1.
What is Tarot?
The
easiest answer to that question is to describe the basic structure of
a Tarot deck. There are 78 total cards in a standard Tarot deck. These
cards are divided in the following way: 4 sets (called 'suits') of 14
cards each=56 cards (the 'minor arcana' or 'minors'). The names of these
suits have varied from pack to pack over time but generally suits adhere
to some form of the following designations—
Wands
(or Rods),
Cups,
Swords,
Pentacles
(or Disks).
Each
suit has ten numbered cards, Ace through Ten, plus four 'court cards'
[note: the term 'court card' possibly comes from a corruption of 'coat
card', 'coat' having once been used to refer to something, such as one's
apparel, which would distinguish one's class or profession].
The
court cards go by various naming conventions but—
King-Queen-Knight-Page
—is
a fairly standard description. One notices that this sequence is identical
to that encountered in the 52-card pack of normal playing cards (the
'Page' being the 'Jack'), with the addition of the 'Knight' in Tarot.
Another
common scheme, one popularized by the Aleister Crowley 'Book of Thoth'
deck is—
Knight-Queen-Prince-Princess
The
difference between these approaches points to one of the myriad ideological
disputes about names and 'meanings' that characterize so much of modern
Tarot.
In
addition to these 56 'small' cards there are—
22
cards of the 'major arcana', often referred to simply as 'majors', or
'trumps'. These cards depict various ideas and persons, the names of
the cards are mostly rooted in Medieval or Renaissance religion and
culture (particularly that of North Italy). The cards are numbered from
0-Fool, to 21-World (or Universe) as follows—
0.
Fool [the Fool will sometimes be found stuck between 20 & 21]
I.
Magus (or Magician)
II.
High Priestess
III.
Empress
IV.
Emperor
V.
Hierophant
VI.
Lovers
VII.
Chariot
VIII.
*)(&)*&&^%$^$#%$%
And
right there our peaceful little perusal of the trumps rolls right off
the tracks—
We
should get used to this, it's going to happen a lot.
The
problem with 'VIII' is that no one can decide, with ultimate authority,
what it's supposed to be. Some people say 'VIII' should be 'Strength'
while others say 'Justice' (and thus these two cards are locked in a
struggle over the number placements 'VIII' and 'XI'). At the same time,
and to muddy things more, there is the whole problem introduced by Aleister
Crowley, in his influential 'Thoth' deck, who exchanged the attributions
(the correspondences between Tarot trumps and paths on the kabbalistic
Tree of Life) of IV-Emperor (yes, we skipped that problem) and XVII-Star.
Most people, who are not strict adherents to Crowley's Thelemic system,
have not followed nor concerned themselves much with the latter change,
but many still fight over the VIII-XI controversy. Based on purely astrological
considerations the better choice seems to be Strength in 'VIII' and
Justice in 'XI'. But there's more to it than that—there almost
always is in Tarot. However, that's something you can ask about on alt.tarot.
so,
let's continue—
VIII.
Strength (or Justice)—[note: also, in Thoth-influenced decks these
cards will be titled 'Lust' or 'Adjustment' respectively.]
IX.
Hermit
X.
Wheel of Fortune—[no, there is no Vanna White turning letters.]
XI.
Justice (or Strength)—[again, in Thoth 'Justice' is called 'Adjustment'.]
XII.
Hanged Man
XIII.
Death—[the one Tarot card almost everyone has seen.]
XIV.
Temperance—in Thoth this is called 'Art', as in 'alchemical' arts
XV.
Devil
XVI.
Tower
XVII.
Star
XVIII.
Moon
XIX.
Sun
XX.
Judgment—as in the 'Last Judgment', in Thoth it is called 'Aeon'
XXI.
World/or Universe
After
establishing these few structural facts, we begin to encounter some
more problems, which will explode in all kinds of confusing ways, in
our attempt to confidently and conclusively answer the question 'what
is Tarot?'. We will discover that the answer does not entirely reduce
to 'anything you want it to be' but it often gets very close to that.
BTW,
the name, 'Tarot', is supposedly the French derivation of the original
Italian, 'tarocchi', referring to the deck and the 'trick-taking' games
played in Italy and elsewhere using these cards. [One theory suggests
that since there is a river in N. Italy called the 'Taro', and since
a famous battle was fought there in the late-15th century between French
and Italian troops, it's possible that this engagement, and its aftermath,
exposed the French to tarocchi-playing Italians, and the French, being
confused about the terms 'tarocchi' and 'taro', adopted the name of
the river for the cards.]
2.
Where can I get one?
Lots
of places these days. However, most 'mainstream' bookstores will only
offer a limited selection of decks, although they may be able to order
just about anything for you (sometimes at a discount over ordering direct
from suppliers). Occult or 'newage' bookstores should have a wider selection
of decks and also books that (allegedly) 'explain it all' to you. You
can also mail-order decks through several supply houses.
3.
How do current decks differ?
First,
there are many kinds of cartomantic decks in existence now, and many
of them are only loosely based on any sort of structure (i.e., 78 cards
organized according to question #1 answer) that matches Tarot. There
are also a lot of decks that DO match the structure, superficially,
but which have questionable links to anything one might describe as
a tradition of Tarot symbolism.
Therefore,
I'm going to use a rather arbitrary method to answer this, but it is
one that will at least make manageable the task of dealing with this
question. As you learn more about Tarot you will learn how to make up
your own arbitrary answers.
There
are approximately five historical periods of Tarot evolution—obviously
there can be more or less depending on how you want to slice it, but
I'm basing this arbitrary division on the nature of the symbolism on
the cards, and the ideologies, if any, they represented:
1.
Early or Classical (c.1440-1550)—Tarot was 'born' in northern
Italy c. 1440 AD and was probably created to play card games, NOT to
read fortunes, and it was NOT brought to Europe by gypsies. The early
development of Tarot was characterized by many different decks and symbologies,
many alterations to those decks considered the 'first'—the designs
of the Visconti-Sforza tarocchi decks—but a pretty consistent
22-card foundation is maintained in the major arcana with a 56-card
minor addition (no one knows with certainty whether the minors originated
with the trumps or were added later). However, it does seem as though,
contrary to what many people believe, playing cards developed BEFORE
Tarot cards and not the other way around. Also, the question of whether
Tarot was derived and developed from an already existing deck or was
developed independently has not been satisfactorily answered.
2.
Middle or 'transitional' (1550-1781)—one sees a fairly stable
but still evolutionary development of Tarot symbolism culminating in
the many examples of what has come to be known as the 'Marseilles' design
(check Kaplan's Tarot encyclopedias for examples of these and other
decks mentioned in this FAQ). A couple of years ago, when this text
was first written, I noted that "There is little evidence that Tarot
symbolism, during this period, meant much of anything to anyone beyond
their surface function as playing-card illustrations." The evidence
has increased a bit, with the discovery of some new documents which
suggest speculation about the meaning of Tarot symbolism began quite
early (though whether it continued in any consistent, publicly-discussed
arena, we still don't know). Also, it appear that decades BEFORE Court
de Gébelin wrote his ground-breaking occult essay on Tarot ('Du Jeu
des Tarots' in 1781), people WERE using Tarot cards for divination (in
Italy), so, contrary to what had been the 'scholarly' view (which was
that the French occultists began the tradition of Tarot divination),
it now appears that fortune-telling with Tarot and with playing-cards
in general may have been more wide-spread and going on for much longer
than was previously believed (again, 'believed' by scholars, MANY 'enthusiasts'
will tell you that Tarot was created by Atlanteans, and so has a quite
'ancient' history).
3.
Traditional or Occult period (1781-1909)—I call this 'traditional'
Tarot simply because, while we see the creation here of an entirely
new kind of Tarot, it nevertheless rests upon a core of the old traditions
and symbolism, and its symbology is that which, in direct or indirect
fashion, is the Tarot everyone knows today. In traditional Tarot we
see, (though very gradually), the evolution of the occult decks that,
while still based in Marseilles-type designs, add Egyptian and Hermetic
symbolism to the traditional iconographies. The evolution is not really
as bold and dramatic as some people have made it out to be—and
we don't see any really radical changes (in real decks at any rate—Eliphas
Lévi might have made an interesting deck but he never got around to
it—publishing drawings of only a couple of cards that were nevertheless,
very influential) until the circulation of 'Book T' in the Golden Dawn
and the incorporation and further development of those symbols into:
4.
Modern Period (1910-1983)— with the publication of the Waite
deck in 1910 we enter the modern period, where Tarot symbolism has become,
in any 'traditional' sense, almost entirely the province of Golden Dawn
symbolism, and that symbolism's most copied derivation has been the
Waite deck (more properly, the Waite-Smith deck, it was designed by
A. E. Waite and painted by Pamela Colman Smith), the most popular Tarot
deck in the world today (especially when one counts the myriad thefts
of its designs into other decks). I'm not sure whether one can call
Waite the most influential design in history (certainly one might be
able to make that claim for the Marseilles design as well) but its symbolism,
and the other Golden Dawn derivatives (most notably the BOTA and the
Thoth decks) have become what most people know (at least superficially)
as Tarot AND Tarot is NOW spreading around the world, so sales of the
decks are undoubtedly at a peak previously unknown since the creation
of Tarot, 550 years ago.
However,
the story does not happily end there for then we move into our last
period—
5. Post-modern
(1983-Apocalypse)—This date assignment is purely arbitrary,
since many of the motivations that have led to pomoTarot (itself, an
amalgamation of diverse but often overlapping movements and ideologies)
started back in the 1960s, when multi-cultural, gender-conscious, and
anti-traditional (the assumption was that IF it was traditional it HAD
to be bad) attitudes were infiltrating all modes of pop and academic
culture. I pick 1983 because this is when that bane of traditional Tarot
was published—Motherpeace!! Printed on round cards, treating men
like they were a humanoid avatar of the ebola virus, and generally promoting
a post-intellectual symbology that has nothing to do with traditional
Tarot, Motherpeace has become the guiding light for the cartofeminist
revisionists. The point was made—one could promote any nonsense
he or she wanted on the back of poor defenseless Tarot because few people
knew what the older symbolism was about and there has been no public
forum (until the advent of Internet) where these pomo decks, or any
of the decks, could be easily and widely discussed and critiqued.
Basically
there are three kinds of pomo decks—
1.
Cartofeminist—my own neologism, describing feminist decks
in general but particularly those promoting the concept of the 'Goddess',
and which find identity basically in the rejection of what are described
as traditional icons of the evil patriarchy (including obviously any
traditional Tarot symbology and interpretation).
2.
True Postmodern—decks that seek to maintain some link to traditional
symbols but which nevertheless ignore traditional interpretations of
the symbolism often for the remarkable and seemingly absurd reasoning
that occult symbolism is 'anti-egalitarian' by nature and so the meanings
of the symbols should be thrown open to what are often called 'intuitive'
methods of interpretation—in other words: make up anything that
suits your fancy and, if you are a Tarot book writer, make it 'bite-sized'
if it all possible.Obviously, it's a lot easier to design a deck based
on this kind of 'thinking' and many of the decks we get here present
mere shades of their traditional roots—as if, knowing that what
those old (dead?) symbols meant is irrelevant and beyond a pomo's multi-absurd
consciousness, we can therefore add mere hints of what we don't care
to know anyway and then speculate (masturbate) about them to our mind's
end. On alt.tarot you will see the merits of this kind of Tarot, and
this kind of Tarot 'ideology' debated, in various forms, over and over
again.
There
are many decks which fall into this category—Morgan-Greer and
Aquarian being 'good' examples of the lot along with (obviously) the
PoMo Tarot deck itself.
3.
Igno-aesthetic—as the word suggests—that which promotes
the aesthetic qualities of the tradition in complete ignorance of its
meaning—this is something like #2 except here there is no attempt
whatsoever to claim the artist or designer knew anything about the meaning
of the symbols they depict. One rather imagines, if Rachel Pollack had
not invested her 'talents' to his project, Herman Haindl's deck could
have gotten away with residing here—amongst some admittedly interesting-looking
decks—instead of in the dumpheap of cartofeminism. Generally,
igno-aesthetic decks are done by real artists and, if nothing else,
do look good (not in any way a trivial attribute—especially when
you've suffered through some of the 'art' that continues to claim Tarot
as its 'templat-ive' victim). Lots of Italian and German decks of the
last ten years fall into this category.
4.
What do the cards mean, if anything?
Different
decks will deal with 'meaning' in different ways. The author of the
prior alt.tarot FAQ suggested, since he had no time or interest in trying
to tell everyone in a FAQ the ONE TRUE MEANING of the cards, that people
should compare the opinions of different authors on the question of
Tarot meanings. I think that's fine, but it does not really address
the 'why' part of this question—because it's not just WHAT something
means that should interest us, but also WHY.
'What
the cards mean' depends to some degree on what YOU decide they mean—but
then you get into the argument, something like the chicken and the egg
problem, about where the meaning 'comes from'.
If,
for example, the artist knew nothing about Tarot but simply executed
designs 'in the style of' Tarot cards (a common trend in postmodern
decks) does that mean his cards are devoid of any meaning? That allegation
has been made against things like the Dali deck, for example—all
aesthetics and no substance. The problem is that is one looks deeper,
Dali appears to have known quite a bit about Tarot, intuitively or otherwise.
