
New Books in Psychology Black Beryl: The Modern Remaking of Kundalini, with Marleen Thaler
Feb 6, 2026
Marleen Thaler, a historian of religion at the University of Vienna and Graz, traces Kundalini’s journey from a Hindu goddess to a modern psychiatric and spiritual concept. She explores Theosophy’s translations, Gopi Krishna’s distressing account, 1970s Kundalini clinics and therapies, the Spiritual Emergence Network, and how religious and medical vocabularies clash over meaning and care.
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
Kundalini Is Multiple Things
- Kundalini appears in multiple overlapping roles: goddess, energy, and subtle-body component across traditions.
- Marleen Thaler emphasizes that its meaning shifts by text, practice, and historical context.
Theosophy Shaped Early Western Kundalini
- Theosophical translators shaped early Western understandings of Kundalini with a universalist agenda.
- Their translations promoted a perennialist view that made Kundalini central to a shared mystical core.
Kundalini's 'Dark Side' Emerges
- The late 20th century reframed Kundalini as potentially destabilizing, not just liberating.
- Thaler marks Gopi Krishna as pivotal for introducing the 'dark side' discourse in modern transmission.


