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The Theosophical Society

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The Theosophical Society

By: Alana Sanchez
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Founded in New York in 1875, the Theosophical Society emerged at a moment of profound intellectual upheaval. Science was challenging scripture, empire was reshaping cultures, and modernity was unsettling inherited certainties. Into this fractured world stepped a movement that claimed to reconcile evolution with spiritual law, religion with reason, and East with West.

In The Theosophical Society, Alana Sanchez offers a meticulously researched historical study of one of the most influential—and controversial—spiritual movements of the modern age. Moving beyond caricature and sensationalism, this work situates Theosophy within its nineteenth-century context: spiritualism, colonial encounter, comparative religion, psychical research, and the crisis of religious authority.

From the founding in New York to the establishment of headquarters in India, from the Mahatma letters and the Hodgson Report to the rise and rejection of the World Teacher project, this book traces the Society’s evolution across scandal, schism, and cultural transformation. It examines how Theosophy shaped modern ideas about karma, reincarnation, spiritual evolution, and universal brotherhood—concepts that continue to influence contemporary spiritual culture.

Neither polemic nor apology, this study treats Theosophy as historically consequential. It asks not whether its metaphysical claims were true, but why they were compelling—and what they reveal about the modern search for meaning.

A rigorous and nuanced account for readers of religious history, esotericism, colonial studies, and modern spirituality.

Religious Studies
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