Or, if you've learned meanings according to some non-traditional Tarot
like Motherpeace, will those 'special' meanings, given that they obviously
contradict with traditional meanings, still apply if you are using Thoth
or Waite? This is a problem that comes up, for example, if you buy some
of the newage books on Thoth, like that of Angeles Arrien, which has
almost nothing to do with Thoth and everything to do with the author's
ideology about what a modern audience 'ought' to get from Tarot.
So,
if the meanings are not in some way derived from the symbols on the
card, where do they properly come from? And, if those meanings are to
be derived from the symbols on the card, and if those symbols are poorly
understood or not understood at all by the artist and are merely used
as a template for a design meant for its aesthetic (as opposed to symbolic)
appeal, then what kind of utility would those cards have for someone?
It is not merely by 'design' that so many pomo decks can be quite charitably
described as 'hallmark' cards.
It
seems the easiest 'rules' on all this would be to select decks that
have been constructed with some symbolic paradigm (or paradigms) in
mind (and heart and soul)—where the designers had planned out
not only the feeling their images might generate but very much also
the thoughts. Most decks have so little thought (about thought) placed
into their execution that they merit little serious consideration as
a 'real' Tarot deck, regardless of the lip service they pay to the structure
and the superficial elements of Tarot symbolism.
Even
decks like 'Rorhig', for example, where much thought has been applied
to the design of many of the cards, suffer from the rather obvious fact
that the artist was not guided by a mastery of Tarot, so that the deck
is symbolically insipid and incomplete in many respects.
The
more you know about Tarot the more this kind of obvious shortcoming
will serve to annoy you—especially in a an otherwise attractive
or 'pretty' deck.
The
thing to remember is that Tarot, whatever the intentions for its use
by the original designers, has always been graphically about the iconization
of ideas; some of them very complex ideas, and the more a deck pays
homage to this fact (which involves not just the juxtaposition of a
bunch of images but also the systematic forethought to know why certain
images should go one place as opposed to another), whatever its ideological
bent may be, the better chance the deck will have to reconstruct Tarot
traditions in a modern frame.
Of
course, the first thing someone who is learning Tarot should try to
do is study as much as possible about what the 'old frame' was about.
5.
Which deck is the best?
The
prior tarot FAQ diplomatically answered this question—
"There
is no consensus on this issue, and discussions of this question have
the potential to start a flame war. Some of the more popular decks include:
The Aquarian Tarot, The Robin Wood Tarot, and Crowley's Thoth Tarot.
I see the potential for a whole other FAQ explaining some of the alleged
benefits/problems with the most widely available decks. But I'm not
about to write it. (Anyone?)"
Actually,
we've already addressed some of the inherent problems of answering the
'best' question in the answer to question 4.
The
only thing I might add here is that 'best' mostly has to do with you
and what you want to use Tarot for. On the other hand, most people who
are just beginning really have devoted little thought (as opposed to
feeling) about any specific objectives they may have with it—Tarot
just seems fascinating and fun—which it is. Therefore, one looks
about in books or from some more experienced person who may take the
role of teacher to provide a bit of guidance on what 'best' could mean.
You
will also, on alt.tarot, see much argument about this question, with
there being a particular dividing line between:
*those
who think 'best' should have NO limiting definition at all—thus,
one should do whatever he wants to and should never be told that something
is a 'bad' idea or application,
—AND—
*those
who think some uses of Tarot are simply stupid and don't merit any time
or consideration as a serious topic.
However
you may feel about this question, be prepared, should you start posting
about 'best' ways to do and think about Tarot, to defend your ideas
vigorously.
It
is likely some other people will disagree with you, no matter how well-intentioned
you may be in enlightening us all about 'best'.
6.
Why does the Tarot "work"?
The
prior tarot FAQ answered—
"There
are a number of different theories on this, which is the eloquent way
of saying no-one really knows."
Actually,
'no one knows' is pretty eloquent too, since it is succinct and right.
The
FAQ then went into a discussion of various 'theories' that have been
proposed. None of them have any scientific evidence to support them.
If you want to know more about them you will have plenty of opportunities
on alt.tarot, but advocating things like 'channeling' and 'synchronicity'
is liable to get you into a flame war. Actually, advocating that people
should 'have a nice day' is likely to get you into a flame war.
However,
you should consider this—not everyone understands the meaning
of the word 'work' in exactly the same way.
You
will discover the same problem if and when a discussion should occur
about 'belief' in Tarot. Some people seem to think there is something,
a power or ability, in which one needs to profess or deny belief. Others
think such questions are irrelevant and silly, belief, in their opinion,
not being required to make whatever use of Tarot they desire.
Ultimately,
one may file the answer to this question under—
'credo
quia absurdum est'
'I
believe because it is absurd.'
7.
How do I use a Tarot deck to 'tell the future'?
The
prior tarot FAQ had the following to say on this one—
"Study
the cards and learn their meanings. Practice a lot, on yourself, friends,
or total strangers as suits your personal leanings. Eventually, you
should get pretty good."
Well,
that's one way to look at it. And certainly one SHOULD take every opportunity
to practice. However, I'm not so sure that everyone 'should get pretty
good.'
There
are many anecdotes we've read over time on alt.tarot about people's
experience learning to use Tarot as an oracle.
Again,
the FAQ reminded—
"And
again, practice, practice, practice."
Yep.
To
which I would amend this—
Tarot
Novice's Rules and guidelines—
1.
DO use formal structured readings, where card positions mean something
specific like 'past influences' or 'hopes and fears'. You are a beginner
remember? Treat this as you would any learning experience—take
it one step at a time. You can get creative after you've mastered the
basics. Where do you get the structured layouts?
Almost
all decks come with an LB (little booklet), that will explain a basic
layout, usually some form of Keltic
Cross (see Keltic Cross layout explanation at the end of this section).
And you can find many other layout suggestions in Tarot books.
2.
DO ritualize (at least a little bit) what you are doing—it will
help you remember what is supposed to be going on. By this I mean—light
candles, evoke your favorite spirit guide, or simply be very methodical
and careful about what you are doing—some of the worst readers
I've seen are sometimes the ones whose basic talents are superior to
others. They get so convinced they've 'got it' after a year or so of
reading (sometimes after a week or so) they get sloppy and careless,
thinking it is all so 'obvious'. Their innate talents never are allowed
to evolve beyond 'sloppy and careless' and they soon tire of reading
altogether.
3.
DO trust that the cards will work for you—this does not have to
be active 'faith', just trust, like you would trust that the rollercoaster
is NOT going to fly off the tracks. Trust aids your self-confidence,
the importance of which we will discuss below.
4.
DON'T act like some kid with a watch or a fly, prying things loose to
see how and why they work. People frequently can not get their Tarot
skills back together again after smashing them to see how or if they
'work'. The fact is that reading is a skill based on talent, knowledge,
experience and the I-word, intuition. You either got it or you don't.
