Goethe's Faust (1808) provides us with the model of the modern hero doomed to freedom and the quest for knowledge and power. Faust sells his soul for knowledge and gold. If you ask the typical college student his or her motivations for attending college, you will find that Faust has many friends seeking knowledge and a good paying job. Faust's devil Mephistopheles (No Lover of Light) is the personification of the negativity that is required as part of the dynamic nature of self-becoming. Mephistopheles describes himself as "I am the portion of that power that always wants evil, and always causes good. I am the spirit which always negates."
In contrast to the heroic and classical devils above, we have Satan of Charles Baudelaire who took Poe's American darkness and transformed it as an idealized form of angst. Baudelaire's Flowers of Evil (1857) later opened the doors of darkness for such artists as Clark Ashton Smith, Kurt Seligman and Diamanda Galas. Much of today's "Goth" culture owes a great debt to Baudelaire's Satan.
One of the best modern masters was Anatole France, whose The Revolt of the Angeles 1914 is full of metaphysical mockery on the one hand and a portrayal of Satan as seeker of mysteries on the other. The image of Satan and his devils as seeking after the mysteries and and becoming the advisers of mankind is a crucial one for the Satanist of the late twentieth century. The use of Satan as way to lampoon organized religion is a major Satanic activity among LHPers today.
Obviously the rich tradtion of literary Satanism can scarcely be touched in so short an essay. For further reading see The Devil's Mischief By Ed Marquand 1996, The Devil in Legend and Literature by Maximilian Rudwin (latest reprint 1989 Open Court), Literature and Evil by Georges Bataille 1957, and The Devil's Race-Track: Mark Twain's Great Dark Writings 1966. The greatest quick introduction to Satanism remains Huck Finn's "Alright then, I'll go to hell" speech when he decides to protect Jim rom the law. Look it up, it's good (?) for you.
© 1997 - 2010 Don Webb
Used with permision of the author
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