Temenos Academy Newsletter May 2025

17 views
Skip to first unread message

Temenos Academy

unread,
May 1, 2025, 4:26:43 AM5/1/25
to temenos...@googlegroups.com
 

 



NEWSLETTER

May 2025

 

EVENING LECTURES


‘Sagging End and Chapter’s Close’: David Jones in the Zone

JOHN MATTHEWS

Thursday 8 May

In the chair Professor Grevel Lindop

David Jones was neither comfortable nor at home in the modern world. To him, the period of history through which he lived, particularly the two world wars and the period between them, was a time of darkness and destruction, characterized by loss of religious faith, a failure to recognize the importance of symbol and sign, and an increasing neglect of the sacramental in Modern Art.

It was indeed a Wasteland, like that whose outlines he delineated in so much of his writings. It was this that he described, in the opening passage of the Anathemata, as ‘the sagging end and chapter’s close’ – the end of history, particularly as it is defined in the writings of Oswald Spengler, whose work was familiar and important to David throughout this period in his life. In this talk, John Matthews will explore how the time though which David Jones lived impacted his work both as artist and writer.

JOHN MATTHEWS is an independent scholar and author living in Oxford. He published his first book in 1980 and has since gone on to publish over a hundred titles on Myth, Folklore, and ancient traditions. A frequent speaker at the Temenos Academy since its inception, he has made a lifetime study of every aspect of the Arthurian legends, from its origins to modern retellings. His Great Book of King Arthur (2023) and Realms of the Round Table (2025) are recognised as presenting a major new dimension to the history of Arthurian literature.

Venue & Admission
St George the Martyr Church
44 Queen Square
WC1N 3AH
Doors open 6.10pm, lecture begins 6.30pm.
£10 General Admission
FREE for Temenos Academy Members and full-time students with ID

E temenos...@myfastmail.com
T 07513 883 335

 


Yeats, Kathleen Raine, and the Learning of the Imagination

PROFESSOR GREVEL LINDOP

Thursday 22 May

In the chair Julia Cleave

Today, we often think of imagination as something individual and insubstantial – a personal process giving rise to notions from ‘subjective’ sources. But traditionally, imagination is something very different: it is a faculty of vision and comprehension rising from deep springs, and one that deserves nurture and training.

Yeats spoke of a ‘singing school’ where the human soul could contemplate ‘monuments of its own magnificence’. He found his own ‘school’ in Indian thought, Theosophy, the Kabbalah, and especially in the art and poetry of William Blake, as well as in Irish legend and tradition. Kathleen Raine in turn, in her studies of Blake and Yeats and her later contact with India, took up this ‘golden string’ enabling her to enrich individual poetic imagination by contact with a universal tradition. This lecture will explore some of these pathways and suggest how ‘the learning of the imagination’ may be valuable in today’s world.

GREVEL LINDOP was Professor of Romantic and Early Victorian Studies at Manchester University. He is the author of six collections of poems and has written biographies of Thomas De Quincey and of Charles Williams (the Arthurian poet and Oxford ‘Inkling’). He is currently writing W.B. Yeats: The Mystical Life , for publication by Oxford University Press. He has taught Buddhist meditation in the Samatha tradition for more than forty years and currently chairs the Temenos Academic Board. His website is at www.grevel.co.uk


Venue & Admission
St George the Martyr Church
44 Queen Square
WC1N 3AH
Doors open 6.40pm, lecture begins 7pm.
£10 General Admission
FREE for Temenos Academy Members and full-time students with ID

E temenos...@myfastmail.com
T 07513 883 335

 


Twelve-fold Harmony: Symbol and Place

CHRISTINE RHONE
Wednesday 18 June
Venue The King’s Foundation School of Traditional Arts


The Image Bears Witness to Your State:
Gifts for our World from the Sufi Tradition

SIR NICHOLAS PEARSON
Wednesday 9 July
Venue The Art Workers’ Guild


Shakespeare and the Language of Nature
DR JOSEPH MILNE
Wednesday 23 July
Venue Rudolf Steiner House


For further information on all evening lectures click HERE.

E temenos...@myfastmail.com
T 07513 883 335

 

HAMLET – READING ESSENTIAL TEXTS


Two places have become available for the Reading Essential Texts seminars with Dr Joseph Milne. This term the group will continue their study of Shakespeare’s Hamlet.

Timings Wednesdays, 7 May – 9 July, 2.30-4pm
Venue The School of Philosophy and Economic Science, W1u 3AJ

For more information click HERE.

E temenos...@myfastmail.com
T 07513 883 335

 

THE ARCHIVE

Our website Archive hosts many audio and video recordings of lectures, digital versions of all thirteen issues of the journal TEMENOS, and the texts of seventy articles from Temenos Academy Review. New material is added regularly.

https://temenosacademy.org/main-lecture-archive
https://temenosacademy.org/temenos-journal-archive
https://temenosacademy.org/temenos-academy-review-archive

Many of our audio recordings are available as PODCASTS.


PAYPAL GIVING FUND UK

The Temenos Academy is registered with PayPal Giving Fund UK. When using PayPal if you choose you may also make a donation in support of the Temenos Academy. Thank you


FURTHER INFORMATION

EMAIL temenos...@myfastmail.com
TELEPHONE 07513 883 335


PRIVACY POLICY

https://temenosacademy.org/privacy-policy

 
Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages