Dictionary Definition
evocation
Noun
1 imaginative re-creation
2 calling up supposed supernatural forces by
spells and incantations [syn: summoning]
3 stimulation that calls up (draws forth) a
particular class of behaviors; "the elicitation of his testimony
was not easy" [syn: induction, elicitation]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
-
- Rhymes: -eɪʃǝn
Noun
- The act of calling out or forth.
Extensive Definition
Evocation is the act of calling or summoning a
spirit, demon, god or other supernatural agent, in the Western
mystery tradition. Comparable practices exist in many religions and magical
traditions.
Evocation in the Western mystery tradition
The first use of the term evocation was for the religious/magical practice of calling the tutelary deities of a city out of it so attackers could succeed in their conquest. The deity in question was promised worship by the attackers in the future.The calling forth of spirits was a relatively
common practice in Neoplatonism,
theurgy and other
esoteric systems of antiquity. In contemporary western
esotericism, the magic of the grimoires is frequently seen as
the classical example of this idea. Manuals such as the Greater Key
of Solomon the King, The Lesser Key of
Solomon (or Lemegeton), the Sacred
Magic of Abramelin the Mage and many others provided
instructions that combined intense devotion to the divine with the
summoning of a personal cadre of spiritual advisers and familiars.
The grimoires provided a variety of methods of
evocation. The Spirits are, in every case, commanded in the
name
of God - most commonly using cabalistic and Hellenic 'barbarous
names' added together to form long litanies. The
magician used wands,
staves, incense and
fire, daggers and complex
diagrams drawn on parchment or upon the ground. In Enochian
magic, spirits are evoked into a crystal ball
or mirror, in which a human volunteer (a 'seer') is expected to be
able to see the spirit and hear its voice, passing the words on to
the evoker. Sometimes such a seer might be an actual medium,
speaking as the spirit, not just for it. In other cases the spirit
might be 'housed' in a symbolic image, or conjuring into a diagram
from which it cannot escape without the magician's
permission.
While many later, corrupt and commercialised
grimoires include elements of 'diabolism' and one (The
Grand Grimoire) even offers a method for making a pact with the
devil, in general the art
of evocation of spirits is said to be done entirely under the power
of the divine. The magician is thought to gain authority among the
spirits only by purity, worship and personal devotion and
study.
In more recent usage, evocation refers to the
calling out of lesser spirits (beneath the deific or archangelic level), sometimes
conceived of as arising from the self. This sort of evocation is
contrasted with invocation, in which
spiritual powers are called into the self from a divine
source.
Important contributors to the concept of
evocation include Henry
Cornelius Agrippa,
Francis Barrett,
Samuel Liddell MacGregor Mathers, Aleister
Crowley, Franz Bardon
and Kenneth
Grant. The work of all of these authors can be seen as attempts
to systematize and modernize the grimoiric procedure of evocation.
Only more modern authors, such as Peter
Carroll, have attempted to describe evocation in a way
independent enough from the grimoiric tradition to fit similar
methods of interaction with alleged supernatural agents in other
traditions.
Comparable practices elsewhere
In a wider sense, evocation is the magical art of calling forth spirits, angels or demons to bring spiritual inspiration, do the bidding of the magician or provide information. Methods for the attainment of this exist in most or all cultures that feature a belief in spirits, such as the shamanic traditions. Daoism, Shintoism, Spiritism and the Afro-American religions (Santeria, Umbanda etc.) have particularly sophisticated systems of evocation. Even the various forms of Christian and Islamic exorcism can be considered evocations in this sense, albeit relatively simple ones.Religions that use this type of ritual are often
judged and criticized by monotheists as potentially Satanic. However,
this is not true from the viewpoint of study of
religion. Evocation is a practice held sacred by societies such
as the American Indian Tribes, most ancient religions and even the
Jews in biblical times. This rite is not a "secret" in the society.
It is common, practiced openly and frequently not distinguishable
from prayer.
Computer Science
In his fictional novel A Fire Upon the Deep, computer scientist Vernor Vinge uses evocation to refer to a method of compressing communication into very high-level information - words rather than their sounds, description of actions rather than motion video. The implication is that the information reproduced may not correspond closely to the original.References
Kocku von Stuckrad: Western Esotericism: A Brief History of Secret Knowledge. Translated and with a Foreword by Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke. London: Equinox. XII, 167 pp.evocation in German: Evokation
evocation in French: Évocation
evocation in Polish: Ewokacja
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
arousal, beck, beck and call, bidding, bringing out, call, calling, calling forth, cameo, catalog, cataloging, character, character sketch,
characterization,
conjuration,
conjurement,
convocation,
delineation,
depiction, description, details, drawing out, eduction, exorcisation, exorcism, exsufflation, graphic
account, image, imagery, impression, incantation, indent, invocation, itemization, limning, nod, particularization,
photograph, picture, portrait, portraiture, portrayal, preconization, profile, rendering, rendition, representation, requisition, sketch, specification, summons, vignette, vivid description,
word painting