Radical Elphame cover art

Radical Elphame

Radical Elphame

Written by: Chad Andro
Listen for free

About this listen

A podcast about The Otherworld, and the people who engage it. A journey through conversations with a wide array of thinkers, practitioners and writers. Join us as we delve into folklore, consciousness, the occult, and all the perennial mysteries that haunt and inspire us.2024 Philosophy Social Sciences Spirituality
Episodes
  • Fröja's Apples with Sara Bonadea George
    Jan 21 2026

    What can change a goddess into a nature spirit? What can change a nature spirit into a witch? A hasty answer might simply be "colonization." This was the evolution of Fröja in Sweden. I don't think we can have an intellectually honest discourse about folklore without confronting the forces of colonization head-on. What has this ongoing process done to the gods, the spirits, and the myths of a people? However, stopping there might miss the point.

    I think we also need to ask: what is the agency of a Goddess during a religious conversion? Does she merely recede into the past, or does she take an active role in co-creating her future? While I personally can't bypass the erasure of ancestral lifeways, I also choose not to skip from the year 800 to the birth of Neo-Paganism, when considering the engagement of a Goddess with their people. I like to embrace the mystery of a Goddess making a home in a tree, or speaking through a fairy tale, or whispering secrets to a cunning person. I think this multivalence doesn't diminish a Goddess, but actually makes them more.

    Sara Bonadea George offers us a glimpse into this interplay of folklore, mythology, and shifting paradigms in the history of Sweden. In her excellent new books, Fröja's Apples and Flowers of Blood, Sara weaves plant lore, folk customs, and anecdotes from antiquity into a beautifully presented repository of a magical terroir. What is the relationship between Odin and the Virgin Mary? Why did Mugwort ask to be called Luna? Why does a white snake guard an oak tree in the forest that never loses its leaves? Let's find out.

    SHOW NOTES:

    Fröja's Apples - Hyldr Press

    Flowers of Blood - Hexen Press

    Sara's IG: @sara.bonedea

    Show More Show Less
    54 mins
  • Animistic Astrology with Teagan West
    Jan 7 2026

    There may be no clearer gateway drug to magic in 2026 than astrology. You don't need psychic abilities, or a spirit court, or a wider mystical philosophy to dabble in astrology. Just a birthday. I've always been a proponent of practical magic – the kind that helps you get stuff – not as an end goal, but as a necessary step, for many, in re-enchanting their minds. Astrology can do something similar, though, with merely a natal chart reading. What do the planets have to do with who I am? It doesn't really matter why astrology can tell you about yourself; the power is in simply acknowledging the mystery.

    And for many, this is what astrology is for. It's a tool for self-reflection and self-care. It reinforces the ideas we have about ourselves and can help us better navigate the world around us. To many, it is more psychological than magical. More personal than universal.

    I've always found astrology interesting, but it wasn't until I first encountered Hellenic and electional astrology that I really got hooked. Rather than consulting astrology to understand why I'm so stubborn, or why my partner and I have different tidying habits, Hellenic astrology revealed a vast, and hitherto invisible, procession of fate and fortune. A mirror of world events playing out in the heavens that could not only tell me when I might go through a career change or have children in the next decade, but also when a war might break out, or a political leader fall, or a revolution erupt in a given country. On a personal level, Hellenic and electional astrology has been a valuable tool to plan rituals, and reference for omens, but on a macro level I've engaged with it almost like prestige TV.

    The height of this macro engagement for me comes every January, when my favorite astrologers put out their forecasts for the year to come. Living now squarely in "interesting times," in a world of ever increasing chaos and novelty, these forecasts have become something of a cathartic schadenfreude, if I'm being honest. With all the discord and despair and conflict playing out before us on the world stage, it can be mildly comforting to, if nothing else, feel like you have some idea what might be coming next, if for no other reason than to rubberneck from the comfort of a moment in time where it's all still merely unfolding. I find astrology used to these ends to be fascinating, and useful, and important. If our engagement with astrology ends there, though, at the level of forecasting the inevitable, it can also be paralyzing and disempowering. If, at the most basic level, astrology is something about our personality, then at this elevated level, it can often feel like astrology is something that happens to us.

