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American writer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mitch Horowitz (born November 23, 1965) is an American author, publisher, speaker, podcaster, and television host specializing in occult and esoteric themes. A frequent writer and speaker on religion and metaphysics in print and on television, radio, and online, Horowitz’s writing has appeared in The New York Times,[1] The Washington Post,[2] The Wall Street Journal,[3] Time,[4] and CNN.com,[5] and he has appeared on NPR,[6] CBS News,[7] NBC News,[8] and Vice News.[9] In 2024, Horowitz began hosting the UFO-themed Discovery/HBO Max TV series, Alien Encounters: Fact or Fiction,[10][11] and he also joined Elijah Wood's podcast network, SpectreVision Radio, where he hosts a historical podcast, Extraordinary Evidence: ESP Is Real, which explores the background and data of extrasensory perception (ESP) research.[12][13] Horowitz plays himself as a historian and commentator in V/H/S/Beyond, the seventh entry in the horror anthology series on Shudder,[14] which a reviewer for RogerEbert.com described as "one of the better V/H/S anthologies of late."[15]
Mitch Horowitz | |
---|---|
Born | November 23, 1965 58) | (age
Occupation(s) | Author, speaker, television host |
Website | mitchhorowitz |
Horowitz is the former editor-in-chief of TarcherPerigee[16] and a former vice-president at Penguin Random House.[17] His best-known works are Occult America (2009),[18] The Miracle Club (2018),[19] and Modern Occultism (2023).[20] In 2022, Ferdinando Buscema noted that "Horowitz is among the most articulate and respected voices in the contemporary occulture scene."[21]
The son of a legal aid attorney and a medical secretary, Horowitz grew up in Bellerose, Queens, before moving to New Hyde Park, New York.[22][23][24] He was raised in a traditional Jewish household and had an Orthodox bar mitzvah.[25][26] He developed an interest in the occult through books of folklore at his local public library, book-club catalogs at elementary school, and astrological content, such as newspaper horoscopes, whose references he historically researched.[27] Horowitz received a bachelor of arts in English literature from Stony Brook University, where he was editor-in-chief of the school's student newspaper, The Statesman.[28] In 1987, he won the Martin Buskin Award for Outstanding Campus Journalism.[29] Before entering publishing, he worked as a police reporter.[30]
He identifies as a "believing historian" and has participated in many of the spiritual movements he writes on, such as Theosophy, New Thought, Transcendental Meditation, and the Gurdjieff Work.[31][32][33]
Horowitz is the author of Occult America: The Secret History of How Mysticism Shaped Our Nation, which received the 2010 PEN Oakland/Josephine Miles Award,[34] and was noted for exploring the impact of occult and esoteric philosophies on mainstream politics and culture; the Washington Post stated that "Horowitz teases out fascinating stories of the 'dreamers and planners who flourished along the Psychic Highway'... In showing how the paths of these figures occasionally intersected with the likes of Abraham Lincoln, Frederick Douglass and Franklin D. Roosevelt, Horowitz argues that the influence of the occult extends beyond the séance room and into the mainstream of American thought.”[35] He has also noted that Rosicrucianism and the Shakers have contributed to America's history of religious experimentation.[36]
Horowitz believes that occultism is a uniquely Western tradition, and that the Renaissance-era rediscovery and adaptation of pre-Abrahamic belief systems inaugurated a new era for those beliefs, thereby making occultism, as integrated into modern society, an ancient revivalist movement.[37]
He has sought to distinguish the complexity of New Thought works, as exemplified by Neville Goddard and Wallace Wattles, from the well-known but somewhat more simplified understandings of the law of attraction, as popularized most notably by Rhonda Byrne's 2006 book The Secret, which Horowitz notes was inspired by Wattles' famous 1910 book The Science of Getting Rich.[38] Furthermore, Horowitz has contextualized New Age figures and books, including Goddard, Edgar Cayce, and The Kybalion, as contemporary expressions of Gnostic and Hermetic themes.[39][40]
His 2023 book Modern Occultism was noted for its historical comprehensiveness, surveying occult-themed philosophies from late-antiquity to the present.[41][42]
Writing in The Washington Post in 2010, Horowitz identified themes and language from occult scholar Manly P. Hall in the speeches of President Ronald Reagan, including the story of an "unknown speaker" at the signing of the Declaration of Independence and America’s assignation "to fulfill a mission to advance man a further step in his climb from the swamps."[43]
Horowitz has argued that occult and UFO themes are increasingly converging due to the many-worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics and has postulated that interdimensional theorizing could provide a unifying hypothesis of anomalies, from ESP to cryptids.[44]
Horowitz advocates for the validity of academic parapsychology research, defending its findings in books, articles, and talks,[45][46][47] and he is a critic of professional skepticism.[48][49]
Horowitz has called attention to the worldwide problem of violence against accused witches, helping draw notice to the human rights element of the issue.[50]
Horowitz has also written on alternative spirituality for Politico,[51] Salon,[52] Big Think,[53] U.S. News & World Report,[54] Gnosis: Journal of Gnostic Studies,[55] Parabola,[56] Esopus,[57] Fortean Times,[58] and the Religion News Service.[59]
Horowitz has lectured at spiritual centers including the Philosophical Research Society,[60] the Theosophical Society in America,[61] and numerous Freemasonic lodges;[62] universities such as Rice University,[63] Duke University,[64] and The New School for Social Research;[65] and cultural venues including the Anthology Film Archives,[66] the Mark Twain House and Museum,[67] and Hancock Shaker Village.[68]
In 2009, Horowitz was on the faculty of the urban holistic learning center, the New York City Open Center,[69] for its annual Esoteric Quest.[70] He presented lectures at the Open Center entitled The Psychic Highway: New York’s 'Burned-Over District' and the Growth of Alternative Spirituality in America[71] and Made in America: The Hidden History of ‘Positive Thinking’.[72]
Chinese government censors excised nearly 40% of a Mandarin translation of Horowitz's 2014 book One Simple Idea, a history of the positive-mind movement.[73]
Horowitz has appeared on television shows including Vox/Netflix's Explained;[74] History Channel's Ancient Aliens[75] and The UnXplained with William Shatner;[76] and the Travel Channel's Mysteries at the Museum.[77]
Horowitz has also appeared on seasons one and two of the History Channel show The UnBelievable with Dan Aykroyd.[78] In an interview in November 2024 with Decider, Aykroyd noted, "I love Mitch Horowitz. He's great... I kind of relate to him in a way."[79]
Horowitz hosted, co-wrote, and produced the 2022 documentary The Kybalion, directed by Ronni Thomas and shot on location in Egypt.[80][81] He appeared on seasons I and II of Shudder’s Cursed Films on AMC+, a selection of SXSW 2020.[82][83]
He is also featured in documentaries including Woodlands Dark and Days Bewitched: A History of Folk Horror, directed by Kier-La Janisse, a selection of SXSW 2021.[84][85]
Horowitz played a newscaster in the Paramount feature film My Animal, directed by Jacqueline Castel, a selection of the 2023 Sundance Film Festival.[86]
He hosts the Discovery/HBO Max series Alien Encounters: Fact or Fiction, which premiered June 2024 and evaluates people's self-reported experiences with UFOs and alien life.[87]
In September 2024, Horowitz became part of the cast of the Shudder horror series V/H/S/Beyond, playing the role of a historical commentator.[14] Beginning in October 2024, he appears on the MGM+ miniseries Beyond: UFOS and the Unknown.[88][89]
Horowitz was a vice-president at Penguin Random House and editor-in-chief of TarcherPerigee, its imprint focused on spirituality and metaphysics.[17] Horowitz published titles in world religion, esoterica, and the metaphysical,[90] as well as works in philosophy, social thought and politics, including Catching the Big Fish: Meditation, Consciousness, and Creativity by director David Lynch,[91] 2012: The Return of Quetzalcoatl by Daniel Pinchbeck and Weapons of Mass Deception: The Uses of Propaganda in Bush’s War on Iraq by Sheldon Rampton and John Stauber. He has published a number of works by religious scholar[16] Jacob Needleman, including The American Soul: Rediscovering the Wisdom of the Founders and What is God?[92] While at Tarcher, he oversaw the work of writer-editor Mike Solana, who later became a vice president at Peter Thiel's Founders Fund.[93]
In 2003, Horowitz published a trade-sized "Reader’s Edition" of The Secret Teachings of All Ages by Manly P. Hall.[94] In 2022, he introduced Taschen's reissue of Hall's original work.[95]
Horowitz has edited and introduced anthologies including Neville Goddard's Final Lectures[96] and The Secret History of America by Manly P. Hall.[97]
Horowitz has also published work by scholar of religion Jeffrey J. Kripal,[98] computer scientist and UFO theorist Jacques Vallée,[99] memoirist and novelist Whitley Strieber,[100] and historian Gary Lachman.[101]
Horowitz has narrated audiobooks including Alcoholics Anonymous;[102] Raven: The Untold Story of the Rev. Jim Jones and His People;[103] and The Jefferson Bible.[104]
Horowitz wrote a historical introduction to Sacred Bones Records' 2020 reissue of the 1905 illustrated occult work Thought Forms: A Record of Clairvoyant Investigation by Annie Besant and Charles Webster Leadbeater.[105]
As an editor at The Free Press in 1996, Horowitz published The Case for Mars by Robert Zubrin.[106]
Horowitz has two sons and lives in New York City.[107] He is partners with filmmaker Jacqueline Castel.[108]
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