And I might add one additional component—courage or self-confidence.
To the degree that reading is a performance-based medium of spiritual
exchange one does need to have that trust element mentioned above and
the self-confidence that they can 'do it' perfectly as well, if not
better, than the next person.
Bottom
line, if you want to learn how to read cards, then study the symbolism,
learn the meanings, and—
—practice,
practice, practice.
I'm
including here a basic guide to the Keltic Cross layout, which is the
one most people first learn. This layout uses the same principles or
assumptions that you will encounter in almost all layouts—the
card position acts similarly to an astrological 'house', providing the
context (past influences, foundations, future influences, etc.) in which
the card energy will be read. The card that one reads in that position
will then act as the 'planet', shading the position according to the
card's symbolic meaning (sometimes, depending on the reading, one will
also consider the effects of surrounding cards on each position).
Here are the basic positions of the Keltic Cross (based mostly
on the version given in 'The Pictorial Key to the Tarot', by A. E. Waite)—
1.
Significator—(the card representing the querent or person asking
the question—traditionally, one chooses an appropriate card from
the pack before shuffling and dealing the other cards; however, a new
tradition has begun of 'allowing' the deck to reveal the proper card
by dealing this position 'blind' along with the other cards of the layout.)
2.
Covering card—(the card representing 'general' influences or the
'atmosphere' affecting this question—note: lots of Tarot-speak
is vague)
3.
Crossing card or the Cross—(the card representing obstacles or
problems affecting this question—if the card is 'positive', then
the problem may not be that great or perhaps the 'problem' will work
to the querent's benefit OR, maybe the 'good' stuff won't be so good
in this situation)
4.
'That which is above' or the Crown—(the card indicating either
the highest hopes of the querent for this question or the best that
can expected for him in the outcome—similar to the MC in astrology)
5.
'That which is below'—(the card indicating the 'foundation' or
'nadir'—similar to the IC in astrology, note that the relationship
between the 'Above' and the 'Below' cards is this—the 'Below'
is the birth point of the question and so represents aspects or events
that have come into definite being and which, Waite says, the querent
has made 'his own'. In practice, the card often represents the TRUE
point of the question, and the querent may not be consciously 'owned
up' to it yet. Compare this then to the 'Above' card, which represents
a point of fulfillment in the circle, and so, according to Waite, is
not something that has been made 'actual'. However, the querent may
be very aware of what this card represents, since he supposedly will
be trying to 'actualize' it).
Deal
all cards face down (no, you don't have to do this but it's more fun
to turn them up one at a time). Card 2 is placed on top of card 1. Card
3 is placed horizontally over card 2 (so it makes a cross over it).
Card
4 is placed directly above the 'cross'. Card 5 is placed directly below
the 'cross'.
OK,
at this point we need to decide where we will put the 'past' and 'future'
influences cards. According to Waite, if you are using a Court or 'picture'
card (King, Queen, Knight, Page) to represent the querent in the Significator
position, then deal the 'past' card to the side AWAY FROM that which
the 'Sig' is facing (i.e., if the 'Sig' appears to be looking to the
left, deal the 'past' to the right). Then deal the 'future' influences
card toward the direction the 'Sig' is facing. In Knight cards this
directionality stuff is pretty easy. If you don't want to mess with
it then simply deal the past-future cards in the same places every time.
Just remember which is which. I generally use Left=Past, Right=Future.
So,
to continue—
6.
That which is behind—(the card showing events affecting the question
that the querent will know, i.e., the past).
7.
That which is ahead—(the card showing events affecting the question
that the querent will NOT know yet, i.e., the future—but NOT the
final outcome).
Now
you have the basic Keltic Cross—a circle about a cross.The last
four cards of the layout are dealt in a vertical line from—8 (on
bottom) to 11 (on top) to the right of the Keltic Cross.
8.
Personal Position—(the card representing the querent/different
than the significator, this card shows the querent in action, for good
or ill, in the question)
9.
Environment—(the 'other' of the question, similar to the Personal
card, but this represents the environment in which everything unfolds,
so it is family, friends, work, etc.)
10.
Psychological—(hopes and fears and dreams of the querent)
11.
Future—(if what is shown in the other cards remains 'true', this
is how the question will resolve)
If
you have questions about this or other layouts, or specifics about how
to read cards, enquire on alt.tarot.
8.
What are 'reversals' and how do I get them into my readings?
A
long time ago in a galaxy far, far away (called France) this guy named
Etteilla decided to do card readings with something called a 'piquet'
deck (32 cards, plus, for purposes of reading, a blank card, called
the 'Etteilla'). Etteilla provided TWO different meanings for these
cards, one for the normal (or 'upright') card, and one for when the
card would be turned upside-down (that is, with the 'top' inverted to
the 'bottom'). This 'tradition' has been maintained ever since, and
almost ALL Tarot books and decks will include meanings both for the
'normal' card and also for the 'reversed' card, although, by now, there
are many variations on that theme, which is, along with its variations,
arbitrary and not very 'fulfilling' as a method of adding depth to a
reading. But IT IS the method A.E. Waite stuck in his book on Tarot
(which was mainly a copy of Etteilla's work that comes down to the present
day) and THAT book has pretty much been copied by everyone ever since.
Surprisingly,
to me, there have been a number of people posting to alt.tarot who have
expressed confusion over how to 'get' reversals to show up in their
readings—YES, you do that thing which seems so unnatural for so
many people—you turn the cards upside-down MANUALLY (what did
you think? that elves did it for you??).
Now,
there are a number of ways in which to get 'there' as well. Here are
a few suggestions—
(note—all
these directions assume you are holding the cards face down, but that's
up to you of course—you WILL have to make sure you are holding
the deck in an upright position before you begin your manipulations.)
1.
After shuffling (it seems to get a little confusing for people if they
try it BEFORE shuffling), just invert (turn upside-down) a few cards.
FEW means like 5-7 or whatever 'few' means to you. Then deal your layout
and interpret any upside-down cards according to the 'reversed' meanings.
You say you don't HAVE any 'reversed' meanings. Well, go get some. You
can't do your 'reversals' if you don't have any reversed meanings. And
those meanings are generally supplied either in your LB (the 'little
booklet' that comes with most decks) or in whatever book which explains
your deck. You can also, if those options are not available to you,
simply 'reverse' the upright or 'normal' meaning for any reversed card
you encounter in your reading.
2.
PRIOR to shuffling (uh-oh), you split the deck (no, not with an ax)
into two equal stacks (NO, they don't have to be PERFECTLY equal), and
then you simply turn one of the stacks so that its cards are now facing
in the exact opposite direction from the other stack. Now shuffle the
cards. Depending on your dexterity with this task, and the number of
times you shuffle (is 3 enough, is 6 too many??), you will get a nicely
'inverted' deck, just crammed with all sorts of 'reversed' cards that
you will still be utterly hopeless in 'dealing' with unless you have
some of the aforementioned reversed meanings.
3.
Put your deck on the table (or whatever), and pretend you are three
years old again (for some of you no great pretense shall be required).
Now, simply 'mess' the deck up—you know, just make all the cards
go every which way until they are a big mess on the table in front of
you. NOW, put the mess back together into a nice regular-looking deck.
And there you have it. Unless you are amazingly unlucky or incompetent,
you will now have a deck full of 'reversed' cards.
9.
Can I read my own cards?
Simple
answer: YES!
Ignore
people who tell you that you'll be too prejudiced to read clearly, or
that the 'energies' won't be right or whatever the excuse is supposed
to be. You CAN read cards for yourself.
Of
course, you're advised to READ the cards, and not merely force them
to say what you want (but that advice applies regardless of whether
you are reading for yourself or someone else).
10.
What's the difference between 'reversals' and 'dignities'?
When
you 'reverse' a card, you are attempting to supply your deck with some
possible 'alternative' meanings, that is, something different from the
norm. With reversals, what you are going to get is pretty much of an
'either-or' situation, although there are usually several different
meanings for both the upright and reversed position. However, there
is another way of generating these alternative meanings that does not
use reversals at all, and that is a system called 'elemental dignities',
which seeks to analyze a series of cards based on their elemental relationships
to each other, and therefore, ALL readings using this method should
provide opportunities, without recourse to manual inversions of the
cards, to get sometimes very subtle ranges of meaning with all the cards.
To find out more about how elemental dignities work, refer to:
http://lonestar.texas.net/~r3winter/edig.html
11.
How do I use a Tarot deck for meditation?
Since
I don't meditate much, in the conventional sense (if there is such a
thing), I will take the opportunity here to discuss a few ideas about
meditation that seem to me reasonable and simple and which, I believe,
can be productively applied to one's contemplation of Tarot cards.
Osho
(the 'artist' formerly known as Baghwan Shree Rajneesh) says—
"Mind
moves in a line, a simple straight line. It never moves to the opposite—it
denies the opposite. It believes in one, and life believes in two."
Yeah,
so?
Well,
meditation is often described as a search for some sort of perfect 'silence'.
To
which Osho again properly notes—
"A
dead man is absolutely silent. Nobody can disturb him, his concentration
is perfect. You cannot do anything to distract his mind; his mind is
absolutely fixed. Even if the whole world goes mad all around, he will
remain in his concentration."
So,
if we are not in search of a 'dead' silence, what should we be looking
for from meditation?
"Silence
must happen while you are absolutely alive, vital, bubbling with life
and energy. Then silence is meaningful. But then silence will have an
altogether different quality to it. It will not be dull. It will be
alive."
So,
what 'live silence' is to be gained from looking at Tarot cards?
First,
we should recognize that merely staring obliviously at the cards, hoping
something spills into our brain from the shapes and colors OR, on the
contrary, hoping to use the card as a harlequin monad, that will help
us shut out the noise of life, is only likely to move us into the 'dead'
form of silence, since we are not really trying to come to grips with
the meaning of the card in any absolute or even personal way, but are
trying to manipulate it for some external and, to my way of thinking,
'dead' application.
We
should rather be interested in, as Osho says, making the cards 'bubble'
with life and energy. Whose life and energy? Well, you think about it.
So,
what I'm getting at here is that meditation first involves a preparation
and this is largely a mental exercise with Tarot. Fill your mind with
as many facts (and thoughts and feelings about the facts as you can)—in
other words, learn what the cards mean. In the beginning you will not
know much, but that's OK, the more you learn about Tarot. the more productive
the meditation becomes.
When
the preparation is done, then you will be ready to exercise this knowledge
in myriad forms of 'meditation', which, as you can see, don't necessarily
take any particular form or function—life is a meditation in this
view. However, if you wish to formalize your experience, you can find
many guides to teaching you proper breathing and postures by looking
to books, newsgroups and websites devoted to yoga.
Oh,
and what is it you are supposed to be getting from this meditation?
A
living experience of the cards.
If
that seems vague, ask about it on alt.tarot.
Plenty
of people will offer ideas on what that means.
12.
How do I use a Tarot deck to play a game?
Many
games have been invented to play with Tarot or tarocchi. Tarot cards
were almost certainly created to play games, not to read fortunes or
to represent occult philosophies, so it is with the games of Tarot that
one is really using the deck in its oldest and (some would say) 'purest'
application.
Numerous
variations exist, mostly bridge-like games involving trick-taking.
See
Michael Dummett's book, "The Game of Tarot", for more explanations of
this material than you could probably ever care to hear.
Also,
there are some Tarot web sites that include different versions of tarocchi
rules.
13.
What is the history of the Tarot?
The
prior tarot FAQ answered this question—
"No-one
knows the 'true' origin of the Tarot."
And
could have added—"so everyone has just made it up as suited their
agendas."
And
that would have pretty much answered the question.
As
with most terse truths of Tarot, saying 'No-one knows the 'true' origin
of the Tarot' is not entirely accurate. It would be better to say that
very few people are acquainted with the history, such as we know it,
of Tarot. It is true that no one can say with certainty where the motivation
came to create the first Tarot deck although one can arrive at a partial
estimate by examining the best evidence for that origin, the symbols
on the cards.
From
such an examination, historians of Tarot (of which there are only a
few) have determined that Tarot arose in North Italy some time between
1425-1450. Its symbolism is filled with ideas and persons that reflect
that North Italian birthplace. There is NO evidence that Tarot originated
for any other purpose than as a gaming device. On the other hand, it
is fair to say that no one can reasonably speculate about what the people
who used Tarot in the beginning (or prior to 1781) either thought about
it, nor how they may have used it, in addition to gaming. As some people
have pointed out, gaming is itself an 'imperfect' form of divination,
and it is not difficult to imagine fortune-telling growing as a practice
with the cards fairly easily and early. However, there is no written
record to support that belief.
The
FAQ continued—
"The
most common myth is that it was brought to Europe by the Gypsies—but
this myth comes from the fact that very early occultists who used the
Tarot fancied that it came from Egypt. They were as wrong about that
as they were about the homeland of the Gypsies."
And,
all kinds of legends, like the Gypsy myth, have developed to explain
all kinds of things about Tarot that have no easy or obvious explanation—like
the fact that it has 22 trumps. Why 22? Is the number arbitrary? Or
does it mean that there is some mystical connection between Tarot and
other systems containing 22 elements, like kabbala?
If
you refer to the timeline (see answer to question 3) you will see that
MANY of the Tarot legends or traditions developed only recently, and
in response to the growth of a general popular interest in Tarot as
an oracular, instead of a gaming, device. One of the first questions
a novice will ask is 'where did Tarot come from' and most writers don't
feel comfortable addressing a first question in a book with 'beats me'.
So, many mythologies, appropriate to certain schools of occultism or
politics, have been created to deal with the annoying lack of knowledge
possessed by most Tarot-book writers.
In
short, in the absence of any real answers about Tarot, they tend to
make them up. This has been a time-honored tradition in Tarot since
1781, when Court de Gébelin first looked down at Tarot cards and, in
a revelation similar (in arrogance and audacity) to that of Joseph Campbell
almost 200 years later, immediately intuited (manufactured?) that the
cards were the lost leaves of the Egyptian 'Book of Thoth', containing
the secret and 'universal' wisdom of the ages and weren't we ever lucky
HE saw it.
Almost
everyone since 1781 has based at least some part of their Tarot shtik
on de Gébelin's 'work'. And, in all fairness to him, one needs to explore
his ideas in context to the time and place in which they developed.
Revolutionary France was a tolerant place for kooks of all sorts (political
and occult—one might almost call the attitude at that time, 'postmodern').
14.
What are the symbolic 'roots' of Tarot?
In
the prior tarot FAQ this question asked—
'Is
the Tarot related to Kabbala?'
To
which we answer—
Yes.
But a better question is to ask 'was it always so?'
And,
again, no one knows the answer to that with certainty.
However,
the question about the proper place of kabbala in Tarot drops us nicely
into the middle of the larger question about what the symbolic roots
of Tarot REALLY are. It may be instructive, before looking at possible
answers to the larger question to answer the smaller one—
Is
the Tarot related to Kabbala?
The
first thing we notice, as have so many before us, including, obviously,
the people who first publicly claimed a Tarot-kabbala link, is the 'happy
accident' of the deck having 22 trumps, which people have tried bravely
over the years to hammer and squeeze into some 'true' relationship to
the 22 Hebrew letters (which are the basis of kabbalistic doctrine).
However,
what is important to us is that the occult Tarot, of which the Waite
deck is the most influential, DOES relate kabbala in a critically important
correspondence to Tarot symbolism.
While
early occult commentators hinted at the link between Tarot and kabbala,
Eliphas Lévi (French 19th-century occultist) is the person principally
responsible for making this link stick as the primary symbolic model
by which modern Tarot would be interpreted and developed. His ideas,
whether historically justified or not (he assumed the kabbalistic link
was there from the 'beginning'), have formed the basis of some of the
most complex, and, in many places, most interesting, speculations about
the meaning of Tarot symbolism. Lévi believed, as have most of the occultists,
before and after him, that Tarot could not have been designed merely
as a game, but that its true purpose must have been wisely hidden in
that form by those who wished to do a sort of millennial knowledge transfer
through, in essence, sewing the pearls of wisdom they possessed into
the seams of a vulgar jacket called 'Tarot'.
That
such a marvelous ruse, if found to be true, would represent one of the
colossal historical discoveries ever, goes without saying. That there
is NO (documentary) evidence whatsoever to support the assertion that
any such ruse occurred, may require saying, but say it we must. Lévi,
while creating a wonderful and interesting system by which to interpret
Tarot, did almost certainly CREATE it, and not DISCOVER it.
So,
in Tarot, a symbolic 'root' is not always what it appears. It may have
gone through many graftings before ending up in the form we may see
in any particular deck, and yet, typically, the promoter of this or
that 'root' ideology will declare to us that the root is SO ancient
it might be dangerous to behold (mental crypt bacteria?) if it were
not for their 'expert' guidance in revealing the thing to readers 'just
so'.
In
the midst of all the dissembling about roots one also will encounter
a sentiment endorsed by certain Tarot political parties that we MUST
NOT, CAN NOT, AND WILL NOT accept any theory, no matter how well documented,
that seeks to fix the origin of Tarot symbolism into any particular
interpretation. Many people have built careers by maximizing the 'mystery'
of Tarot and they will not, by the gods, have anyone demystifying a
vein that has not run out.
All
this is to say that when you start messing with the politics of Tarot,
you can rapidly be declared a heretic by all kinds of people for all
kinds of reasons. At least they can't burn you at the stake (so far).
If
you really want a good start on learning about the symbolic roots of
Tarot, get 'The Tarot Cards Painted by Bonifacio Bembo', by Gertrude
Moakley. I'm not claiming Moakley's theory is entirely correct, but
she has shown the 'way' to those who wonder if Tarot symbolism can be
deciphered without recourse to newage nonsense.
Answer,
yes it can.
15.
How is the Tarot related to other forms of divination?
If
one buys into the theory that Tarot is supposed to be some sort of magical/mystical
encyclopedia, then it would certainly have the potential of being related
to just about any other form of divination one could think of.
There
is an interesting theory, one discussed by Gertrude Moakley,that Tarot
may have been originally derived as a gaming replacement for dice. If
that's true, then it is reasonable that, as in dice, Tarot may have
been used as a means of divination quite early, but again, there is
no written documentation to support that theory.
There
are some specific similarities between Tarot and astrology, particularly
in the way some systems of Tarot divination are performed. Also, given
a certain creativity in the formulation of layouts, Tarot can be made
to simulate the superficial structures of all kinds of other systems.
For example, one of the most popular reading layouts is the Astrological
or Zodiac spread, where each position represents either a sign of the
zodiac or a house of a horoscope.
16.
Is there a Tarot reading program for IBM/Mac/Unix/Whatever?
Yes.
As
pointed out in the last revision of the prior tarot FAQ, this subject
is so large that a separate FAQ could and should be written about it.
One
question that frequently comes up concerning computer Tarot is—does
it 'really' work?
The
answer is no more approachable than is the similar question for Tarot
in general. People who tend to distrust computers and technology in
general seem to think that only a human-spirit link can power the Tarot
(reading) mechanism. On the other hand, some computer programmers, especially
ones who pain themselves about the creation of some 'perfect' randomizing
agent (algorithm), also refuse to believe that a computer generated
reading could be as 'natural' as that conducted by a human. This latter
concern raises an interesting philosophical point—one that has
been discussed occasionally on alt.tarot—is the randomization
of the cards what we are actually trying to achieve by shuffling?
17.
What about those extra 'Magi' in the Thoth Deck?
What
about those extra 'Magi' cards in the Thoth deck? We are including this
seemingly narrow (single-deck) question and answer simply because SO
many people ask about it and because another one of those post-modern,
post-intellectual 'traditions' has developed about 'what they mean',
which we will take the opportunity here to address.
First,
you need to understand that Tarot cards are printed in sheets of 80
cards—SO, you always will have two extra cards in a typical 78-card
printing. People put all kinds of things on those extra cards, ads,
reading instructions, magical emblems, you name it. One of the things
you can do with the extra cards is to print—extra Tarot cards.
Now,
it's also necessary to understand that Aleister Crowley had Frieda Harris
paint several versions of the Magus, before he settled on the final
one (which is the one illustrated in 'Book of Thoth', the guidebook
for the deck). You might note that in 'Book of Thoth' Crowley does not
talk about THREE Magus cards, but only one.
However,
when it came time for A. G. Mueller, the Swiss company that prints one
of the versions of the Thoth deck (U. S. Games is the other), to print
the two 'extra' cards, they decided to include these 'draft' magi in
the printing. So, all 'Swiss decks' have two extra Magi.
Over
time, because people were basically ignorant of these facts, and given
the natural newage tendency to 'make it up' first, and ask questions—well—never,
people have created extraordinary 'theories' about the presence and
significance of these extra cards and MANY people have ignorantly assumed
that they were intended to be used in the deck and that Aleister Crowley
designed it that way. He didn't.
So,
just pull out you extra Magi, admire their artwork, note how they represent
a clear evolution in the development of the imagery, but realize that
they are provided as a kind of 'gift', or 'extra', and are not intended
to be used in the deck.
Of
course, if your interest in Tarot is to assist you in breaking all the
rules, then you'll certainly WANT to use these extra Magi, and be sure
to make up some baseless theory about why Crowley intended the deck
to have three Magi. Of course, if you post your creation on alt.tarot,
in anything other than an attempt at jest, you are warned to expect
some severe 'correction' (some of you may be looking for that too—but
in that case you might try alt.spanking or something).
[NOTE—subsequent
to the writing of this, ANOTHER newage tradition, caused by this same
kind of problem (ignorance about the nature of 'extra' cards), was brought
to our attention concerning the US Games version of Thoth, wherein one
receives the Unicursal Hexagram card (spooky!!), and a blank card as
the 'extras'. Some people apparently have decided that THESE cards also
were intended for use with the deck. In this case they may have been
aided in their confusion by US Games, which even includes in its sales
catalog a note about the '80-card Thoth deck'. This phenomenon is just
one more example of how complete ignorance is translated into a postmodern
'wisdom tradition' about which people crave 'answers'. Certainly, the
pop Tarot book writers are happy to keep supplying those answers as
long as people keep asking these really dumb questions.]
18.
What is alt.tarot?
It's
a Usenet newsgroup devoted to the discussion (or fight) of Tarot. More
sites carry this group all the time. If you don't get alt.tarot, then
ask your news administrator to carry it for you.
19.
What are the 'rules' of alt.tarot?
Feel
free to post whatever relevant thing you have to say about the Tarot.
'Relevant' means about the topic—'Tarot'. 'Relevant' does NOT
mean a daily or hourly (or even weekly) dose of advertising about some
Tarot product or service.
NOTICE:
not all posts about all topics will be received warmly by any or most
other posters.
If
you are looking for a place to 'share' newage ideas and experiences,
there are many 'nicer' places to go to do this than alt.tarot, where
the nonsense tolerance can be VERY low. On the other hand, if you want
to learn about Tarot, there is no better place to go than alt.tarot.
But remember, no one owes you the education. Some of the most knowledgeable
Tarot people in the world write on alt.tarot. Most of them are more
than happy to field your questions. Some of them are, however, a little
bit 'difficult' to deal with, and some of them are self-admitted curmudgeons.
In
the same way, however, no matter how silly other people may think your
ideas or questions are, you are almost certain to find other people
on alt.tarot who will think that they are interesting and will want
to talk to you about them.
So,
as with most things in life, you get nowhere on alt.tarot if you don't
take a chance.
20.
What books might I read if I wanted to learn more about Tarot?
Someone
once asked me what they should read to learn Tarot.
I
said—"everything".
In
a way that includes the many things that are not right too. To learn
by negative example is still to learn.
However,
since I like Thoth, and think it is still the most interesting Tarot
deck there is, I have to recommend first and foremost—
1.
The Book of Thoth, by Aleister Crowley
Contrary
to what some people have suggested you do not need any background in
AC's writings to take on this book. In many ways his personal views
on the cards are not even the point here (the book is a very good general
introduction to occult Tarot) and he supplies you with all the additional
references re: his writings and 'Thelemic' interpretations to go do
further study—this is not however true of much of the mythological
material he cites and that's part of the reason many people are intimidated
by what they read in Thoth. If you arm yourself with a good mythological
encyclopedia or guidebook you can make out just fine. If you have the
Thoth deck there is no substitute for this book.
2.
The Encyclopedia of Tarot, in 3 volumes, by Stuart Kaplan
Stuart
is an OK historian and not in any obvious way an occultist (read Dummett
and Moakley for historical insights—Crowley, Waite and Case for
the occult stuff), but he is a great collector and presenter and provides
more decks per volume to look at and compare than anyone. If you are
taking this subject seriously at all you MUST have these books.
3. The Game of Tarot, by Michael Dummett
This
book is out of print and pretty hard to find. It is, however, the most
substantial and detailed study of the history of Tarot ever written.
Since Dummett was, and IS, convinced that 'TRUE' Tarot is only the gaming
version which preceded the 'occult revolution' of 1781, and is therefore
zealous in attacking the historical claims and merits of occult Tarot,
he should be read with a number of grains of salt handy (unless you
really do ONLY wish to play card games with your Tarot deck). While
you will learn everything you could possibly EVER wish to know about
how to play card GAMES with Tarot, and no small amount about the historical
arguments which have fascinated Tarot nerds (these are the people who
study Tarot purely out of a scholarly interest in its origins and development),
you'll also learn that virtually all of the people who invented the
modern version of Tarot were frauds and kooks. While that is unquestionably
true in some cases, the question religiously begged by Dummett is whether
this fact kept occult Tarot from ending up a phenomenon worthy of serious
and balanced study—he simply dismisses that possibility and with
it, any possibility that most of the people presently interested in
Tarot, would give a damn about reading his book. And that's too bad,
because there is much historical information in it that is worth reading.
[NOTE: In an effort to popularize his doctrine of the 'evils' of occult
Tarot, Dr. Dummett teamed up with a couple of other fellows (Ronald
Decker and Thierry DePaulis) and produced in 1996, A Wicked Pack
of Cards, which was a focused study on the origins of occult Tarot.
Dummett's narrow vision of the value of occult Tarot, which harms the
otherwise excellent, The Game of Tarot, is promoted as a kind
of sideshow act in the 'pop' presentation of A Wicked Pack of Cards.
The latter book will be a dull read, at best, to most people, and will
be a disappointment to anyone looking for a balanced history of occult
Tarot.]
4.
The Tarot Cards Painted by Bonifacio Bembo, by Gertrude Moakley
Back
in the 1950s Moakley was a librarian at the New York Public Library.
She decided to use the subject of Tarot as a test to see how useful
and efficient the library might be to a prospective researcher. In the
course of the test she came to the realization that very little serious
work then existed exploring the historical origins of Tarot cards. The
product of her continued work into these origins became this important
(but seldom-read) book. Moakley put forward a theory concerning the
development of the symbolism of early Tarot that matched Tarot symbols
to 'players' in the dramatic carnivals which preceded the observance
of Lent every year. Her theory, while based mostly in her imagination
of how such an event would have yielded the characters on Tarot cards,
nevertheless pointed to the generally ignored (in 'pop' Tarot books)
influence upon early Tarot of Renaissance Italian cultural themes. While
some of her theory tends to beg questions of logic and coherence, the
book is well worth reading for the questions it raised in respect to
what the symbolism of early Tarot REALLY meant to the people who created
the first cards.
5.
The Pictorial Key to the Tarot, by A E Waite
For
a long time I truly hated this book, even though it was the first Tarot
book I ever read. It is so heavily veiled that it is nearly useless
to a novice—in fact, it is a far more useless book to a novice
than is Book of Thoth. Nevertheless, a novice SHOULD read the
book to get a taste of the historical flavor of occult Tarot, and also
of the general nastiness that has always surrounded the debate over
what is 'true' about Tarot. And, for a student that has learned something
about Christian and Masonic and Golden Dawn symbolism through friendlier
sources, suddenly the Waite deck and the book will start to unveil itself
in many interesting and surprising ways. Waite also includes a good
bibliography describing HIS sources, most of which will be unavailable
to most of you, but some (particularly the works of Eliphas Lévi), you
should eventually find and read.
6.
The Qabbalistic Tarot, by Robert Wang
I
include this mainly because it is a good introduction to the many original
sources one should pursue when studying the Hermetic and Kabbalistic
influences on Tarot. However, the little card descriptions and analyses
are not really useful at all unless you are completely ignorant of the
subject (which some of you are). The general warning provided at the
end of this list is particularly applicable to this book.
7.
The Tarot:History, Mystery and Lore, by Cynthia Giles
I
have many reservations about this book, but it does provide a concise
introduction to the subject, although the back part of the book where
she sinks into Jungian and pseudo-scientific justifications and explanations
for Tarot is entirely silly and can be beneficially avoided (although,
if you want a good concise introduction to the kind of inane mumbo-jumbo
that occurs in most modern Tarot books you could read this stuff and
avoid everything else). She also has a detailed review of many other
Tarot books.
8.
The Tarot, A Key to the Wisdom of the Ages, by Paul Foster Case
This
book should probably be read along with Waite's Pictorial Key,
for comparison and contrast. Case based his own deck, and many of his
Tarot ideas, on those of Waite, but he often criticizes 'Ed' for being
too quick on the 'blind' (that is, too ready to conceal the 'pearls'
from the 'swine'), and then, presumably, P.F. will kindly turn about
and reveal that pearl to us hungry pigs—except, it does not always
quite work out like that. Case will tell you much more than Waite, he
will do it more clearly (like who wouldn't) than Waite, but you should
recall that Case IS AN OCCULTIST, and he does suffer from the occultist
disease—meaning he loves to occult things. However, I often find
myself agreeing with the Tarot insights of Paul Foster Case, even though
he is a bit too 'newagey' for my blood. He wrote another book, 'Book
of Tokens' , which is a series of kabbalistic Tarot 'revelations',
offered in verse form, complete with commentaries. From a mnemonic standpoint,
I suppose these poetic devices are a good way to learn some of the kabbalistic
correspondences, and the commentary sometimes offers some good ideas.
9.
The Tarot of the Bohemians, by Papus
You
want to read a book that makes A.E. Waite look clear and concise, read
this.
Actually,
this book is required reading from an historical perspective—Papus
was the last great link in the chain of French occult Tarot evolution
that had begun with Court de Gébelin. Papus was a student of Lévi, a
great influence on Waite, and this book includes a lot of bits and pieces
of Tarot lore and ideas you will probably be unable to find anywhere
else. It also has a lot of tedious drivel. However, his justification
for including a fortune-telling section is alone worth the price of
the book.
Here's
a sample of his 'progressive' reasoning—
"Still,
since it is customary for the Tarot to be used for 'fortune-telling',
we have touched upon this subject, and rendered it as attractive as
possible. We have tried to simplify the systems used, so that a woman
of even little intelligence can easily and with little exercise of memory
amuse herself with this art."
10.
Tarot Symbolism, by Robert V. O' Neill
O'Neill's
book is a quite useful overview of the myriad ideas and cultural influences
which affected the creation and selection of the symbols used in the
first tarocchi decks. His interest is in providing an alternative view
to Dummett's anti-ideological "it's only a card-game" analysis while
at the same time he has little interest in (at least in this book) reviewing
the validity or value of the later occultist speculations about Tarot.
This book is NOT likely going to interest the casual reader, nor especially
those whose interests are embedded in pomo-isms of the newage, but for
serious students of Tarot (or those who would like to become one of
those) Tarot Symbolism is an important read, providing a nice
balance against Dummett's rather narrow take on the significance of
early Tarot history. For a long time this book was pretty hard to obtain,
since its author was the sole source for it and prior to 1997 he was
not on the net. Recently, after a brief number of years where O'Neill
was able to sell the remaining copies of Tarot Symbolism he still
possessed, the book finally sold out its first run (helped along by
renewed interest and the Internet effect). Dr. O'Neill indicates there
are no plans to reprint it, so O'Neill's Tarot Symbolism is now
and presumably forever "out of print".
11. Meaning in Tarot,
by J. Karlin
In
this book I cover the idea of meaning in Tarot from several perspectives—(A)
as an example illustrating basic semiotic concepts (B) looking at how
A. E. Waite danced around meanings (and sometimes the truth) (C) as
a kind of grammatical expression (D) as an agent of "inclusion". In
the first essay I examine the development of one of the suit signs,
Wands, to show how its signification has evolved from its beginning
as the Mamluk suit sign of Polo Sticks. In so doing, the process of
the evolution of meaning in Tarot is discussed and revealed, and a suggestion
is made that though the occultists may not have been much good at satisfying
the modern demands of history (as a science), they may not have been
half-bad semioticians (at least of the "drifty" sort). In the second
essay I answer questions from an alt.tarot poster about why A. E. Waite
is "torturing" her with his prose. In the third essay I look at how
Latin can teach some basic lessons about Tarot as a language. In the
fourth essay I explore the postmodern phenomenon of adapting Tarot to
satisfy inclusive urges of various interest groups.
A
final note on all this bookreading stuff—
ALWAYS
READ SKEPTICALLY!!!
There,
you've been warned.
End
of FAQ