Serna with thought processes of her
own which are heavily influenced by the rationalizations of
modern psychology. It did not occur to Adair to muse upon
possible inspiration by spirits as part of Serna's accurate
discourse. Yet this possibility seems obvious. All cultural
traditions link fortune-telling with spiritism. But in the
20th Century literary tradition, the invocation
of "psychological concepts" has become somewhat
of a religion. Adair's book is blessed with many of these
"correct" psychological suppositions.
In Plays of
the Natural and Supernatural by Theodore Dreiser, written
in 1916 before the "psychological religion" was
so widely accepted(5), the author, who would later compose
the well-known novel Sister Carrie about the social
abuses of the then-emerging modern city, assumes that many
spirits and forces whisper into the ears of human beings,
causing them to be wicked, heedless of ethical and moral responsibility,
and to commit crimes. The early Dreiser sees the same grim
landscape as he later would depict in Sister Carrie,
but in the plays he sees this landscape animated by phantasmagoric
forces and creatures. There is even a malevolent spirit form
he describes as "the Blue Sphere." Long before the
present day fad for "UFO abductions," the "blue
sphere" of Dreiser's expressionist play leads a disabled
child toward the railroad tracks and an "accidental"
suicide.
Toward the end
of her book, Adair states: "I am aware that what I have
produced here is a mere random sampling, only a handful of
interviews with women alleged to be psychic." Yet I feel
this is Adair's illusion. Adair has, in fact, produced a patterned
tapestry of her own impressions, not a random sampling. The
"forces" and spirits which formed her adventures
and misadventures did not produce a "random sampling."
Rather, Adair's book is a portrait of a certain level of expectation
about female psychics. Adair indicates why she feels that
the mental potential of women oracles has been culturally
undervalued or overlooked. But she then makes somewhat the
same mistake in focusing only on the basic personal situation
of these lady oracles, as far as they would reveal this to
a traveling stranger, rather than on the actual mental structure
and belief systems of their oracular practices.
I look forward
to Virginia Adair's next book and hope this review has been
helpful to those who have attempted to study extrasensory
perception by limited sensory means.
(1)
Lawrence Durrell, Bitter Lemons, Dutton, NY, 1957.
(Also the author of Alexandria Quartet, 4 volume work
on the control of "objective reality" by a variety
of individual viewpoints.)
(2) Barbara Goldsmith,
Other Powers, Alfred A. Knopf, NY, 1998.
(3) Herbert G.
Jackson, Jr., The Spirit Rappers, Doubleday, NY, 1972.
(4) "The
Circle of Sex," Alan Watts, Beyond Reason, Playboy
Press, 1973.
(5) Plays of
the Natural and Supernatural, Theodore Dreiser, John Lane
Company, NY.
|