Secondary literature

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  • timotheus.lutz
    Are there any worthwhile book-length studies on the life and work of J. Evola? Prominent and available ones seem to be those by Adriano Romualdi, Gianfranco de
    Message 1 of 4 , Oct 3 12:25 AM

      Are there any worthwhile book-length studies on the life and work of J. Evola? Prominent and available ones seem to be those by Adriano Romualdi, Gianfranco de Turris, Christophe Boutin, Francesco Cassata, Jean-Paul Lippi, along with many anthologies.


    • evola_as_he_is
      Apart from those you have listed, there is Julius Evola: arte come alchimia, mistica, biografia : opere e documentazione , published in 2005, by Vitaldo
      Message 2 of 4 , Oct 4 3:00 AM
        Apart from those you have listed, there is 'Julius Evola: arte come alchimia, mistica, biografia : opere e documentazione', published in 2005, by Vitaldo Conte. I have not read it.


      • timotheus.lutz
        I should clarify: I have not read or looked over any of the above-mentioned, and none of them are easily obtainable around here (North America). I would like
        Message 3 of 4 , Oct 4 3:47 AM

          I should clarify: I have not read or looked over any of the above-mentioned, and none of them are easily obtainable around here (North America). I would like to know if any of them, or any other secondary sources on Evola I didn't mention, are worth reading. A few of these authors have been mentioned on this list; Boutin and Romualdi were reported to have favorable opinions of Evola, but other than a few quotes I haven't seen any critical analysis of these sources.


          The one you mentioned appears to be an art book, perhaps one published to coincide with an exhibit. (?)

        • Ea Lord of the deeps
          I ve read Julius evola, the man and his work by Romualdi. Spanish edition tho. El 4/10/2015 11:10, timotheus.lutz@yahoo.com [evola_as_he_is]
          Message 4 of 4 , Oct 4 7:22 AM

            I've read  Julius evola, the man and his work by Romualdi. Spanish edition tho.

            El 4/10/2015 11:10, "timotheus.lutz@... [evola_as_he_is]" <evola_as_he_is@yahoogroups.com> escribió:
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            I should clarify: I have not read or looked over any of the above-mentioned, and none of them are easily obtainable around here (North America). I would like to know if any of them, or any other secondary sources on Evola I didn't mention, are worth reading. A few of these authors have been mentioned on this list; Boutin and Romualdi were reported to have favorable opinions of Evola, but other than a few quotes I haven't seen any critical analysis of these sources.


            The one you mentioned appears to be an art book, perhaps one published to coincide with an exhibit. (?)

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