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Global Ritualism: Myth & Magic Around the World

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The concept of ritual and spirituality is common to all peoples. Global Ritualism analyzes the common themes and archetypal symbols of higher ritual so you can define how these archetypes play out in your own life. As you build a "global vocabulary" of such spiritual and magical symbols, you will be able to construct your own vibrant, living rituals.

256 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1995

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About the author

Denny Sargent

22 books12 followers
Aion 131 (Denny Sargent), writer, teacher and practicing Ecclectic Ritualist, was first introduced to Mythology & Magick in the suburbs and center of New York City where he grew up. He has since his early teens been accepted as a member of a number of initiatory groups including Pagan Way (and various other Pagan groups), Welsh Traditional Wicca, The GSS, the Typhonian OTO, QBLH, Order of Chaos, Cult of Tara and the Adinath and Uttara Kaula Lineages of Tantrika. He is one of the founding members of the Horus/Maat Lodge and various other arcane cults too hideous to mention.

In 1979 he received his BA in Education from Oneonta college, New York. During this time he was one of the founding editors of Mandragore, a journal of magick and ecclectic ritualism published in New York City.

Denny has spent ove r30 years as a ceramic artist and sigil artist, having many one-man and group shows of his ceramic work. His ceramic work is currently on display in Seattle. His Sigils have appeared in a wide variety of esoteric magazines and journals. In 1981 he was awarded an MA in Ancient History from Western Washington University where he also taught History for three years. His research has included the magickal/religious traditions of Egypt, Sumeria, Greece, Rome, China, India, Europe and Pacific Northwest Indians (Kwakiutl). In the early 1980’s he helped found, write and edit Aeon and Kalika, journals that were concerned with contemporary ritual practice and creative mythology.

Informally, he has taught seminars on The History and Use of the I Ching, Natal Hexagrams, Tantrika, Jungian Mandala Symbolism, Ceramic art, Comparative Mythology, Cross-Cultural Communications and, most recently, on Shinto and it’s Festivals. He has written for many different Pagan and magickal magazines and currently writes a regular column in Pan Gaia magazine on magickal religions about the world. He was and still is a committed member of a number of Green organizations and is politically dedicated towards environmental goals. In 1984, after working for three years at a ski area in the Cascade Mountains.

Denny taught and lived and wrote for four years in Japan from 1989-93. In Japan he had an ecological textbook published called Heal the Earth!, (Dawn Press, Nara, 1991) and he was also a journalist for Eye Ai Magazine, City Life News, Via Magazine, Tokyo Today, The Japan International Journal, and The Japan Times Weekly. He wrote regular columns on festivals and travel for The Tokyo Weekender, Mini-World and the Asahi Evening News. In Tokyo he began doing technical writing and software text-writing for the Tec Tek Company, as well. Denny has engaged in extensive traveling and on-site research in Australia, China, Indonesia, Hong Kong, Singapore, Korea, Hawaii, Mexico, Thailand and America. A book resulted from all of this: Global Ritualism, Myth & Magick Around the World

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Joey Madia.
Author 24 books25 followers
August 12, 2024
An excellent, thorough, and prescient study of global rituals and cultures that is sadly out of print.
Profile Image for Beesauce.
21 reviews
May 19, 2022
This book was hard to read for a few reasons, one positive and another negative. For one, I had to pause every few pages and write something down or I would spiral into random mental tangents until I realized I wasn't retaining any information I was reading! A good thing, because I got a lot of inspiration from this book. It also made me very reflective, which was good for me (though less ideal for reading comprehension). However, I did find the prose hard to get through (sentences got pretty long and twisty). I found my general reading experience to be vexing at times, but I also gathered good insights from it as well. So yeah, I have a bit of a complicated relationship with this one. I read this book at the right time in my spiritual development and it inspired me to dedicate myself to the craft of creation again. Good book for those starting solo on a vague spiritual adventure with no compass but theirself.
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