Soon after Lammas, the largest pagan gathering in the
Elvis the historical figure died over twenty years ago, but the mythical Elvis is gaining an ever increasing number of followers. Reclaiming witches have the saying, “What is remembered lives.” If there’s a germ of truth to that, then Elvis is alive and thriving. Look around and you will see that as Mojo Nixon says, Elvis is everywhere. More than any other of our cultural icons, he remains alive in our popular consciousness.
It is becoming increasingly acknowledged that the Elvis phenomenon can only be categorized as the birth of a religious movement. Elvis’s home,
Unfortunately and inaccurately, most Elvisologists have equated the Elvis religion with Christianity, seeing Elvis as Christ-like figure and Elvis worshippers as similar to early Christians. This is dead wrong. Elvis is clearly a Pagan phenomenon!
In the landscape of popular culture, Elvis is the top cat pagan deity, embodying many aspects of our gods and standing for pagan virtues over Judeo-Christian ones. The Christians have a long history of stealing and absorbing the best of pagan traditions. They took our Yule tree and the eggs of Eostar. We can’t let them get away with taking Elvis! The King of Rock and Roll belongs to us. To that purpose, we need to claim him as ours and give him a place in our pantheons and on our altars.
Like the Sun King he is, Elvis was born soon after Winter Solstice in
Elvis and his parents moved from
This was smack dab in the middle of the 1950’s, an extremely uptight time. Black and white
Elvis, the trickster god, began a cultural revolution by crossing the racial line and playing music that until that point had been primarily a black musical tradition. In crossing the line, he also reminds us that the line exists, and if not for racism, Little Richard or Chuck Berry might be known as The King. As trickster, Elvis paradoxically symbolized both racial lines being dissolved and the power of racism and culturally appropriation.
Elvis, the “hillbilly cat” wore hair pomade worn by black men slick back his dyed black hair. He bought his bright pink shirts and flashy pants at Lansky’s, a store frequented primarily by black musicians and hipsters. At a time when most white males were wearing crewcuts and dressing drably, Elvis was a stunning Peacock God, fanning and strutting around the stage. He shirts of satin and velvet, and when he got enough money, had a suit made from gold lame. Whether as the epitome of cool or later, in his white jumpsuit years, the epitome of tacky, Elvis never wore anything boring. As pagan Peacock God, Elvis would always jump gender lines with ease. He admired that other white gender bender of the 1950’s, Liberace, and could inhabit the same gaudy outfits with a sexuality that defied categorization.
Young God Elvis was Peacock God, the Horned One, the Trickster, and Dionysus, all rolled into one, continually giving all due to his mother. The guy was hot. In less than fifteen minutes of televised air time, Elvis cracked the wall of 4,000 years of Judeo-Christian uptightness about se and opened the sex chakra of white
At the height of his fame, Elvis was drafted in the army. Soon after, Gladys died. Elvis was devastated. Most celebrities have the slimmest of chances of a comeback after their stardom dims. Elvis in his aspect of God of the Grain rose and fell several times in his career. The boy, who rose from poverty to stardom, rose again to fame after his hiatus in the military. Then, chained like Sisyphus to a series of horrible movies by his carny huckster manager, Col. Parker, he faded in the light of the brilliant revolution he had been instrumental in creating. It’s hard to find a rock star of the 1960’s who doesn’t pay homage to Elvis, but while the youth of that generation were finding religion in sex, drugs, and rock and roll, Elvis was starring in films like “Clambake”.
In 1968, Elvis shook off his chains and did what is now called “The Comeback Special”. Most of
After this, he made no more bad movies, choosing instead to remain on stage in front of live and loving audiences. He chose to focus on performing in the one spot that gave him a cold reception in his hottest years:
The pot-gutted, white jumpsuited, bejeweled Elvis embodies the pagan view of the deity as fallible. The Great God of the Celts, the Dagda, can be glimpsed in this aspect of Elvis.
The Dagda was fat, with a tremendous appetite. His ass hung out of his pants, and he was jolly at being the butt of jokes, presiding over a cauldron of plenty, being known for his generosity. Las Vegas Elvis split his pants more than once, and would frequently make jokes and allusions to it. Elvis was always able to laugh at himself. The Charge of the Goddess requires us to find mirth and reverence within ourselves. Followers of Elvis are experts at this. Those who revere Elvis can also laugh at him, without finding any contradiction in the two states. Like the Dagda, Elvis was legendary for his generosity. He gave away Cadillacs and guns like party favors, and had a constant supply of gold jewelry at hand to give away. Throughout his rises and falls, Elvis remained rooted in
Elvis remained staunchy true to his class roots, refusing to act “high class”. He has been ridiculed for this, but many of us from poor or working class backgrounds find it refreshing and downright radical. He could have lived on champagne and caviar over Central Park, but instead stayed at
Las Vegas Elvis embodies the god of rot and decay. Like any Sun King, he casts a long shadow. Incarcerated in the jailhouse of fame, he went increasingly stir crazy. His chronic insomnia led to the use of an ever increasing amount of uppers and downers. Elvis’s abuse of prescription drugs would eventually result in his mortal fall from the throne of his bathroom toilet at the age of 42.
Elvis died on August 16th 1977. He was reading an occult tract at the time. Elvis was drawn to spiritualist and occult writings. He believed in numerology and would practice moving clouds with focused will. Elvis was interested in magic. As pagans and witches, it behooves us to embrace Elvis as one of ours. He is. Like the Goddess, Elvis is everywhere. Look around, you’ll find him.
11 comments:
Huh? I expected to see the store announcement.
::evil laugh::
march 25th, 2006......she emerged from the bathroom and said, "do you really think elvis is alive?"....you are a fantastic writer... J
W*O*W I'm all shook up -
The King Lives Babe
My thoughts exactly.
Keep up the good blogging.
-Sean
__________________
www.SeanDietrich.com
"All my music is free."
Thankyou for the Elvis, "He Touched Me"!
Just yesterday, Dennis and Manuel noticed there was no Elvis postcard just inside the front door of GroovyDC. They instinctively know that's bad feng shui - so he ordered some right away!
This piece is awesome, a beautiful culmination of all your years of thinking and developing this theory. Doesn't it belong on Salon.com or Slate, one of those? It's great!
One question (naturally). When you say that Jews and Christians "stole" pagan symbols, what do you mean? To me, stealing implies ownership. Do you think pagans own these ancient symbols? Do you think Jews and Christians have no right to use the old signs and symbols, or is it a matter of respect - they should acknowledge older traditions as the sources of religious icons? Or is it that Judaism and Christianity use different definitions for the symbols, definitions not in alignment with pagan theology? Or something else?
Thank yew thank yew thank yew very much!
Well worked out. I really like it.
Now how does Elvis relate to Lady Liberty, the goddess of the USA? Somehow I don't see them as consorts. Or to Tonatzin/Nuestra Senora de Guadalupe Hidalgo, the goddess of the Americas?
Oak, you really should submit this for my 'bit of fun' competition to win a Spicy award for outstanding blog articles. Fantastic! Details on my front page. x
Brilliant - a well deserved winner!
LOL! That is brilliant. Forget the Spicy (congrats on that, by the way), this should be someone's Masters thesis!
Great piece!
Hi, I found you by following the link in Andy's Spicy site ... loved your item, congrats on winning. Elvis does get everywhere, we went camping at Mablethorpe in Lincolnshire this summer and Elvis stuff seemed to be in virtually every shop!
Willow
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