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A rare combination of personal and academic, this book showcases
the myriad avenues for transcending the boundaries of reality
through direct sensory experience. The Varieties of Magical
Experience: Indigenous, Medieval, and Modern Magic provides a
comprehensive volume that examines magic in all its aspects.
Through detailed case studies, verbatim accounts of personal
experiences, and first-hand experience from the authors' own active
participation in many alternative religious rituals and ceremonies,
this unique book reveals how magic can be a universal phenomenon
that crosses cultural, historical, and spatial boundaries. The work
is organized in five sections that embrace several broad themes:
indigenous magical and shamanic practices; medieval witchcraft;
sorcery and hermetic magic; and contemporary Western magical
practices, including the role of sexuality, trance, and meditation.
The introductory section explores the idea of magic, other
realities, and the employment of all the senses, while the final
section discusses contemporary issues of ecology and cybermagic.
The authors give voice to the powerful emotions and feelings that
result from a magical encounter, providing engaging and accessible
information to general readers, while those well versed in the
opaque world of magic and occultism, consciousness studies, and
imaginal and disembodied realms will appreciate the book's content
at a deeper level. Highlights techniques, rituals, and training of
magical practitioners Counterpoints the rational with the emotional
and compares the past with the present Takes a cross-cultural,
historical, and anthropological approach that is accessible to all
readers Includes experiences of academics, shamans, occultists,
healers, sorcerers, pagans, medieval magicians, cybermagicians, and
indigenous peoples across the world
Originally published in 1982, The Shaman and the Magician draws on
the author's wide experience of occultism, western magic and
anthropological knowledge of shamanism, to explore the interesting
parallels between traditional shamanism and the more visionary
aspects of magic in modern western society. In both cases, as the
author shows, the magician encounters profound god-energies of the
spirit, and it is up to the individual to interpret these
experiences in psychological or mythological terms. The book
demonstrates that both shamanism and magic offer techniques of
approaching the visionary sources of our culture.
Originally published in 1978, The Occult Sourcebook has been
compiled primarily for the many people who are for the first time
becoming engrossed by the numerous and often confusing
possibilities underlying the occult sciences. It consists of a
series of articles on key areas, providing the reader with easy
access to basic facts, together with a carefully planned guide to
further reading. Critical comments on the recommended books allow
the reader to select those which best suit their interests. The
authors have also included a 'Who's Who of the occult' to provide
short biographies of some of the more amazing figures who have
already travelled down the mystic path. The book offers a
programmed system of exploration into the realms of the unknown. It
will be invaluable to the increasing number of people who are
concerned with the exploration of enlarging human consciousness.
First published in 1978, Don Juan, Mescalito and Modern Magic
begins with an analysis of the Castaneda material from the
viewpoint of its inherently magical content. The author examines
the symbiotic gestures, the magical actions and the mind-altering
techniques employed by the brujo Don Juan, and then goes on to draw
comparisons with two other schools of thought: the psychedelic
development of the 1960s and the Western Magical Tradition. The
essential aim throughout is to show that there is a basically
Western shamanism which uses Western symbols and is easily
accessible. The shamanistic practices of the Hermetic Order of the
Golden Dawn are examined in this context. Considerable emphasis is
also placed on mythological aspects associated with out-of-the-body
experiences and their relevance to both the Don Juan Mescalito
imagery and the Qabalistic and Tarot symbols found in Western
Magic. This book will be of interest to students of religion,
history and literature.
First published in 1979, Inner Visions discussion the nature of
contemporary magical thought - encompassing the Tarot and the
Qabalah - and considers its impact on the creative imagination. The
author presents a fusion of the creative, magical and mythological
undercurrents which are part of the 'new consciousness', and traces
the influence of surrealist art and the expansive psychedelic
period on the art and music of the 1970s. He looks, for example, at
the relationship of the fantasy art on record sleeves to the
electronic inner-space music which it often accompanies, and shows
that this form of modern music represents one facet of the
contemporary reaction against scientism and of the search for what
Roszak has termed the visionary sources of our culture. The author
concludes that a major mythological impulse is emerging in our
culture and that magical and surreal approaches represent a
profoundly invigorating and inspiring attitude linking the
individual to the cosmos. This will be a fascinating read for
anyone interested in magic, mythology, art, music and literature.
