Theosophical History Centre Publications edited by Leslie
Price
Theosophical History: Occasional Papers edited by James Santucci
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Theosophy and the Theosophical Society
Professor James A. Santucci
A brief historical introduction to Theosophy.
$4.00 (£2.32; €3.38). 35 pages ISBN 0 948753 00 5 (1985)
Madame Blavatsky Unveiled?
Leslie Price
A critical discussion of the 1885 Report, in the context of the wider questions of H.P.B.'s work.
$5.00 (£2.89; €4.22). 44 pages ISBN 0 948753 01 3 (1986)
J'Accuse: An Examination of the Hodgson Report of 1885
Dr. Vernon Harrison
The official S.P.R. offprint of the paper in the April 1986 issue of the Journal of the Society for Psychical Research. With a note by Dr. John Beloff, the Editor.
$3.00 (£1.74; €2.54). 24 pages 1986
Madame Blavatsky: The 'Veiled' Years: Light From Gurdjieff or Sufism?
Paul Johnson
Evidence that H.P.B. was a Sufi and the T.S. a Sufi project.
$3.00 (£1.74; €2.54). 11 pages ISBN 0 948753 03 X (1987)
Autobiography of Alfred Percy Sinnett
Published in full for the first time. First edition, November1986.
A.P. Sinnett (1840 – 1921) was one of the main recipients of the Mahatma Letters. He was Vice-President of The Theosophical Society (Adyar). His most notable books were The Occult World and Esoteric Buddhism."
$7.00 (£4.40; €5.92). Pp. ii + 58 + 10. ISBN 0 948753 02 1 (1986)
100 Years
of Modern Occultism: A Review of the Parent Theosophical Society
Leslie Leslie-Smith
A centenary account, from an English perspective.
$8.00 (£4.62; €6,76). 70 pages ISBN 0 948753 04
8 (1987)
The Golden Dawn and the Esoteric Section
R.A. Gilbert
$8.00 (£4.62; €6,76). 24 pages ISBN 0 948753 06
2 (1987)
Bibliography of H.P. Blavatsky
Jean-Paul Guignette
A compilation of various studies on H.P. Blavatsky.
$4.00 (£2.32; €3.38). 12 pages ISBN 0 948753 05
6 (1987)
Theosophia in Neo-Platonic and Christian Literature
Dr. Jean-Louis Siemons
$8.00 (£4.62; €6,76). 32 pages ISBN 0 948753 07
2 (1988)
Senzar: The Mystery of the Mystery Language
John Algeo
$6.00 (£3.47; €5.07). 32 pages ISBN 0 948753 08 0 (1988)
The Beginnings of Theosophy in France
Joscelyn Godwin
$6.00 (£3.47; €5.07). 39 pages ISBN 0 948753 09 9 (1989)
VOLUME I
Witness for
the Prosecution:
Annie Besant's Testimony on Behalf of H.P. Blavatsky in the N.Y.
Sun/Coues Law Case
Introduction by Michael Gomes
The actual testimony given by Mrs. Besant on May 4, 1891 during the proceedings held in the New York Supreme Court. Of special interest is Mrs. Besant's explanation of Theosophy and the Theosophical Society and her views of Madame H.P. Blavatsky.
$12.00 (£7.00; €10.14. 60 pages. ISBN 1 883279-01-1 (1993)
VOLUME II
Joan Grant: Winged Pharaoh
By Jean Overton Fuller
Miss Fuller's work on the British novelist is based both on her observations of Miss Grant while a guest at her home during a long weekend in 1944 and on an extensive investigation of her literary works and life. Was John Grant's Winged Pharaoh historical fiction or the record of true memory? Miss Fuller attempts to unlock the mystery through her knowledge of Egyptian hieroglyphics.
