ABSTRACT

This book examines how and why practitioners of nature religion - Western witches, druids, shamans - seek to relate spiritually with nature through 'magical consciousness'. 'Magic' and 'consciousness' are concepts that are often fraught with prejudice and ambiguity respectively. Greenwood develops a new theory of magical consciousness by arguing that magic ultimately has more to do with the workings of the human mind in terms of an expanded awareness than with socio-cultural explanations. She combines her own subjective insights gained from magical practice with practitioners' in-depth accounts and sustained academic theory on the process of magic. She also tracks magical consciousness in philosophy, myth, folklore, story-telling, and the hi-tech discourse of postmodernity, and asks important questions concerning nature religion's environmental credentials, such as whether it as inherently ecological as many of its practitioners claim.

chapter 1|20 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|17 pages

Nature Religion and Underlying Influences

chapter 3|22 pages

Connection with Nature

chapter 5|30 pages

Magical Consciousness

chapter 7|27 pages

Learning to be Indigenous

chapter 8|33 pages

A Tangled Web: Paradoxical Elements