Originally published in 1982, The Shaman and the Magician draws on
the author's wide experience of occultism, western magic and
anthropological knowledge of shamanism, to explore the interesting
parallels between traditional shamanism and the more visionary
aspects of magic in modern western society. In both cases, as the
author shows, the magician encounters profound god-energies of the
spirit, and it is up to the individual to interpret these
experiences in psychological or mythological terms. The book
demonstrates that both shamanism and magic offer techniques of
approaching the visionary sources of our culture.
Originally published in 1978, The Occult Sourcebook has been
compiled primarily for the many people who are for the first time
becoming engrossed by the numerous and often confusing
possibilities underlying the occult sciences. It consists of a
series of articles on key areas, providing the reader with easy
access to basic facts, together with a carefully planned guide to
further reading. Critical comments on the recommended books allow
the reader to select those which best suit their interests. The
authors have also included a 'Who's Who of the occult' to provide
short biographies of some of the more amazing figures who have
already travelled down the mystic path. The book offers a
programmed system of exploration into the realms of the unknown. It
will be invaluable to the increasing number of people who are
concerned with the exploration of enlarging human consciousness.
Wisdom Seekers: The Rise of the New Spirituality explores the
origins and precursors of the New Age movement, its consolidation
within the American counterculture of the late 1960s, and its
development into an international spiritual perspective in
contemporary Western society. The book considers the influence on
the New Age of metaphysicians like Emanuel Swedenborg, Mesmer,
Madame Blavatsky and Gurdjieff; pioneering thinkers like Freud,
Jung and William James; and the contribution to New Age thought of
Indian spiritual traditions and transpersonal psychology. Wisdom
Seekers also describes the way in which the New Age paradigm has
absorbed the most recent discoveries of quantum physics and
consciousness research, and it explores the New Age focus on
personal spiritual experience rather than formal religious
doctrines.
Despite the dramatic expansion of modern technology, which defines
and dominates many aspects of contemporary life and thought, the
Western magical traditions are currently undergoing an
international resurgence. How can we account for this widespread
interest in ancient magical belief systems? In historical terms,
Gnosticism and the Hermetica, the medieval Kabbalah, Tarot and
Alchemy, and more recently, Rosicrucianism and Freemasonry,
collectively laid the basis for the modern magical revival, which
first began to gather momentum in Europe at the end of the
nineteenth century. Modern Western magic has since become
increasingly eclectic, drawing on such diverse sources as classical
Greco-Roman mythology, Celtic cosmology, Kundalini yoga and Tantra,
shamanism, chaos theory, and the various spiritual traditions
associated in many different cultures with the Universal Goddess.
In this overview of the modern occult revival, Nevill Drury traces
the rise of various forms of magical belief and practice, from the
influential Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn to the emergence of
Wicca and Goddess worship as expressions of contemporary feminine
spirituality. He also explores Chaos Magick and the occult
practices of the so-called Left-Hand Path, as well as
twenty-first-century magical forays into cyberspace. Drury believes
that the rise of modern Western magic stems essentially from the
quest for personal spiritual transformation and the direct
experience of the sacred-a quest which the trance occultist and
visionary artist Austin Osman Spare once referred to as "stealing
fire from heaven." Considered in this light, modern Western magic
can be regarded as a form of alternative spirituality in which the
practitioners seek direct engagement with the mythic realm.
This exciting multi-authored volume provides a fascinating overview
of the many different pathways that help defi ne esoteric belief
and practice in modern Western magic. Included here are chapters on
the late 19th century Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, the infl
uential Thelemic doctrines of Aleister Crowley, and the different
faces of the Universal Goddess in Wicca and the Pagan traditions.
Also included are chapters on Neoshamanism in Europe and the United
States-and an account of how these traditions have in turn infl
uenced the rise of techno-shamanism in the West. Additional
features of this collection include insider perspectives on Seidr
oracles, hybridised Tantra, contemporary black magic, the
Scandinavian Dragon Rouge and Chaos magic in Britain-as well as
profi les of the magical artists Ithell Colquhoun, Austin Osman
Spare and Rosaleen Norton. Contributors: Nikki Bado Jenny Blain
Nevill Drury Dave Evans Amy Hale Phil Hine Lynne Hume Marguerite
Johnson Thomas Karlsson James R. Lewis Libu e Mart nkov Robert J.
Wallis Don Webb Dominique Beth Wilson Andrei A. Znamenski Nevill
Drury, editor of this collection, received his PhD from the
University of Newcastle, Australia, in 2008. His most recent
publications include Stealing Fire from Heaven: the Rise of Modern
Western Magic and The Varieties of Magical Experience (co-authored
with Dr Lynne Hume).
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