Hurry - Only 2 left in stock!
|
Lo Scarabeo's Tarot decks have been acclaimed all over the world for originality and quality. With the best Italian and international artists, each Lo Scarabeo deck is an exceptional artistic value.
Commited to developing innovative new decks while preserving the rich tradition of Tarot, Lo Scarabeo continues to be a favorite among collectors and readers.
Llewellyn is the exclusive distributor of Lo Scarabeo products in North America.
Summary: The Manga Tarot is a beautiful and insightful deck. It
skillfully combines the evocative and fantastical feel of
Manga--Japanese comic art--with the equally evocative format of
Tarot. Add to the mix some creative changes and juxtapositions and
you've got a deck that is both familiar and exotic. It provides
enough connection to traditional meanings that a beginner will not
feel overwhelmed. It provides enough freedom that a beginner will
not feel stifled. It presents enough uniqueness that a seasoned
reader will discover new pathways to explore.
In-Depth Review:
For those of you familiar with Lo Scarabeo Tarot decks, you'll know
that they are more apt to push the boundaries of Tarot, to play
with structure, symbolism, and theme, and to reach toward the next
evolutionary level of Tarot in general. This means they don't
produce many decks that would be recognized as Rider-Waite-Smith
derivatives. But when they do, such as with the Manga Tarot, they
change just enough and add just enough to make the journey through
the Major and Minor Arcana a thrilling ride filled with intriguing
insights, if only we take the time to look.
In the Manga Tarot there are four things that overtly affect the
interpretation of the cards. First, in most of the cards, figures
that are usually depicted as male in the Rider Waite tradition are
depicted as female, and vice versa. This creates a change in the
some of the Major Arcana titles and the numbering of the Emperor
and Empress (III and IV, respectively). This technique really plays
with the Eastern idea of Yin/Yang and of the idea that all people
(and archetypes?) have both masculine and feminine qualities. When
we look at these cards, we are encouraged to explore the feminine
qualities of the Priestess (The Hierophant in the RWS system) and
the masculine qualities of Temperance.
Another change also involves gender. The court cards are named:
Prince, Princess, King, and Queen and are depicted in that order,
as opposed to the usual Page, Knight, Queen, and King. In a
reading, this probably wouldn't make much difference. The idea of
the court cards as a family is not alien to us, and the order they
are listed in the booklet, since there is no numerical demarcation
on the cards, wouldn't affect how we view them in a spread. But
because this shift in order was consciously implemented by the deck
creator, it does invite us to reconsider how the implied hierarchy
of the court cards, whatever they are called, influences our
interpretations.
In addition to the gender changes, the Manga Tarot includes the
addition of four different glyphs. These glyphs are the Japanese
symbols for the seasons: spring, summer, fall, and winter. In the
Manga Tarot the seasons are meant to indicate the temporal and
cyclic element of the cards:
Spring: birth, beginning, sunrise, adolescence
Summer: growth, culmination, noon, maturity
Fall: decline, stagnation, sunset, old age
Winter: death, minimum, night, silence
These glyphs are used (or not used, as we shall see) on all the
cards. Each card has one glyph, with the following exceptions: The
Wheel and the Aces have all four glyphs. The Tens have three
glyphs. The Fool has no glyphs. So in the Manga Tarot the absence
of a single glyph (in the case of the Tens) or of any glyph at all
(in the case of The Fool) plays as big a role as the inclusion of a
glyph. For example, the Ten of Cups is missing the glyph for
winter. If the Tens in general represent the culmination, fullness,
or ending of something and the Ten of Cups is about true love and
happiness, we can see the absence of the winter glyph as the ending
of night, silence, and loneliness. The fullness of true love has
within it the beginning of love, the growth of love, and hopes for
growing old together. But in that moment, the Ten of Cups moment,
it has no thought of that love ever ending.
Another important and conscious choice in this deck is the use of
color. The four colors highlighted are:
Blue: which represents the suit of Swords, air, and intellect.
Green: which represents the suit of Pentacles, earth, and
nature.
Red: which represents the suit of Wands, fire, and personality.
Yellow: which represent the suit of Chalices, water, and
feelings.
So, as you would imagine, the cards in the suit of Wands are mostly
red. That's nice, but not really something that would influence a
card interpretation. A Sword is a Sword, whether the image is blue
or otherwise. Ah, but this deck is more complex than that. For
example, the Ten of Pentacles is very green overall. However, there
is much yellow (Chalices). For a card showing a loving, stable
family bond, Chalices compliment this card perfectly and remind us
that stability, family, and tradition without emotion and affection
is an incomplete picture of the Ten of Pentacles.
The idea of the absence of something is used to good affect in The
Fool card. It not only lacks any glyph, it also lacks color. It is
all black, white, and gray except for one small, subtle use of
color: small red flowers grow along the path that The Fool has
walked. This Fool is not our easily recognizable Rider-Waite Fool.
It is true, there is a figure walking not paying attention to where
she is going, a dog, and a cliff. But this Fool isn't distracted by
anything external or happy. She covers her eyes with her hands.
When you look at her you may, sometimes think she is unhappy or
distressed. Other times she seems very calm in a Hanged Man-like
way. The dog isn't watching for danger; it is watching her. The
booklet provides the (at first glance) cryptic phrase: "It is the
nature of things that space desires to be filled." This Fool may be
seen as being between lives, on her way to her next incarnation.
That's why the flowers sprout where she walks; she is leaving her
previous personality behind, bit by bit, making space that will be
filled by her next incarnation.
This deck is beautiful, challenging, and enchanting. It's like a
song sung in a different language...the tune resonates but you may
not be quite sure of the lyrics. Each time you look at it you'll
find yourself in a new place, with new questions and new answers.
If you are someone who enjoys knowing the general direction, who is
comfortable finding meaning in images, and who wants to find their
own way, you will love this deck. If a beginner is aware of the
differences between this deck and a Rider-Waite-Smith deck and is
comfortable delving into something new, then this would be a lovely
introduction to Tarot. The really remarkable thing about this deck
is that it does manage to be two things at once. Because the
traditional meanings are clearly recognizable, this is an excellent
reading deck for divination. Because of the gender reversals, the
intelligent use of color, the intriguing use of the absence of
things, and the addition of the glyphs, it is also a doorway into
new ways of looking at the cards. Publisher: Lo Scarabeo
ISBN: 9780738710051
Creator: Riccardo Minetti
Artist: Anna Lazzarini
Brief Biography of Artist: Anna Lazzarini is well known in the
world of Italian comics. Passionate about Manga drawing and art,
she has made an essential contribution to the creation of the deck
through her inventiveness and imagination.
Name of Accompanying Booklet: Manga Tarot
Number of Pages of booklet: 63 (15 in English, the rest in Italian,
Spanish, French, and German)
Author of Booklet: Riccardo Minetti
Brief Biography of Author: Riccardo Minetti is the author of the
Etruscan Tarot, the Fey Tarot, and the Gothic Tarot of Vampires. He
also collaborates on many other decks as a member of the creative
team at Lo Scarabeo.
Reading Uses: General, Past Lives, Karma
Ethnic Focus: Japanese
Artistic Style: Manga-influenced
Does it follow Rider-Waite-Smith Standard?: Yes, with
variations
Does it have alternate names for major arcana cards? Yes, for three
cards.
The Magician becomes The Sorceress
The High Priestess becomes The Priest
The Hierophant becomes The Priestess
Why was deck created?: According to Riccardo Minetti, the creator
of the Manga Tarot:
"I wanted to make a deck for beginners, and I wanted to make a deck
that could help younger generation (that do not have the sixties or
the occult in their brain wavelength) to approach Tarot into a
form, and toward a direction, that was in their experience, and
that could resonate with them. I sort of think that it's easier for
younger people to relate to 'warrior's honor, ' than to 'justice.'
It's not just that they can recognize it more (they are not
stupid), but it simply means more to them.
"In a way the assumption behind it is that Tarot should mirror
experience. It is not a higher truth, but rather a 'tool' for that,
a 'map' to that, and a 'translation' of that.
"Also, note that I don't absolutely think that Beginner =
Rider-Waite[-Smith].
"I wanted the Manga [Tarot] to offer Rider-Waite compatible
meanings, but also give an easy and immediate way to look at
connections between cards rather than to the meaning of single
cards. And I wanted images (as the gender switching) that make you
wonder about the why... so that when you change decks you were not
set to 'this is the only way.' In my opinion, a beginner deck
should open doors and not offer a safe, self-contained path. At
least that is my idea of a good beginner deck."
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |