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Storytelling and London Dreamtime: An Interview with Vanessa Woolf

Posted on February 24, 2021February 24, 2021 by TheCustodian

Storytelling is one of our oldest and most enduring arts. It pervades all cultures and experiences, and it unites and marshals our deepest emotions. Storytellers, somewhat like the weather-making Tempestarii of legend,  modulate the soul’s atmosphere; their words electrify and vivify, frighten and amaze. “Legend-makers” are, as J.R.R. Tolkien maintained, “blessed.” Their tales cast audiences…

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Rosicrucians, Drugs, and Angelic Transformations: An Interview with Dr Hereward Tilton

Posted on January 25, 2021January 26, 2021 by TheCustodian

“Who but a Rosicrucian could explain the Rosicrucian mysteries!” -from Zanoni (1842) by Edward Bulwer-Lytton Edward Bulwer-Lytton has oft been described as a crypto-Rosicrucian writer, and in his master work, Zanoni, he sketched a very distinct picture of the ideal magus. Zanoni–the novel’s eponymous mage–is a self-sacrificial, self-effacing Stoic with a knack for Batman-style theatrics…

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Sigils and Spirits: An Interview with Darragh Mason

Posted on January 3, 2021January 3, 2021 by TheCustodian

“Throughout my childhood and adolescence I was an avid reader of folklore and mythology…it’s very apparent that this interest had a huge and long lasting impact on my life and the path it’s taken.”  -Darragh Mason International travel these days seems like a thing of the past, a dream known only by faint remembrances or…

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Sacred Worship in Ancient Nubia: An Interview with Professor Solange Ashby

Posted on December 26, 2020February 8, 2023 by TheCustodian

“In writing the history of this Nubian tradition of worship in the Egyptian temples of Lower Nubia, I came to understand that Nubian pilgrimages to and activities at the sacred site of Philae were actually older than the extant temple of Isis that was built under Ptolemy II…” -Professor Solange Ashby Situated in modern-day Egypt…

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Death Studies at Padua: An Interview with Ivan Cenzi

Posted on December 20, 2020December 20, 2020 by TheCustodian

“A sudden shift in our relationship with the dead, or in the geography of the afterlife, can have unthinkable consequences…” -Ivan Cenzi The University of Padua has long been associated with daring research. In the early modern era especially, the school was a bastion of learning that attracted experimental thinkers who passionately investigated and dissected…

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Espionage in Early Modern Venice: An Interview with Dr Ioanna Iordanou

Posted on December 4, 2020December 4, 2020 by TheCustodian

“With several sub-departments and a distinct division of work, the Venetian secret service was different to other, more rudimentary espionage networks created by rulers (and their rivals) in other parts of Italy and early modern Europe.” -Dr Ioanna Iordanou Giacomo Casanova–as is well known–was fiercely independent, possessing an untempered passion for high adventure, self-promotion, and…

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Evelyn De Morgan and the Art of the Imponderable: An Interview with Emma Merkling

Posted on November 27, 2020November 27, 2020 by TheCustodian

“De Morgan was a spiritualist, meaning she believed that after the death of an individual’s body, their soul or spirit continued to live and operate in the world, and that individuals beyond the grave could thus be contacted. Such…ideas dominate her mature oeuvre.” -Emma Merkling In an article published in the New York Tribune about…

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The Many Faces of Pico della Mirandola: An Interview with Professor Brian Copenhaver

Posted on November 23, 2020November 23, 2020 by TheCustodian

“He lived with such intensity that people have stayed fascinated by him. They’ve told his story over and over again–for different reasons and in different ways.” -from Magic and the Dignity of Man: Pico della Mirandola and His Oration in Modern Memory (2019) by Professor Brian Copenhaver It would not be an exaggeration to call…

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A 17th-Century Conspiracy Tale: Johann Cambilhon and the “Magick” College

Posted on November 17, 2020November 18, 2020 by TheCustodian

“If they find any to be timorous and fearful, they admit not such a man to the secrets of magick…But such as appear to be of bold and undaunted spirits, they take especial notice of them, and reserve them for serious employments.” -from the English translation of Johann Cambilhon’s De studiis Jesuitarum abstrusioribus (1608) Sometime…

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Occult Egypt in the Victorian Popular Imagination: An Interview with Dr Eleanor Dobson

Posted on October 31, 2020February 8, 2023 by TheCustodian

“Late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century occultism was…heavily influenced by popular fiction, which often benefited from the generic fluidity that flourished at the chiasma of literary and Egyptological culture.” -Dr Eleanor Dobson For ages Egypt was regarded as a land of occult wisdom. In his Timaeus, Plato suggested that the Egyptians–the only people with knowledge of…

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