The Spiral Dance: A Rebirth of the Ancient Religion of the Goddess: 20th Anniversary Edition
B**Y
gratitude and love for this book
This book is exactly what I was searching for. A book based on divine feminine and magic. I’m very grateful for the very detailed resource.
T**D
Why I no longer recommend “the Spiral Dance” to new Witches.
Why I no longer recommend “the Spiral Dance” to new Witches.For decades I have recommended “the Spiral Dance” by Starhawk as a second book (after “Drawing Down the Moon”) to new Witches. When it was first published, Starhawk was one of us, but had a few interesting ideas and had organized them in a well written book. It was, for a while, the best how to be a Witch book for many years. But as she continued to write books, I found them interesting, but less and less were they about Witchcraft. But it wasn’t until she started putting out revised versions of “the Spiral Dance” that I began to find myself in conflict with Starhawk fans. In the notes, she had begun recanting many of the parts of the book I liked. (like a rotating leadership for Covens, and co-ed Covens) Women started asking the men in our groups why “the Spiral Dance” had anything of value to them what so ever.The Problem is that in the 40 years since “the Spiral Dance” was first published, the occult scene has changed a lot. It used to be that we all read most of the same books, and then, only if were were lucky enough to find a copy of that particular book. But now, although we still read some of the same books, there are so many good books available, that it is impossible to read all of them. People are starting to preferentially read books only by certain authors. Some people prefer Gerald Gardner, Doreen Valiente and the Farrars, other people prefer Scott Cunningham, Silver Ravenwolf and Ray Buckland, still others gravitate to books by Starhawk and the Reclaiming collective. Although the divorce hasn’t happened yet, people are starting to put names to groups of traditions that may someday be separate Religions: British Tradition Witchcraft, Traditional Witchcraft, Wicca, and Feminist Spirituality.Recently, I downloaded the electronic version of “the Spiral Dance”. The latest version does not just have notes that I object to. There are whole sections of new content, and the some of the old content appears missing! (though she probably thinks the parts she removed are not that important) The changes are so large that they change the whole tone of the book. It is no longer a good beginning book on Witchcraft. But is still and excellent book on Feminist Spirituality.For this reason, I no longer recommend “the Spiral Dance” as a beginning book on Witchcraft. If you can Try to get hold of an old edition of the book, the red one with the pentagram mandala on the cover. It’s excellent. But the current version is not so good.
S**H
Now a Favorite!
My favorite book on this subject, of all, to date. More than a suitable read for a thoughtful, intelligent, responsible and fair introduction for one who wishes to broaden his/her understanding of the ancient philosophies that underwent so much persecution, suppression, fear and suffering by so many.It's also particularly relevant for the new practitioner including some get-your-toes-wet guidance and exercises for practice and crafting. I won't lie, it has a bit of feminist bent on occasion, however, considering the initial release was what, 38, nearly 40 years ago, it's more than understandable given what was going on back then. Gender equality plus the right for one to freely worship in their belief or what feels most natural and sincerely connecting have all advanced light years in the past 40 years in most parts of the world; of course, there's still ample room before we reach the point of needing to not have the discussion concerning human rights any longer. I didn't mean to digress - the point I am trying to make is that this is by far my favorite book on the subject and it's become my preferred reference and go-to-guide time and time again and it's more than a worthy and pertinent source, still.
E**
foundational for all in the Craft
Witchcraft may not have a sacred text, a required read for all those in the Craft to follow, but The Spiral Dance has been foundational to many early on in their journey. It has been an invaluable resource, and will continue to be for decades to come.
A**R
Why didn't I read this book sooner?
I've been a pagan for ten years, but "The Spiral Dance" had somehow escaped my radar. Despite being recommended to me by my mentor, I neglected it until I had the happy accident of picking up Starhawk's later book, "Dreaming the Dark," which rapidly became possibly my favorite pagan book ever.Starhawk's gift is for flawlessly gathering seemingly disparate but ultimately inseparable topics and crafts. She uses moving poetry to make incisive statements about religious experience, ecology, psychology, magic, economics, gender relations, and politics all at once. These ultimately inseparable questions of how the world works and how we can behave in it to the benefit of ourselves and others are rarely (almost never) so skillfully illuminated in relation to each other.People who speak of myth, magic, spells, and rituals often struggle to be taken seriously in the more left-brained realms of economics and psychological science. But Starhawk shows her rare ability to navigate both domains and explicitly discusses the utility of magical techniques for the task of moving between left-brained analytical and rapturous right-brained "starlight consciousness" to allow us to harness multiple modes of human consciousness in our daily life and our societal decision-making.
T**O
Amazing Read!
Starhawk provides insightful historical and political background on the Goddess movement. Additionally, she includes many helpful techniques, rituals and visualizations to assist with connecting to the Divine Feminine. Highly recommend!
S**E
Love it!
This is a very informative book. I would definitely recommend this book to anyone interest in the subject.
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