dorian escribió:Hey Paul !
Nice to see some Americans over here !
Nice to be welcome. I promise to not speak in loud tones, to not demand ice in my water, to not wear American flag clothing, and for god's sake no white tennis shoes!
I am also not fat. My only unavoidable stereotype is being monolingual, but at least I won't shout "Do you speak ENGLISH here?!" to kind French people.
(I have hopefully whispered the question here.)
Looks like the camoin method is spreading all around the world. Did you use the Rider-Waite decks in the past ?
Yes, the method is travelling, but very discretely, and nothing public in English. I understand that is how M. Camoin wants it. I look forward to his book.
Many, many moons ago I used the Rider-Waite decks--I started reading in my teenaged years. I am now 38. In those years there were no Marseille decks to be found anywhere in the USA. The Grimaud company was the primary manufacturer, and we just didn't get the decks here. Now, Marseille decks are in Borders! The Camoin/Jodo deck could be publicized here as well, but it would need a book with it to explain to Americans how to read it. They have been saturated with the Rider-Waite, both in decks and in books.
I was highly dissatisfied with the Rider-Waite from the beginning and longed for the original Tarot that I saw in books-- the Tarot de Marseille. I saw the Rider-Waite as a distorted deck, and also a peurile deck made for babies who needed cartoon pictures on their Minors.
But, alas, there was no Internet at that time. So, would you believe I drew my own Marseille deck when I was 13 years old? It was a brutish and clumsy creation.
Is the Marseille deck very used in english speaking countries ?
For a long time it was invisible. The Marseille deck was eclipsed by the Rider-Waite and Crowley decks, both made by British gentleman of the Golden Dawn Society. For once, we Americans were not responsible for mucking up something. We only saw the Marseille decks in books pictures. The US Games company took over the Tarot market and then basically demanded that all Tarot decks must use Rider-Waite or Crowley imagery for their protoype, or else the deck would not be marketable.
Even now, the Italian company
Lo Scarabeo puts out clone after clone of the Rider-Waite and Crowley decks. They breed like bunnies. Lo Scarabeo at least published a Marseille deck facsimile, however.
But, the Marseille deck is making a resurgence in the US, due to the internet. There are now a a plethora of English-speaking websites devoted to reading with the Marseille deck only. The big push now is to get English-speakers into reading with the Marseille deck without placing Rider-Waite or Crowley deck visual overlays on the cards. So, not imagining Rider-Waite distortions when one is using the Marseille deck.
I think if Jodorowsky's book (and soon Camoin's book) were to be translated into English, they could spearhead a major Marseille deck resurrection in the western countries.
The soil is ripe, indeed.