Richard Ruach's Research Center – Telegram
Richard Ruach's Research Center
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Forwarded from Tradition Publishing Co.
Between the Worlds
Various authors

The rich corpus of literary otherworld journeys that has survived from the Scandinavian Middle Ages is in many respects tied to a space 'Between the Worlds'. Every otherworld journey engages with a space 'between the worlds' in the sense that it plays itself out between this world and a world beyond, an otherworld. This volume presents a rich panorama of a broad range of Scandinavian, Celtic, and Slavic perspectives on the topic of the 'otherworld journey', which contextualises the motif of the otherworld journey in Old Norse literature with an unprecedented breadth.


https://tradition.st/between-the-worlds/
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Always loved this picture.
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Whelp time to check the chat....
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Y'ALL BETTER BE PLAYING NICE
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Why is everybody posting feet?
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Forwarded from The Sum of all Fears
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Richard Ruach's Research Center
Photo
I like this. Reminds me of old Atlantis...
Forwarded from The Sum of all Fears
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Forwarded from The Sum of all Fears
Lux lucens in tenebris, Splendor solis, Angelus lucis
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Forwarded from The Sum of all Fears
Descent into Limbo, from the Workshop of Andrea Mantegna (Italian, c.1431-1506)
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Forwarded from The Sum of all Fears
The Shadows, by Fritz Schwimbeck (German, 1889-1972), 1919
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Richard Ruach's Research Center
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLsEA1Yy0H-HhgFUVirXqxmG4wHWtmsOzE&si=EgflMP1pYqmyizKh
Hermetix is a good channel btw. Sometimes he just does philosophy but there are some solid interviews!
Forwarded from Incendiary Ideas (anarchkitty)
The goddess was known as “Astarte” to the Phoenicians, the figure called “Ishtar” by the Babylonians and “Setareh” by the Persians. The Celts called her “Artio” and associated her with bears [...]. She was depicted either as a bear — in shamanic fashion — or as a woman astride a bear. Obviously, this is the very same goddess who is more widely known by her Greco-Roman names: Artemis, or Diana. The Huntress.

[...] Some Romans also identified her with Venus. Others, in an attempt to reconcile this with the syncretic identification of her as Diana, called her “Diana Lucifera,” since Venus, when she appears as the morning star and bringer of the dawn from out of darkness, is known as “Lucifer.”


— Jason Reza Jorjani, PSYCHOTRON

Images: Remedios Varo - Forest, 1956 / Spirits of the mountains, 1938 / Correspondences, 1951
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