Peter Mark Adams
Author Biography
Peter Mark Adams is a Scarlet Imprint, Inner Traditions & Corbel Stone Press author, poet and essayist specialising in ethnographies of spirit, sacred landscapes, esotericism, consciousness and healing.
Peter has a background in Philosophy and has undertaken advanced studies with the Warburg Institute, London. He is an Associate Member of the European Society for the Study of Western Esotericism (ESSWE) and a Member of the British Wittgenstein Society (BWS).
Peter also contributes literary prose and poetry to Reliquiae: Journal of Landscape & Nature published by Corbel Stone Press and the Bosphoros Review of Books.
Books
Mystai: Dancing Out the Mysteries of Dionysos (forthcoming). Scarlet Imprint (2019)
A Guide to the Trumps and Court Cards of the Sola-Busca Tarocchi. Scarlet Imprint (2017)
The Game of Saturn: Decoding the Sola-Busca Tarocchi. Scarlet Imprint (2017)
The Healing Field: Energy, Consciousness & Transformation. Balboa Press (2014)
Altered States / Parallel Worlds. Ceres Yayinlari (2011)
Literary Short Prose & Poetry
‘Gobekli Tepe, 10,000 BCE: A Reading’ in Reliquiae: Journal of Landscape & Nature, Vol.7 No.2, 2019.
‘The Mistress of the Labyrinth’ in Reliquiae: Journal of Landscape & Nature, Vol.7 No.1, 2019.
‘The Crane Dance’ in Reliquiae: Journal of Landscape & Nature, Vol.6 2018.
Conference Book Chapters
‘Elite Illuminism & Saturnian Ritual in Renaissance Italy: Decoding a Late-Byzantine Pagan Theurgical & Magical System’ in Ritual Magic: Conference Papers, (forthcoming).
Conference Presentations
‘Elite Illuminism & Saturnian Ritual in Renaissance Italy’, Ritual Magic Conference, Museum of Witchcraft and Magic, Boscastle, May 2018
‘The Game of Saturn: the Sola-Busca Tarocchi’, Treadwell’s, London, April 2017
‘Ritual as Therapy: Steps Towards an Ethnography of the Invisible’, International Ritual Studies Symposium, Sah University, Istanbul, May 2014
‘Altered States / Parallel Worlds’, Brain to Consciousness Conference, Istanbul, May 2011
Peer Reviewed Academic Articles
‘Ritual as Therapy: Steps towards an Ethnography of the Invisible.’ Paranthropology: The Journal of Anthropological Approaches to the Paranormal, Volume 5, No 3 (2014).
‘Healing Interventions Involving Deceased Persons’. The Journal of Exceptional Experiences and Psychology, Volume 1, No 2 (2013).
‘Lord of the Flies: The Phenomenology of a Possession’. Paranthropology: The Journal of Anthropological Approaches to the Paranormal, Volume 4, No 3 (2013).
Podcasts
Thelema Now!, January, 2020
The Higher Side Chats, October, 2017
Thelema Now!, September, 2017
Occult of personality, August 2017
Rune Soup, April, 2017
Contact
Gmail: petermarkadams@gmail.com
Twitter: @petermarkadams
Peter Mark Adams is a Scarlet Imprint, Inner Traditions & Corbel Stone Press author, poet and essayist specialising in ethnographies of spirit, sacred landscapes, esotericism, consciousness and healing.
Peter has a background in Philosophy and has undertaken advanced studies with the Warburg Institute, London. He is an Associate Member of the European Society for the Study of Western Esotericism (ESSWE) and a Member of the British Wittgenstein Society (BWS).
Peter also contributes literary prose and poetry to Reliquiae: Journal of Landscape & Nature published by Corbel Stone Press and the Bosphoros Review of Books.
Books
Mystai: Dancing Out the Mysteries of Dionysos (forthcoming). Scarlet Imprint (2019)
A Guide to the Trumps and Court Cards of the Sola-Busca Tarocchi. Scarlet Imprint (2017)
The Game of Saturn: Decoding the Sola-Busca Tarocchi. Scarlet Imprint (2017)
The Healing Field: Energy, Consciousness & Transformation. Balboa Press (2014)
Altered States / Parallel Worlds. Ceres Yayinlari (2011)
Literary Short Prose & Poetry
‘Gobekli Tepe, 10,000 BCE: A Reading’ in Reliquiae: Journal of Landscape & Nature, Vol.7 No.2, 2019.
‘The Mistress of the Labyrinth’ in Reliquiae: Journal of Landscape & Nature, Vol.7 No.1, 2019.
‘The Crane Dance’ in Reliquiae: Journal of Landscape & Nature, Vol.6 2018.
Conference Book Chapters
‘Elite Illuminism & Saturnian Ritual in Renaissance Italy: Decoding a Late-Byzantine Pagan Theurgical & Magical System’ in Ritual Magic: Conference Papers, (forthcoming).
Conference Presentations
‘Elite Illuminism & Saturnian Ritual in Renaissance Italy’, Ritual Magic Conference, Museum of Witchcraft and Magic, Boscastle, May 2018
‘The Game of Saturn: the Sola-Busca Tarocchi’, Treadwell’s, London, April 2017
‘Ritual as Therapy: Steps Towards an Ethnography of the Invisible’, International Ritual Studies Symposium, Sah University, Istanbul, May 2014
‘Altered States / Parallel Worlds’, Brain to Consciousness Conference, Istanbul, May 2011
Peer Reviewed Academic Articles
‘Ritual as Therapy: Steps towards an Ethnography of the Invisible.’ Paranthropology: The Journal of Anthropological Approaches to the Paranormal, Volume 5, No 3 (2014).
‘Healing Interventions Involving Deceased Persons’. The Journal of Exceptional Experiences and Psychology, Volume 1, No 2 (2013).
‘Lord of the Flies: The Phenomenology of a Possession’. Paranthropology: The Journal of Anthropological Approaches to the Paranormal, Volume 4, No 3 (2013).
Podcasts
Thelema Now!, January, 2020
The Higher Side Chats, October, 2017
Thelema Now!, September, 2017
Occult of personality, August 2017
Rune Soup, April, 2017
Contact
Gmail: petermarkadams@gmail.com
Twitter: @petermarkadams
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Papers by Peter Mark Adams
But it is precisely the encounter with the anomaly that drives conceptual, theoretical and methodological innovation, those ‘paradigm shifts’ that constitute significant and even, epochal enlargements of our worldview.
Recent calls for the articulation of an ‘ethnography of the invisible’ are guided by a growing recognition of the need to re-adopt the orphaned children of ethnological research and learn from them what they have to teach us.
Edited Journal by Peter Mark Adams
Drafts by Peter Mark Adams
But it is precisely the encounter with the anomaly that drives conceptual, theoretical and methodological innovation, those ‘paradigm shifts’ that constitute significant and even, epochal enlargements of our worldview.
Recent calls for the articulation of an ‘ethnography of the invisible’ are guided by a growing recognition of the need to re-adopt the orphaned children of ethnological research and learn from them what they have to teach us.