$13.00 (£7.6; €11.00). 33 pages ISBN 1 883279-02-X (1993)
VOLUME III
Ammonius Saccas and His Eclectic Philosophy as Presented by Alexander Wilder
By Dr. Jean-Louis Siémons
Dr. Alexander Wilder, the author of The Eclectic Philosophy (1869), was one of the early Vice-Presidents of the Theosophical Society (1878) and the person responsible for editing and indexing H.P. Blavatsky's Isis Unveiled. The present study examines Dr. Wilder's sources for his study on Ammonius Saccas and Neo-Platonism.
$15.00 (£8.67; €12.70). 31 pages ISBN 1 883279-03-8 (1994)
VOLUME IV
W.T. Brown's "Scenes in My Life"
Introduction and Notes by Michael Gomes
William Tournay Brown's most detailed account of his life under the pseudonym Carwood Gerald Clarke, includes the letter he received from the "Unknown Brother," Koot Hoomi, "regarded by many as the most remarkable of the age," and his tete-a tete with a Brahmin who was "well dressed, handsome, and seemingly of about 40 years of age" while "crossing the plain on the outskirts of Lahore City," presumably the Master in the flesh. Also of special interest is Brown's positive assessment of H.S. Olcott, quoting in full both a letter from Olcott to Brown and an address by Olcott to the Prayag Psychic Theosophical Society, entitled "India, Past, Present and Future."
$17.00 (£9.82; €14.40). Pp. 40. ISBN 1 883279-03 (1995)
VOLUME V
Krishnamurti and the World-Teacher Project: Some Theosophical Perceptions
By Govert W. Schüller
Mr. Schüller examines the literature (Theosophical as well as non-Theosophical)
with great acumen and clarity. Included are the assessments of (in alphabetical
order) John Algeo, Alice Bailey, Annie Besant, Radha Burnier, Jean Overton Fuller,
Geoffrey Hodson, Elizabeth Clare Prophet, Cyril Scott, Rudolf Steiner, and Albert
E.S. Smythe. Mention is also made of the highly controversial book, Lives in
the Shadow with J. Krishnamurti (reviewed in TH III/7-8).
Krishnamurti and the World-Teacher Project was released on May 25, 1997.
Those interested in ordering this volume should send a check or international
money order in U.S. dollars to James Santucci (Department of Religious Studies,
California State University, P.O. Box 6868, Fullerton, California 92834-6868)
payable to Theosophical History. Checks or money orders in British sterling
should be made out to Dr. Joscelyn Godwin and sent to Dr. Godwin c/o
the Department of Music, Colgate University, Hamilton, New York 13346-1398.
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Wholesale discounts
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VOLUME VI
Astral Projection or Liberation of the Double and the Work of the Early Theosophical Society
By John Patrick Deveney
An information sheet on the Theosophical Society published around 1897 describes the T.S. as "an International Body . . . which was founded at New York, U.S., on the 17th day of November 1875, with three well-defined objects . . . ." Although somewhat ambiguous, the impression to the casual reader is that the T.S. at its inception had three objects, the first of which is "to form a nucleus of the Universal Brotherhood of Humanity . . . ." This is the impression that still exists today among many Theosophists and historians with passing knowledge on Theosophy. A careful reading of the events that led to the formation of the Theosophical Society and its activities during the New York years (1875-1878) leaves no doubt that this is an erroneous view. Although a number of studies have revealed the original goals and activities of the Society, no study has exhibited such an extensive investigation of this topic as John Patrick Deveney's Astral Projection or Liberation of the Double and the Work of the Early Theosophical Society. Mr. Deveney culls his information from a host of primary sources that leave the reader with little doubt that magic, occultism, theosophy all imply that acquiring successful practical experience, not simply knowing the theory, was the main purpose in founding the Society.
Madame Blavatsky's famous lamasery is mentioned as a training school for magic, especially the separation of the astral body from the physical body. Isis Unveiled is largely based on the separability of the astral and physical bodies. Madame Blavatsky herself possessed this ability or at least claimed this ability well into the 1880s. Other members, such as Damodar, Stainton Moses and Elliott Coues supposedly possed the same ability. The role of George Henry Felt in the founding of the Society, what it means to be a "chela" and achieve "Chelaship," and the possible implications of the early objects upon the later T.S. are all discussed. In short, this study serves as a corrective to the misconceptions and general ignorance of the early T.S. that seem to be widespread to the present day.
