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Número del envío: 2463
ID del envío: 2472
Submission UUID: c727e6b8-89ca-440a-ae15-0258c108ecec
Submission URI: /index.php/es/form/wizard-fichatraductologica
Created: Dom, 24/11/2024 - 16:17
Completed:
Changed: Dom, 24/11/2024 - 16:37
Remote IP address: (desconocido)
Enviado por: SERGIO NISHIMURA VALLARTA
Idioma: Español
Is draft: Sí
Página actual: Vista previa
Form Ficha Terminológica: Ficha Traductológica
Término
Occulture
Inglés (Estados Unidos) (214)
Humanidades y de las Artes (406)
Filosofía (485)
Filosofía política
A cultural reservoir of diverse ideas, beliefs, practices, and symbols related to individuals, groups and contemporary spiritualties involved in occult, hidden, rejected and oppositional practices and beliefs concerned with arcane knowledge that contradict the accepted worldviews and rules of dominant ideologies, giving an emphasis to immediate religious experience (gnosis) and to particular monistic cosmologies, anthropologies and theologies. As the term designates, the occult is becoming popular so as to form an "occulture," something evident in popular media content that express and are also formative of this culture.
Psyence Vedava. (2022). The Dance of Aurora: Media Priestesses and Auric Fields. En S. B. Schafer & A. Bennet (Eds.), Handbook of Research on Global Media’s Preternatural Influence on Global Technological Singularity, Culture, and Government (Advances in
Christopher Partridge, Professor of Contemporary Religion at the University of Chester, has coined the term 'occulture' to encapsulate this atmosphere:
The new spiritual awakening utilizes thought forms, ideas , and practices which are not at all alien to the majority of Westerners. They emerge from an essentially non-Christian religio-cultural milieu; a milieu that both resources and is resourced by popular culture.
The new spiritual awakening utilizes thought forms, ideas , and practices which are not at all alien to the majority of Westerners. They emerge from an essentially non-Christian religio-cultural milieu; a milieu that both resources and is resourced by popular culture.
Graham, A. (2009). Culture and Occulture – an alternative to scandalous religion? The Furrow, 60(3), 131–139. https://www.jstor.org/stable/27808813?seq=1
Español
Ocultura
Nominal (221)
México (Mex.) (192)
Ocultura es un neologismo de origen anglosajón (occulture) que se emplea desde comienzos del siglo XXI para referirse al estudio de aquellas corrientes de pensamiento, filosóficas, artísticas, a veces políticas e incluso religiosas, sobre las que se levantan patrones fundamentales de nuestra Cultura y que, por uno u otro motivo, no son de amplio conocimiento público.
Ocultura. (s.f.). Ocultura. Ocultura. https://www.ocultura.com/ocultura/
La ocultura lo impregna todo y nos ayuda a comprender por qué, por ejemplo, líderes como Abraham Lincoln fueron asiduos a las sesiones de espiritismo, por qué referentes históricos como Julio César, Ronald Reagan o François Mitterand estaban tan atentos a los augurios de sibilas y astrólogos, o por qué científicos como Albert Einstein leyeron obras de la fundadora de la teosofía, madame Blavatsky.
Ocultura. (s.f.). Ocultura. Ocultura. https://www.ocultura.com/ocultura/