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.
- 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.
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. (?)
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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