Veiled Power: Five Women Who Shaped Victorian Spiritualism

Veiled Power: Five Women Who Shaped Victorian Spiritualism

27:17 Mar 27, 2026
About this episode
In this final deep dive of the Victorian Spiritualism series, Ashleigh closes the séance room door—then opens something much bigger: power. Victorian Spiritualism wasn’t only about ghosts, raps, and ectoplasm. It was also a rare cultural doorway where women could claim spiritual and intellectual authority in a society that restricted their public voice.This episode is structured around five archetypes—five women, five expressions of spiritual authority, five ways of stepping through the veil:The 5 Archetypes & Featured WomenThe Trance Speaker: Cora L. V. Scott (Cora Hatch) (1840–1923) — trance lecturing as a “loophole” for women to teach philosophy publiclyThe Movement Builder: Emma Hardinge Britten (1823–1899) — turning Spiritualism into infrastructure through writing, history, and organizingThe Esoteric Architect: Helena Petrovna Blavatsky (1831–1891) — building cosmology and founding the Theosophical SocietyThe Embodied Medium: Florence Cook (c.1856–1904) — materialization séances, “Katie King,” and the gendered scrutiny of embodied powerThe Symbolic Visionary: Pamela Coleman Smith (“Pixie”) (1878–1951) — the creative force behind the most influential modern tarot template (and the long erasure of her credit)Episode highlightsWhy Victorian Spiritualism created a socially “acceptable” way for women to speak publiclyHow trance lecturing became power-through-plausible-deniabilityThe moment Spiritualism shifts from parlor spectacle into worldview and philosophyA beginner-friendly explanation of what the Theosophical Society was (and why it mattered)The high-stakes tension of physical mediumship—and why women’s bodies became the battleground for beliefWhy Pamela Coleman Smith’s illustrated minors changed tarot forever (and why that matters for modern intuitive reading)Series wrap + what’s nextThis episode ties a bow on the Victorian Spiritualism series—and then gently opens the next doorway. April’s theme: exploring the fairy realm—folklore, threshold spaces, the wild edges of the unseen, and the places where reality feels thin in a different way.Mentioned / referencedAshleigh’s interview with Steele Alexandra Douris (Spirits, Seers, & Séances) — the Fox Sisters + Victorian Spiritualism overviewIsis Unveiled (1877) and The Secret Doctrine (1888) — Helena BlavatskyRider–Waite–Smith / Waite–Smith Tarot — Pamela Coleman Smith’s legacyConnect + support the showIf you loved this series finale, please follow/subscribe and leave a review—it helps Big Crystal Energy reach more magical souls. And come say hi on social—Ashleigh will be sharing visuals and extra context from this episode (including the
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