Drawing from original texts on self-mastery, Evola discusses two Hindu movements--Tantrism and Shaktism--which emphasize a path of action to gain power over energies latent within the body.
Julius Evola was a renowned Dadaist artist, Idealist philosopher, critic of politics and Fascism, 'mystic, ' anti-modernist, and scholar of world religions.
Originally published in 1932, bringing together essays that appeared in previous years, and then reprinted in 1949 and 1971 with updates, this book, so far from its first appearance, is of a shocking topicality, such that it can still be ...