Mr. Deveney is very well qualified to write on this topic. The author of the newly published Paschal Beverly Randolph (Albany: SUNY Press, 1996) and co-author of The Hermetic Brotherhood of Luxor (York Beach, Maine: Samuel Weiser, 1995), he has a grasp on the literature of the period that is unsurpassed.
$22.00 (£13.00; €18.60) . For air mail, please add $4.00 (£2.40; €3.40). California residents please add 7.75% sales tax ($23.71). Wholesale discounts available with purchase of ten or more copies.
VOLUME VII
Cyril Scott
And A Hidden School: Towards The Peeling Of An
Onion
By Jean Overton Fuller
For the musical world, Cyril Scott is a composer, but for Theosophists he is the author of the three "Initiate" books: The Initiate, The Initiate in the New World, and The Initiate in the Dark Cycle. Originally signed "by His Pupil" and only later identified as Scott, the question remained, had Scott really met a Master, Sir Thomas, or was the whole story fictitious? Jean Overton Fullers investigations have led her to the house where Scott really received his teachings, not in the West country but in Sussex. There it was that he was given the instruction to marry Rose the Viola of his books though it was given in the name of one of Blavatskys teachers. Who was he told that she and he had been in their immediately past life? Why had they spent seven years hesitating as to whether they should marry? Rose wrote a book, Despised and Rejected, which was the object of a prosecution, and banned. That was known. But Jean Overton Fuller has discovered that Scott also wrote a book that was banned. This banned autobiography and Roses novels in a labyrinthine way point up incidents and situations in their own lives and those of their associates. After the death of their link with their Teacher, they became fascinated by the astrology of David Anrias, who unfortunately put them against Krishnamurti. But H.K. Challoner, author of The Wheel of Rebirth, comes into it too, as we glimpse principally through Roses novels, each one a layer of an onion, to be peeled off to reveal another layer of mystery beneath.
$23.00 (£13.50; €19.42).
For air mail, please add $4.00 (£2.40; €3.40) plus $2.00 (£1.20; €1.70) for each
additional copy. California residents: please add 7.75% sales tax ($24.77). 53 pages ISBN 1-883279-07-0.
VOLUME VIII
Some
Fragments of the Secret History of the Theosophical Society
By Franz Hartmann, M.D.
(Compiled by Robert Hütwohl)
Volume VIII of the Series is an essay written by one of the notable members of the Theosophical Society, Dr. Franz Hartmann (1838-1912). The essay, Some Fragments of the Secret History of the Theosophical Society, is a rewritten version of his earlier Report of Observations Made During a Nine Months Stay at the Headquarters of the Theosophical Society at Adyar (Madras), India (1884). As Boris de Zirkoff notes in his bibliographical sketch of Hartmann (Blavatsky: Collected Writings, VIII, 443): To describe the activities of Franz Hartmann while at Adyar would be tantamount to writing the history of the Theosophical society at the time. Michael Gomes, in his introduction to the letter of H.P. Blavatsky to W.Q. Judge dated May 1, 1885 (see Theosophical History, vol. V, no. 2: 48) writes:
[Hartmann] traveled to Adyar in 1883 to attend the yearly December convention of Theosophists. Col. Olcott named him to an eight-man Board of Control administering the affairs of the headquarters during the Colonels and Madame Blavatskys absence in Europe in 1884. In October of that year Hartmann published a 60-page pamphlet, A Report of Observations Made During a Nine Months Stay at the Headquarters of the Theosophical Society at Adyar, Madras, India, detailing the events that led to the expulsion of Monsieur and Madame Coulomb from the Society during the summer of 1884, and edited the 152-page Report of the Result of an Investigation into Charges Against Madame Blavatsky, Brought by the Missionaries of the Scottish Free Church at Madras and Examined by a Committee Appointed for that Purpose by the Council of the Theosophical Society, issued in March 1885.
