MA in the Cultural Study of Cosmology and Divination
Please note: this taught MA programme will be offered FULL-TIME only in 2009-10. If you are interested in a part-time MA that would allow you to take modules from this programme, see the MA in the STUDY OF MYSTICISM AND RELIGIOUS EXPERIENCE. You may also apply for an MA by research in both these areas either full-time or part-time.
Director: Dr Angela Voss
Lecturers: Angela
Voss, Leon Schlamm, Peter
Moore, Maggie Hyde
The Course
Course requirements
Four module assignments (each 5,000 words), one dissertation (12-15,000 words).
The MA in the Cultural Study of Cosmology and Divination and the MA in the Study of Mysticism and Religious Experience are unique developments at the University of Kent, complementing each other in subject matter and in their innovative and challenging approaches to the study of spiritual experience. Cosmology and Divination focuses on two main areas: imaginal cosmology and symbolism, and the history and theory of divinatory practices. Historical and contemporary themes are explored through a variety of methods including the reading of primary texts, the study of music and images, comparative and analytical approaches. Divinatory practices and beliefs are reviewed in the light of traditional metaphysics and philosophy, religious and magical contexts, contemporary psychological theories and practice-based enquiry. Specific subject areas include the cosmology and epistemology of Platonic, neoplatonic and esoteric traditions, symbolism and its interpretation, imagination as knowledge, cosmology and music, cosmology and literature, alchemical imagery and practices, the history, symbolism and interpretation of astrology, Tarot as a divinatory narrative, near death and after death experience, transpersonal and para-psychology and Jungian and archetypal perspectives on both divination and spiritual experience.
The four modules offered for 2009-10 are as follows:
1. TH866 Cosmology and the Arts
Lecturer: Angela Voss
Credits: 30 (15 ECTS)
Period of Study: spring term (ten 2-hours seminars). This
module provides the opportunity to deepen understanding
and experience of the sacred dimension of the arts. Themes
may include the cosmological aspects of
literature, music, art or drama. Students
will be encouraged to adopt an imaginal approach
to their research, both through course work and
visits to relevant plays, exhibitions, concerts
or workshops. Emphasis will be on the philosophical
and religious foundations of art and creativity
and how these inform historical and contemporary
practice. For information on the specific
themes to be covered in 2009-10, please contact
the convenor. Assessment is by one essay
of 3-5,000 words and one Learning Journal extract
of 2-3,000 words.
The Learning Journal
The learning journal assignment is a compulsory element of the MA and will comprise half the assessment of TH866. For the duration of the year, the student will record his or her personal responses to issues raised in the lectures, seminars and group discussions. It should be noted that “ a learning journal is not a confessional account of the student ’ s private life, nor an invitation to indulge in pseudo-therapy” , but an opportunity to explore the connections between ‘ outer ’ and ‘ inner ’ dimensions of experience through narrative, image, poetry, divinatory readings, symbolism, synchronicities or any other creative method. The Learning Journal process needs to be specifically related to the student’s engagement with the course material. It could relate to current writing and research, or to challenges and issues raised in taught courses. The material presented in the group seminars will be discussed with staff and students, and therefore should be fully communicable. The presentations from the journal will therefore contribute to a group learning process, and will also be shared with the individual tutor. Students will be required to present 2,500-3,000 words from the journal to be assessed, and to give on-going presentations from their Journal (750-1,000 words) at MA research seminars.
2. TH867 The Intelligible Cosmos : Hermeneutics of Divinatory and Astrological Praxis
Lecturers: Angela Voss, Maggie Hyde
Credits: 30 (15 ECTS)
Period of study: autumn term (ten 2-hour seminars)
a) Theory unit
The theory unit addresses philosophical and religious
traditions which presuppose a sacred cosmos, especially
as these traditions are expressed in explicitly
divinatory practices; a focus of attention is astral
religion and pre-enlightenment European astrology.
This unit introduces scholarly and critical interpretations
of these expressions and practices, drawn from
cultural history, anthropology, psychology, and
philosophical analysis.
b) Divinatory practice unit
The divinatory practice unit utilises the scholarly
and critical interpretations introduced in the
theory unit and entails an in-depth hermeneutic
analysis of one culturally significant contemporary
divinatory practice, showing its broad philosophical
presuppositions and implications. This analysis
is intended to locate contemporary practice with
respect to its cultural-historical origins, and
to examine its relationship both to modern rationality
and to New Age cosmology and spirituality. The
analysis is undertaken through a review of available
scholarship and with reference to writings by practitioners.
Practices currently considered appropriate for
such analysis are: modern astrology, Tarot, and
the Book of Changes (I Ching); unless
otherwise advertised to students prior to the commencement
of the academic year, the chosen practice will
be modern astrology. Prior technical knowledge
of divinatory practice is not required; however
students who have practised in relevant divinatory
forms are encouraged to engage their personal experience
and expertise in their studies, provided broad
communicability with non-practitioners and a reflexive
self-critical attitude retain full priority. Where
resources and student interest permit, an appropriate
alternative optional divinatory practice unit may
be offered. Assessment is by one research
essay of 5,000 words (chosen in consultation with
the convenor).
3. TH862 Death and Afterlife in Western Traditions: Philosophical and Cosmological Perspectives
Lecturer: Peter Moore
Credits: 30 (15 ECTS)
This module explores narratives of otherworld and
afterlife journeys, from
ancient myth and legend to modern accounts of mystical
vision and
near-death experience. It also considers questions
about the nature of
death and the identity of self as surviving or
transformed subject of
these journeys.
4. TH861 Contemporary Issues in the Study of Mysticism
Lecturer: Leon Schlamm
Credits: 30 (15 ECTS)
This module examines some of the most significant
issues in the study of mysticism addressed by analytical
and transpersonal psychologists, parapsychologists
and scholars of ‘new age’ spirituality
and new religious movements. Students will become
acquainted with the work of Carl Jung, Ken Wilber,
Stanislav Grof, Jorge Ferrer, Christopher Bache,
Andrew Rawlinson, Georg Feuerstein, Paul Heelas,
Robert Forman, Wouter Hanegraaff, John Hick, Peter
Fenwick and Kenneth Ring. Through an assessment
of their writings, a range of key issues will be
addressed including Jungian theories of individuation
and synchronicity, Wilber’s integral model
of transpersonal psychology, Gorg’s holographic
model, Rawlinson’s taxonomy of mystical traditions,
parapsychology and new age spirituality.
Dissertation
Module Code: TH997
Credits: 60 (30 ECTS)
The dissertation may be written on any relevant
subject of the student’s choice, subject
to approval by the programme convenor. Students
will also be assessed on a presentation of their
research material in the summer term. The
deadline for Dissertation submission is 31st August.
For more details and information on any aspect
of the MA programme, please contact the convenor
Dr Angela Voss a.voss@kent.ac.uk 01227
824411
Applying for the Programme
Entry requirements
Normally a 1 or a 2.1 in a relevant subject (2.2 subject to the discretion of the director). Applicants without a first degree may be eligible for diploma status. Candidates must submit a recent essay on a relevant subject and two references.
You can apply for this programme either by post or on-line, but either way you are strongly advised to email the programme convenor if and when you have applied (a.voss@kent.ac.uk). The Recruitment and Admissions Office at the University cannot release your application for approval by the programme convenor until two references and a sample of written work (i.e. an academic essay) have been received. It is in the interests of all applicants to encourage both referees to send in their reports in good time.
Publications
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Marsilio Ficino was at the forefront of the revival of Platonic philosophy in Renaissance Florence. A practising astrologer and magician, he was ordained as a Christian priest and dedicated his ife to reconciling the seeming incongruities of religious faith and philosophical reason. At a complex period in history when orthodox Christian beliefs were being challenged by an enthusiasm for the ‘ancient wisdom’ of the esoteric traditions, Ficino played an important role in re-visioning traditional astrology as humanistic and psycho-spiritual, laying the foundation for modern-day holistic practices. This is the first published collection of Ficino’s astrological writings in English, with a substantial introduction. |
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The Imaginal Cosmos gathers together the papers presented at the international conference held at the University of Kent in October 2004. The contributors include leading scholars and practitioners of analytical and archetypal psychology, esotericism, the history and theory of astrology, medieval philosophy and religious studies. In this volume new theories and methods are suggested for the study of divination: most significantly, a phenomenological approach which considers divinatory knowledge and practice on its own terms, and closes the divide between ‘emic’ and ‘etic perspectives. |
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Seeing with Different Eyes represents the cutting edge of contemporary thought and research on divination. The thirteen authors come from a variety of academic disciplines, ranging from anthropology and classics to English literature and religious studies, and all address the question of divination, astrology and oracles in a spirit of critical but sympathetic enquiry. The emphasis is on a participatory and reflexive approach which is firmly post-positivist, seeking to understand the divinatory act on its own terms within widely varying contexts.
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The Imaginal Cosmos: contents
Geoffrey Cornelius Introduction; Joseph Milne ‘The Cosmic Sense’; Dorian Giesler Greenbaum ‘Rising to the Occasion: Appearance, Emergence, Light and Divination in Hellenistic Astrology’; Gregory Shaw ‘The Talisman; Magic and True Philosophers’; Patrick Curry ‘Divination, Enchantment and Platonism’; Maggie Hyde ‘The Cock and the Chameleon: Divination, Platonism and Postmodernism’; Charles Burnett ‘Astrology, Astronomy and Magic as Motivation for the Scientific Renaissance of the Twelfth Century’; Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke ‘The Weave of Fate: Sixteenth Century Prognostications and Twentieth Century Prediction in the Context of Western Esotericism’; Leon Schlamm ‘C.G. Jung’s Visionary Mysticism’; Frank McGillion ‘Does Prophecy have a Future?’; Jean Hinson Lall ‘Watering the Roots of Astrological Theory and Practice: Gaston Bachelard’s Contribution to a Philosophy of Divination’; Liz Greene ‘Love, Alchemy and Planetary Attrractions’; Angela Voss ‘Father Time and Orpheus’.
Seeing with Different Eyes: contents
Patrick Curry Introduction; Peter T. Struck ‘A World full of Signs: Understanding Divination in Ancient Stoicism’; Algis Uzdavinys ‘Chaldean Divination and the Ascent to Heaven’; Crystal Addey ‘Oracles, Dreams and Astrology in Iamblichus’ De mysteriis’; Gregory Shaw ‘Living Light: An Exploration of Divine Embodiment’; Garry Phillipson ‘Theurgy in Theravadan Buddhism’; Ann Jeffers ‘Nor by dreams nor by Urim, nor by prophets: the Story of the Woman at the Well in I Samuel’; Angela Voss ‘The Power of a Melancholy Humour: Divination and Divine Tears’; Anthony W. Johnson ‘Four Faces of Apollo: Divination, Music, Cosmology and Healing in Ben Jonson’s Masque of Augurs (1622)’; Marilynn Lawrence ‘A Phenomenological approach to Astrology: Thinking of Astrology at the end of Metaphysics’; Geoffrey Cornelius ‘The Unique Case of Interpretation: Explorations in the Epistemology of Astrology’; Johann Friedrich Wolfgang Hasler ‘The Chance Game of Divining? The Case of the Enochian Chess of the Golden Dawn and its use in Divination’; Dennis Tedlock ‘Mind, Body and Cosmos in Mayan Divination’; Barbara Tedlock ‘Sacred Connections between Self, Other and the World: The Emergence of Integrative Medicine’.
Videos from the Seeing with Different Eyes conference available here.


