Ritual America Secret brotherhoods and their influence on American society : a visual guide

Adam Parfrey, 1957-

Book - 2012

"America's biggest secret is hidden in plain sight-the vast, fundamental and ongoing influence of fraternal orders on our culture. Just decades ago, one out of every three Americans belonged to a secret society, and more than six hundred such groups flourished throughout the country. Today they are still mighty, particularly in the military, police and government."--P. 4 of cover.

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Subjects
Published
[Port Townsend, WA] : Feral House c2012.
Language
English
Main Author
Adam Parfrey, 1957- (-)
Other Authors
Craig Heimbichner (-), Loren Coleman
Physical Description
xix, 337 p., 24 p. of col. plates : ill., ports. ; 29 cm
Bibliography
Contains bibliographical references (p. [317]-328) and index.
ISBN
9781936239146
  • Foreword
  • Introduction
  • Look around, they're everywhere
  • Pomp and circumstance: every man a king
  • The Grand Cyclops: race, gender, and the brotherhoods
  • Strange, esoteric and confounding twilight language
  • Raising tubal-Cain
  • Sons of the desert: Freemasonry in popular culture
  • Sex, death, clowns and crippled children
  • Folk magick, crypto-Masonry, and holding it
  • Epilogue.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

There have been hundreds of clandestine clubs in America, but as Coleman notes in the foreword, we "[do] not know much about the hidden landscape in which we live everyday." In unmasking this "widespread covert reality"-a motley group of secret societies from Elks and Masons to the Ku Klux Klan, the Bohemian Club, and the Rosicrucians-Heimbichner, a contributor to Paranoia magazine, and Parfrey (editor of Apocalypse Culture) survey secret passwords, garments, handshakes, songs, and initiations to show how these offbeat orders and brotherhoods have shaped America. The pages are packed with unusual images, many not previously printed, in paper ephemera, postcards, cartoons, sheet music, and art by numerous illustrators, along with kooky costumes and helmets. Controversial figures such as Scientology's L. Ron Hubbard and "Masonic Pope" Albert Pike are profiled. One bizarre section has ads for items (like axes) used in hazings and sadistic initiation pranks. The military is described as "a bastion of Masonic membership," and a dubious connection is drawn between waterboarding and "fraternal traditions." The total effect is that of a tattered, bulging scrapbook of outre oddities on high-quality slick paper with an attractive graphic design. (Mar.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved