エピソード

  • Flower Power and Fortune Cards: How the 1960s Revolutionized Tarot
    2026/06/04
    Explore how the 1960s counterculture movement revolutionized tarot, transforming it from an obscure occult practice into a mainstream tool for personal reflection. This episode of The History of Tarot examines the cultural forces that democratized tarot reading, from Eden Gray's accessible guidebooks to the human potential movement's embrace of psychological symbolism. Discover how the Summer of Love, feminist spirituality, and the rejection of traditional religious authority created the perfect environment for tarot's explosive growth. Learn about the shift from fortune-telling to self-exploration, the rise of alternative bookstores, and how music festivals became venues for card reading. Host Clara Moss traces the lasting impact of this transformation, showing how 1960s values of personal empowerment and DIY spirituality continue to shape modern tarot practice. The episode reveals how a generation's hunger for authentic spiritual experience breathed new life into centuries-old divination cards, establishing the contexts and interpretations that define contemporary tarot culture. Perfect for history enthusiasts, tarot practitioners, and anyone interested in the intersection of spirituality and social movements in twentieth-century America.
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    6 分
  • Aleister Crowley's Thoth Deck: Art, Magic, and Controversy
    2026/05/28
    Explore the fascinating history behind Aleister Crowley's Thoth Tarot deck, created in collaboration with artist Lady Frieda Harris between 1938-1943. This episode examines the five-year artistic journey that produced one of tarot's most visually stunning and symbolically complex decks. Learn about Harris's innovative painting techniques using phosphorescent paints, the deck's incorporation of Golden Dawn magical traditions, astrology, and Kabbalah, and how it reflected Crowley's Thelemic philosophy. Discover the challenges faced in publishing this controversial deck, which didn't appear until 1969, and its lasting influence on modern tarot design. We discuss the deck's unique structure, from renamed court cards to the evocatively titled minor arcana, and examine how this collaboration between an occultist and an aristocratic artist created a masterpiece of esoteric art. Perfect for tarot historians, artists, and anyone interested in twentieth-century occultural movements. Features discussion of Art Deco styling, ceremonial magic symbolism, and the deck's reception in both occult and mainstream circles.
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    4 分
  • Arthur Waite's Vision: Creating the Rider-Waite-Smith Standard
    2026/05/21
    Explore the fascinating story behind the world's most influential tarot deck in this episode of The History of Tarot. Host Clara Moss examines the groundbreaking collaboration between scholar Arthur Edward Waite and artist Pamela Colman Smith that revolutionized tarot imagery in 1909. Learn how Waite's vision of fully illustrated cards transformed the traditional Tarot de Marseille format, and discover how Smith's innovative artwork created the visual language that defines modern tarot understanding. This episode delves into the Golden Dawn's influence on esoteric studies, the creative process behind the deck's creation, and the lasting impact of what became known as the Rider-Waite-Smith standard. From Smith's theatrical background to Waite's scholarly approach to symbolism, discover how this partnership created imagery that continues to influence tarot deck design more than a century later. Perfect for tarot enthusiasts, history buffs, and anyone interested in the evolution of symbolic art. Keywords: tarot history, Rider-Waite-Smith deck, Arthur Waite, Pamela Colman Smith, Golden Dawn, tarot cards, occult history, esoteric traditions, tarot symbolism, tarot art.
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    7 分
  • Pamela Colman Smith: The Forgotten Artist Behind the World's Most Famous Deck
    2026/05/14
    Discover the remarkable story of Pamela Colman Smith, the visionary artist behind the iconic Rider-Waite tarot deck imagery. Born in 1878, Smith was a multicultural artist, folklorist, and member of London's mystical Golden Dawn society. In 1909, she revolutionized tarot by creating the first deck with full pictorial scenes on all 78 cards, completing the work in just six months. Despite her groundbreaking contribution, Smith received only a flat fee and no royalties for what became the world's most popular tarot deck. This episode explores her diverse artistic background, from New York's bohemian art scene to Caribbean folklore illustration, and how her unique perspective shaped the symbolic visual language we associate with tarot today. Learn about her theatrical training, spiritual influences, and the financial struggles that marked her later years in Cornwall. We examine how Smith's multicultural identity and outsider status allowed her to synthesize diverse spiritual traditions into universally resonant imagery. The episode also addresses the historical overlooking of women's contributions to cultural movements and the recent efforts to restore Smith's rightful recognition in tarot history. Discover how her innovative approach to symbolic storytelling continues influencing contemporary artists and deck creators worldwide.
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    6 分
  • The Golden Dawn's Mystical Mathematics: Occult Symbolism in Modern Tarot
    2026/05/07
    Explore how the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn revolutionized tarot through systematic occult symbolism and mystical mathematics. This episode examines the Victorian-era organization's scholarly approach to combining tarot with Kabbalistic Tree of Life correspondences, astrological associations, and numerological systems. Learn about key figures like MacGregor Mathers and William Westcott, and discover how their methodical framework influenced the creation of the famous Rider-Waite-Smith deck through members Arthur Edward Waite and Pamela Colman Smith. We discuss the Golden Dawn's innovative Color Scales, their assignment of Hebrew letters to major arcana cards, and their systematic approach to minor arcana symbolism based on elemental correspondences. The episode contextualizes these developments within Victorian spiritual movements and explains how this organization's comprehensive documentation preserved their methods for modern practitioners. Understanding the Golden Dawn's contributions reveals why contemporary tarot practice relies so heavily on astrological and numerological associations that originated with this influential group. Essential listening for anyone interested in how modern tarot's symbolic complexity emerged from late 19th-century British occult scholarship and continues to influence tarot interpretation today.
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    5 分
  • Etteilla's Cards: The First Professional Tarot Reader's Empire
    2026/04/30
    Dive into the fascinating world of Jean-Baptiste Alliette, known as Etteilla, the 18th-century French occultist who revolutionized tarot reading and built the first commercial cartomancy empire. This episode explores how a Parisian seed merchant transformed into history's first professional tarot reader, creating systematic methodologies, publishing instructional materials, and designing his own tarot deck. Discover Etteilla's innovative business practices, his influence on modern tarot reading techniques including upright and reversed card meanings, and how he popularized divination among the French middle class during the turbulent pre-revolutionary period. Learn about his Grand Etteilla deck, his claims connecting tarot to ancient Egyptian wisdom, and his lasting impact on contemporary tarot practice. From his early work with playing cards to his sophisticated tarot interpretations, Etteilla established templates for professional cartomancy that continue influencing readers today. Perfect for tarot enthusiasts, history buffs, and anyone interested in the commercialization of esoteric practices in 18th-century France.
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    6 分
  • Antoine Court de Gébelin and the Egyptian Myth That Changed Everything
    2026/04/23
    In this episode of The History of Tarot, host Clara Moss explores how Swiss pastor Antoine Court de Gébelin created the most influential myth in tarot history. In 1781, Court de Gébelin published his theory that tarot cards were actually the ancient Egyptian 'Book of Thoth,' containing secret wisdom from Egyptian priests. Though completely historically inaccurate, this Egyptian origin theory transformed tarot from Italian card games into mystical divination tools. We examine Court de Gébelin's role in Enlightenment intellectual circles, including his membership in the Nine Sisters Masonic lodge alongside Benjamin Franklin. The episode reveals how Egyptomania in 18th-century Europe made his theory irresistibly appealing, despite tarot's actual 15th-century Italian origins. Court de Gébelin's work directly inspired Jean-Baptiste Alliette (Etteilla) and later occultists like Éliphas Lévi and the Golden Dawn. This episode demonstrates how historical myths can prove more powerful than facts, showing why many people still associate tarot with ancient Egypt today. Essential listening for understanding how tarot evolved from Renaissance playing cards to modern divination practice through the power of compelling mythology and cultural fascination with ancient wisdom.
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    5 分
  • Antoine Court de Gébelin and the Egyptian Myth That Changed Everything
    2026/04/23
    In this episode of The History of Tarot, host Clara Moss explores Antoine Court de Gébelin's groundbreaking 1781 theory that connected tarot cards to ancient Egypt. Court de Gébelin, a French Protestant pastor and scholar, claimed in his encyclopedia 'Le Monde Primitif' that tarot cards were remnants of an ancient Egyptian book of wisdom, specifically the legendary Book of Thoth. Despite having no historical evidence, his Egyptian origin theory revolutionized how people viewed tarot cards, transforming them from simple gaming cards into vessels of ancient mystical knowledge. This episode examines how Court de Gébelin's ideas caught fire during the Enlightenment era, when European intellectuals were fascinated by ancient Egypt and esoteric wisdom. We discuss how his theories, though historically unfounded, became the foundation for tarot's modern mystical reputation and influenced tarot culture for over two centuries. The episode also contrasts Court de Gébelin's romantic Egyptian narrative with modern historical research, which traces tarot's actual origins to 15th-century Italian courts. Perfect for history enthusiasts, tarot students, and anyone interested in how myths and legends shape cultural practices. Learn how one scholar's imaginative theory changed tarot forever and established patterns of mystical interpretation that continue today.
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    7 分