Abstract: In the two decades since the publication of Douglas E. Cowan's Cyberhenge , the landscape of digital engagement has undergone a seismic transformation. Cowan's work was foundational in mapping the early relationships between contemporary Pagan religiosity and online environments; yet, Cowan's research was rooted in a Web 1.0 ecology, dominated by static websites, text-based forums, and asynchronous communication. This Book Forum contribution revisits Cowan's key insights in light of Web 2.0's sociotechnical affordances, particularly examining the evolving centrality of unverified personal gnosis (UPG), the visual and aesthetic economies of digital ritual, and the emergence of platform-mediated forms of community. This essay seeks to outline a post-Cyberhenge paradigm: one that accounts for the performative, visual, and algorithmic dimensions of contemporary Pagan and esoteric practices. This is not simply an extension of Cowan's insights but a reconfiguration necessitated by the ontological and ritual transformations introduced by social media.
Angela Puca (Mon,) studied this question.