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Occult Paris: The Lost Magic of the Belle Époque
Tobias Churton
€ 33.99
€ 21.78
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Description for Occult Paris: The Lost Magic of the Belle Époque
Hardback. How fin-de-siecle Paris became the locus for the most intense revival of magical practices and doctrines since the Renaissance Num Pages: 528 pages, Includes 16-page color insert and 160 b&w illustrations. BIC Classification: 1DDF; 3JH; HBJD; HBLL; HBTB; VXW. Category: (G) General (US: Trade). Dimension: 165 x 308 x 37. Weight in Grams: 882.
During Paris's Belle Epoque (1871-1914), many cultural movements and artistic styles flourished--Symbolism, Impressionism, Art Nouveau, the Decadents--all of which profoundly shaped modern culture. Inseparable from this cultural advancement was the explosion of occult activity taking place in the City of Light at the same time. Exploring the magical, artistic, and intellectual world of the Belle Epoque, Tobias Churton shows how a wide variety of Theosophists, Rosicrucians, Martinists, Freemasons, Gnostics, and neo-Cathars called fin-de-siecle Paris home. He examines the precise interplay of occultists Josephin Peladan, Papus, Stanislas de Guaita, and founder of the modern Gnostic Church Jules Doinel, along with lesser known figures such as Saint-Yves d'Alveydre, Paul Sedir, Charles Barlet, Edmond Bailly, Albert Jounet, Abbe Lacuria, and Lady Caithness. He reveals how the work of many masters of modern culture such as composers Claude Debussy and Erik Satie, writers Arthur Rimbaud and Charles Baudelaire, and painters Georges Seurat and Alphonse Osbert bear signs of immersion in the esoteric circles that were thriving in Paris at the time. The author demonstrates how the creative hermetic ferment that animated the City of Light in the decades leading up to World War I remains an enduring presence and powerful influence today. Where, he asks, would Aleister Crowley and all the magicians of today be without the Parisian source of so much creativity in this field?
Product Details
Publisher
Inner Traditions Bear and Company
Format
Hardback
Publication date
2016
Condition
New
Number of Pages
528
Place of Publication
Rochester, United States
ISBN
9781620555453
SKU
V9781620555453
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 5 to 9 working days
Ref
99-34
About Tobias Churton
Tobias Churton is Britain's leading scholar of Western Esotericism, a world authority on Gnosticism, Hermeticism, and Rosicrucianism. An Honorary Fellow of Exeter University, where he is a faculty lecturer, he holds a master's degree in Theology from Brasenose College, Oxford, and is the author of many books, including Gnostic Philosophy and Aleister Crowley: The Beast in Berlin. He lives in England.
Reviews for Occult Paris: The Lost Magic of the Belle Époque
Tobias Churton brings this amazing era to life. Gnostics, Free Masons, Rosicrucians, Hermetics...The echos of Paris' Belle Epoque is still heard in cultural and spiritual movements today.
The Echo
No one can evoke the feel of a place and an era like Tobias Churton! This is Paris in the Belle Epoque, but behind the city of the can-can, Toulouse-Lautrec, and the Moulin Rouge, Churton shows us a Paris of seekers in mysterious worlds
magic, Hermeticism, Kabbalah, alchemy
and of artists, writers, and composers who were also drawn to those realms. The spirit of their compelling quest is stamped on every page of this book.
Christopher McIntosh, Ph.D., author of Eliphas Levi
A tour de force. A stunning account of fin-de-siecle Occult Paris and its lasting influence on the counterculture. . . . Churton gives comprehensive portrayals of such occult luminaries as Peladan, Papus, and de Guaita as well as a portrayal of their movements and a seminal analysis of esoteric art
in particular the `Rosicrucian' art of the salons
locating its place in the intellectual, cultural, and political milieu of the Belle Epoque. Tobias is as erudite as he is excited and exciting. His scholarship is alive with passion, imagination, humor, and, most of all, humanity. A must-read for students of European history, Art Nouveau, Symbolism, Idealism, Surrealism, and the Decadents as well as for neo-Rosicrucian, Templar and Gnostic esotericists, and modern-day alchemists and magicians.
Stephen J. King (Shiva X Degrees), Grand Master, Ordo Templi Orientis
Music, art, literature, mysticism
fin-de-siecle Paris had it all in great abundance, and in Tobias Churton's latest tome he uncovers the hidden and not-so-hidden connections between Satie, Debussy, Redon, Rops, Khnopff, Gauguin, Crowley, Levi, Papus, Mathers, Peladan, Michelet, Blavatsky, Reuss, Huysmans, Breton, and countless others. . . . Eminently readable and filled with meticulous historical details, this is a fabulous depiction of one of the most exciting and fervent periods of creativity in modern times.
John Zorn, composer-performer
With Tobias Churton as the cicerone
or dare I say psychopomp?
the reader is expertly guided in the labyrinthine world of the Occult Paris of the Belle Epoque (1871-1914). This is the best introduction to the French occult revival ever written in English.
Henrik Bogdan, professor of religious studies at the University of Gothenburg
. . . a massive, focused exploration of the relationship between the mystical and the creative. . .This entertaining volume will please fans of esoterica and the City of Light.
Publishers Weekly
The Echo
No one can evoke the feel of a place and an era like Tobias Churton! This is Paris in the Belle Epoque, but behind the city of the can-can, Toulouse-Lautrec, and the Moulin Rouge, Churton shows us a Paris of seekers in mysterious worlds
magic, Hermeticism, Kabbalah, alchemy
and of artists, writers, and composers who were also drawn to those realms. The spirit of their compelling quest is stamped on every page of this book.
Christopher McIntosh, Ph.D., author of Eliphas Levi
A tour de force. A stunning account of fin-de-siecle Occult Paris and its lasting influence on the counterculture. . . . Churton gives comprehensive portrayals of such occult luminaries as Peladan, Papus, and de Guaita as well as a portrayal of their movements and a seminal analysis of esoteric art
in particular the `Rosicrucian' art of the salons
locating its place in the intellectual, cultural, and political milieu of the Belle Epoque. Tobias is as erudite as he is excited and exciting. His scholarship is alive with passion, imagination, humor, and, most of all, humanity. A must-read for students of European history, Art Nouveau, Symbolism, Idealism, Surrealism, and the Decadents as well as for neo-Rosicrucian, Templar and Gnostic esotericists, and modern-day alchemists and magicians.
Stephen J. King (Shiva X Degrees), Grand Master, Ordo Templi Orientis
Music, art, literature, mysticism
fin-de-siecle Paris had it all in great abundance, and in Tobias Churton's latest tome he uncovers the hidden and not-so-hidden connections between Satie, Debussy, Redon, Rops, Khnopff, Gauguin, Crowley, Levi, Papus, Mathers, Peladan, Michelet, Blavatsky, Reuss, Huysmans, Breton, and countless others. . . . Eminently readable and filled with meticulous historical details, this is a fabulous depiction of one of the most exciting and fervent periods of creativity in modern times.
John Zorn, composer-performer
With Tobias Churton as the cicerone
or dare I say psychopomp?
the reader is expertly guided in the labyrinthine world of the Occult Paris of the Belle Epoque (1871-1914). This is the best introduction to the French occult revival ever written in English.
Henrik Bogdan, professor of religious studies at the University of Gothenburg
. . . a massive, focused exploration of the relationship between the mystical and the creative. . .This entertaining volume will please fans of esoterica and the City of Light.
Publishers Weekly