The compiler (who includes an introduction, biography and additional footnotes) to Hartmanns essay, Robert Hütwohl, summarizes its contents:
Hartmann states he later had time to think over the matters concerning the Hodgson/shrine affair and was able to come to different conclusions [than those expressed in the Hodgson Report], having considered the original report as a premature expression of my opinion. Hartmann was trained in the epistemological scientific method as a medical doctor, but also had a strong mystical bent. This helped him to observe and reach conclusions both from a scientific as well as a Theosophical viewpoint. Hartmann places some blame on Col. H.S. Olcott for initially inviting the Society for Psychical Research to investigate the shrine process, an experiment never originally intended to be purveyed under a magnifying glass of scientific scrutiny. He draws careful analogies to the fact that we are constantly bathed in a world of illusion. Comparing our world of deceptions to the current scientific world of men of authority who refuse to give up their own influential impostures, he saw many in the Theosophical community giving permission to allow themselves to be deceived. But he also assures us the Hodgson Report is premised upon the fact that the root of psychical phenomena is purely epistemological and has no basis as stemming from another, even if illusory, world of being.
VOLUME IX
By Robert Mathiesen
One of the lesser known and
ignored founders of the Theosophical Society and one of the prominent figures
in Spiritualism, Emma Hardinge Britten (1823-1899) is the subject of a major
study by Robert Mathiesen, Professor of Slavic Languages at Brown University
in Rhode Island (USA). Dr. Mathiesen writes:
Emma Hardinge Britten (1823-1899) is, for most people, a forgotten figure,
who seems to merit no more than a footnote in the separate histories of
Spiritualism, the Theosophical Society and nineteenth-century occultism.
Only recently, due largely to Joscelyn Godwin and John Patrick Deveney,
has her historical importance begun to be reassessed. The present monograph
is meant to broaden and deepen our understanding of the several important
roles which she played in public and in private throughout the years of
her long life.
To this end, Professor Mathiesen includes chapters on Hardinge Brittens
early life (1823-1856), her career as Spiritualist, the identity of the
Chevalier Louis de B___, his role in the publication of Art Magic and Ghost
Land, the occult society in which he was a member, the Orphic Circle,
and her involvement in the early years of the Theosophical Society. Appendices
include a chronology of Emma Hardinge Brittens life and a bibliography
of her books. An extensive bibliography and notes are also included.
The Unseen Worlds of Emma Hardinge (ISBN 1-883279-09-7) is approximately
90 pages in length.
$24.00 (£13.90; €20.30). For
airmail, please add $4.00 (£2.40; €3.40) and $2.00 (£1.20; €1.70) for each
additional copy. There is no extra shipping and handling charge except for
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publication price). Purchase of five or more copies will receive a 20% discount.
VOLUME X
The Coulomb Case
By Michael Gomes
The one event that was to
leave a permanent stain upon the reputations of the Theosophical Society and
of H.P. Blavatsky was the publication of an exposé in The Madras Christian
College Magazine (September and October 1884) claiming fraud of the most serious
proportion allegedly perpetrated by Madame Blavatsky. This publication brought
into question the very existence of Blavatsky’s Masters and the letters
that they supposedly wrote to such individuals as A.P. Sinnett and A.O. Hume.
This book recounts the story of Emma Coulomb's charge that Blavatsky faked the Mahatma letters; it also chronicles the investigation by the S.P.R. of the Theosophical Society's and Blavatsky's claims of communication with the Masters through its representative, Richard Hodgson. Original documents are reproduced to shed more light on this episode.
$22.00 (£13.00; €18.60) plus postage $2.00 (£1.20; €1.70) for U.S. destinations and $4.00 (£2.40; €3.40) overseas (airmail). vi + 73 pages ISBN 1-883279-10-0 (2005).