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The Esoteric Secrets of Surrealism
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Table of Contents

Foreword by Bernard Roger Introduction: Tolerance and Acceptance of Difference 1 Under the Sign of the Goose: Surrealism and Liberation of the Mind 2 Surrealism and the Sacred 3 Surrealism and the Labyrinth of the Mind 4 Surrealism and Divination 5 Surrealism and Astrology 6 Surrealism and Dark Romanticism: "In the Closed Palace" 7 The Unappeasable Shadow of Arthur's Companions: Surrealism and Celticism 8 Surrealism and Alchemy: "You with Lead in the Head, Melt It Down to Make Surrealist Gold" 9 Surrealism and Magic 10 Surrealism, Freemasonry, and Voodoo: Ogun Ferraille, the Elect Cohen, and the Great Tradition 11 Surrealism and Gnosticism 12 Surrealism and Tradition: Occult Sources, Histories of Orders and Churches 13 Surrealism and Myth 14 Keeping a Level Head? Notes Bibliography Index

About the Author

Patrick Lepetit has written several books in French on esoteric traditions and surrealism. He is a member of the Grand Orient de France and of the Melusine Network of scholars interested in surrealism. He lives in Mons en Baroeul, France.

Reviews

"This book is a necessary resource for those readers interested, or rather compelled, by the implicit and explicit relationships between surrealism and the initiatory forms that comprise the great traditions of the esoteric and occult arts. The author, whose enthusiasm for his subject is equaled by his erudition, provides for the first time in English translation numerous excerpts from noted surrealists commenting directly on the subject at hand, whether it be divination, astrology, dark romanticism, the Celtic world, or alchemy, magic, Voudoun, Gnosticism and mythopoesis. His exegesis and conclusions are ripe, and should provoke the reader not only in terms of encountering the texts and works discussed throughout the various ages and contexts they were created in but also in recollecting, or revisiting, quite personal moments that have acted as levers or axial junctures from which much else evolved. Patrick Lepetit's scholarship in this regard is revivifying and precise. A much needed looking glass into a still evolving gyre in which science, as a capacity for astute observation, and poetry, where our internal and external theaters merge, have ever the potential of reaching new syntheses." Allan Graubard, co-author of Invisible Heads: Surrealists in North America - An Untold Story and aut "Lepetit's book remains an excellent one. For readers with an interest in occultism and spirituality it offers a journey of initiation into the arcana of modern art and literature; for scholars and students of the surrealist movement, it is essential reading. According to the English-born surrealist Leonora Carrington, modern men should abandon themselves to the great ocean of the unknown and rediscover a sense of magic and enchantment amid the dull and monotonous shades of rationalized society. Reading Lepetit's study is a first plunge into precisely this sea of spirituality." Art Papers, Daniel Zamani, September 2014 "French scholar Lepetit's first English-language book, translated by Jon E. Graham, draws extensively on the work of others to suggest links between esoteric traditions and the surrealist movement. Lepetit calls on a parade of commentators to support his argument that surrealist artists such as Andre Breton and his colleagues were more than avant-garde painters and poets. Instead, posits Lepetit, they had strong ties to spiritualists, Freemasons, voodoo practitioners, and secret societies of all stripes; he believes that their message was not only psychological, but essentially spiritual. Lepetit is an enthusiastic researcher, and this volume is thick with quotations, references, and footnotes that explore every aspect of surrealism. Precisely how all of these dimensions are related to each other is not always clear, because quotations so rapidly follow one another that they leave little room for Lepetit to comment or readers to reflect. While textual sources abound, Lepetit includes only 21 illustrations to provide examples of the wealth of surrealist art he refers to in the text. Previous knowledge of surrealist art and the history of the occult are recommended before delving into Lepetit's specialized body of knowledge. A comprehensive bibliography provides ample opportunity for additional exploration." Publishers Weekly, February 2014

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