    Teagan West has a different approach. Not only drawing on the revival of ancient techniques, but also imbuing her practice with animism and alchemy. What happens to astrology when we view the planets as ancestors? What if astrology isn't something that happens to us, and is instead a hermetic unfolding, an act of co-creative evolution coming just as much from us as from the stars? Teagan's year-ahead forecasts are my personal favorite. Spirit-led, embodied, and in conversation with fate. In our chat, we explore Teagan's background, and her unique philosophy and approach to magic, and ceremony, and the stars. Also, in our bonus conversation on Patreon, I present Teagan with a few key planetary movements in the coming year and get her take on how the magically inclined might engage with them.

    SHOW NOTES:

    Teagan's Substack: The Altar of Stars

    Teagan's Services: The Altar Healing

    Teagan's Podcast: The Altar of Stars Podcast

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 3 mins
  • The Immense Hauntology of Things with Lee Morgan
    Dec 24 2025
    I sometimes wonder why, of all the occult and magical currents we have on offer, Witchcraft manages to still have such a powerful pull on our contemporary culture. We find ourselves on the other side of a century of occult revivals and magical trends, and yet Witchcraft somehow stil retains a timeless appeal. More recent spiritual trends, such as the "New Age" movement, which you would expect to be a better gateway for contemporary Western people to explore spirituality, have aesthetically aged far worse than Witchcraft generally, and what once appeared modern and enlightened would now be better described as cringe. Similarly, Chaos Magic – with its having its cake and eating it to, non-commital metaphysics and whiff of the science-y – would seem to be the heir apparent to the most accessible form of magical engagement for the Western mind, but looking at the numbers: the domination of "WitchTok" in magical social media landscape, and the non-existence of a "CaoteTok" paints a pretty clear picture of the respective crossover appeal. The assumption that Chaos Magic would grow in popularity to become the magic trend of the future is similar to the presumption that "prog rock" would go on to top the Billboard charts in perpetuity from its inception. If you take a look at the ideas disseminated on WitchTok you'll run into plenty of New Age thought and Chaos Magic, but they have become subsumed under the cloak of Witchcraft. I think a key to understanding Witchcraft's enduring popularity in the modern era lies in Jacques Derrida's concept of "hauntology." Hauntology describes the ways in which the past continues to haunt us in the present. It is somehow both a nostalgic and eerie feeling that Derrida said could be summed up most susinctly by Hamlet's line, "the time is out of joint." As our relationships, and media landscape, and ways of interacting with the world become increasingly less tangible, it's only natural that we would yearn for a more embodied way of engaging. In smaller ways we crave the experience of a time when our own lives were simpler, which is why music and fashion trends seem to be perpetually looking back twenty years. The writer Mark Fischer observed an effect that he called the "Slow Cancellation of the Future," where this nostalgia for a generation before, this desire to relive a memory of a simpler time, has caught us in a perpetual cultural time warp where novelty and innovation in the realms of art and media are rapidly decreasing, all while technology advances exponentially around us. If my generation is so nostalgic for the 80's of our youths that we largely consume media that calls back to it, will our children be nostalgic for the era we're living through today or for the 1980s, and then what about their kids? When we look back, what are we looking for? I think we are seeking meaning in the tangibility of the past that we no longer experience in our daily lives today. In many ways, this "slow cancellation of the future" has left us in a vacant pastiche, and so we have to look back even further. We start to crave the kind of activities that make us feel more human – maybe you take up bread baking, or exercising with kettlebells, or making beef tallow lotion. This same impulse, I think, is just as present in our spiritual lives. And hence, the timeless appeal of Witchcraft. The expression of magic that, as far back as you go, in all of its iterations, has always felt even older. In Lee Morgan's latest book, The Rag and Bone Man, they explore the enduring influence of the Victorian Age, and the ways its novel approaches to the spirit world are still haunting us in the present day. Lee describes our attraction to this time as being related in many ways to its very substance, where, as they describe it: "Our modern witchcraft ladders get started. Through stealing the Fat from the previous era (one that still exists inside us in the presence of our own great-grandparents), we can nourish ourselves here in this one." In Lee's new book, they weave together academic research, poetic fiction, and embodied practice to bring the Victorian era's ecstatic hunger for a new kind of spiritual experience into tactile relief. Here we, just like the Rag and Bone Man of his time, can "steal the fat" from the discards of the past, and deepen our own practices. Also, a friendly reminder that you can tune in to our extended conversation on Patreon, where we talk about the nature of being in diaspora as a magical practitioner, the ways that Lee's practice has evolved since they first started writing, and the "slow cancellation of the future." SHOW NOTES: Order the Book: The Rag and Bone Man Lee's Website: Leemorganbooks.com Lee's Patreon: ...
    Show More Show Less
    1 hr
No reviews yet