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Books > Health, Home & Family > Mind, body & spirit > The Occult > General
Paul Foster Case was an American occultist of the early 20th
century and author of numerous books on occult tarot and Qabalah.
Perhaps his greatest contributions to the field of occultism were
the lessons he wrote for associate members of Builders of the
Adytum. The Knowledge Lectures given to initiated members of the
Chapters of the B.O.T.A. were equally profound, although the
limited distribution has made them less well known. Case was early
on attracted to the occult. While still a child he reported
experiences that today are called lucid dreaming. He corresponded
about these experiences with Rudyard Kipling who encouraged him as
to the validity of his paranormal pursuits. In the year 1900, Case
met the occultist Claude Bragdon while both were performing at a
charity performance. Bragdon asked Case what he thought the origin
of playing cards was. After pursuing the question in his father's
library, Case discovered a link to tarot, called 'The Game of Man,
' thus began what would become Case's lifelong study of the tarot,
and leading to the creation of the B.O.T.A. tarot deck, a
"corrected" version of the Rider-Waite cards. Between 1905 and 1908
(aged 20-24), Case began practicing yoga, and in particular
pranayama, from what published sources were available. His early
experiences appear to have caused him some mental and emotional
difficulties and left him with a lifelong concern that so called
"occult" practice be done with proper guidance and training.
Rebel Folklore gathers 50 of the darkest and most complicated
folktale characters from around the world, showing readers why we
should care about the rebels and misfits of ancient stories.
Folktales were humble stories, passed down generations by those on
the fringes of society: women, peasants, outcast groups. Across the
world, these ancient stories are filled with strange characters,
complicated figures who hold up a mirror to the world that dreamt
them up. From outspoken women cast as witches to anti-authority
figures denounced as criminals, flawed heroes to relatable
villains, Rebel Folklore celebrates 50 of these misfits and what
they mean for us today. Whether it's Muma Padurii, the Romanian
forest witch who terrorizes trespassers to protect the environment,
the Churel, who stalks unfaithful men on her backwards feet, or
Robin Hood, everyone's favourite lawless activist, we can learn a
lot from the rebels of days gone by: how to speak out, embrace our
flaws, and be unashamedly ourselves - even if that means being a
cannibalistic swamp witch.
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