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Pop Culture Magick: A How to Guide to Practical Pop Culture Magick

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Learn how to get consistent results with pop culture magick Turn the pop culture you love into a source of spiritual power that changes your life. Do you feel like you can’t relate to the available books on magic, because you’re told you have to work with ancient cultures and deities? In Pop Culture Magick I show you how to take the core techniques and practices of magic and apply them to the pop culture you love, so you can practice magic and get consistent results that change your life. In this book you will In Pop Culture Magick you will learn how to apply practical magic to the pop culture you love and use it to get results.

192 pages, Paperback

Published September 30, 2018

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27 people want to read

About the author

Taylor Ellwood

98 books160 followers
I'm Taylor Ellwood.

I've been writing since I was a teenager. I published my first book in 2003 and since then have continued writing and publishing books regularly on a number of topics.

I originally started out in the traditional publishing world, but I have since become a self-publisher. I love being an indie author and write both fiction and non-fiction.

Check out at my zombie apocalypse fiction reader group at: https://www.facebook.com/groups/imagi...

Check out my occult reader group at: https://www.facebook.com/groups/Magic...

I write in the following genres:

1. Occult/esoteric books - I share my experiences and experiment with magic and the occult. I write cutting edge books that explore what could magic can be and how it can evolve. Here are links to just a few of the books I've written in the occult genre

The Process of Magic: A Guide to How Magic Works

Inner Alchemy: Energy Work and the Magic of the Body

Walking with Magical Entities: How to Create and Work with Servitors, Egregores, and Thought Forms to Get Consistent Results

Pop Culture Magick: A How to Guide to Practical Pop Culture Magick

Space/Time Magic: A Guide to Practical Probability Magic

2. Fiction books - I write fiction books, currently in the superhero fiction and zombie apocalypse fiction genres, but there will be other genres as well. Here are links to a few of the Fiction books I've written:

The Zombie Apocalypse Call Center

Learning How to Fly

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6 reviews
July 20, 2019
I received a copy of the new audio version of this book in exchange for writing this review. This is one of my favorite books on magic, and I liked the audio version once I adjusted to the narrator's voice after a few chapters. It's not a book for absolute beginners, since there are no specific rituals or spells and the exercises are fairly open-ended, but it's an outstanding book for any practitioner to develop powerful new perspectives and tools.
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Author 98 books160 followers
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March 9, 2021
An excerpt from Pop Culture Magick

When I first began writing this book I was asked why pop culture as a form of magick? The many people I told about the concept of pop culture magick were astonished and skeptical of the workability of such an idea. One fellow magician even told me I was reinventing the wheel. He might be right.

But despite the skepticism, I also saw – and see – a market for pop culture as a form of magick, and other writers and even publishers would seem to agree. In fact, the media has made pop culture into a promising meta-system for practicing magick, with lots of potential for anyone who is creative and imaginative. I might be reinventing the wheel, but at least when the wheel is reinvented, it’s my wheel instead of someone else’s. For anyone who chooses to test and try out the ideas and practices in here, a chance to reinvent the wheel and make it your own wheel lies before you.

But before that can happen, it’d be a good idea if I answered another question in regard to pop culture. What is pop culture? Pop culture, as mainstream society understands it, isn’t quite what pop culture actually is. Most people, for instance, will associate any kind of celebrity that dominates the media news as being pop culture, but that’s not always true. Michael Jordan or Ben Roethlisberger, though popular within media coverage, is not necessarily pop culture icons. The athlete is accepted and adored by mainstream culture, largely because s/he presumably represents the values of mainstream culture. That said, people give power to athletes and it’s not unreasonable to draw on that power. For the focus of this book however, I focus on what I consider pop culture to be (which may differ from what you think of as pop culture).

Pop culture is defined by what it does. Pop culture resists the mainstream blah culture. It possesses and represents different value systems, which clash with the values of mainstream culture. However, the value system of a pop culture icon can and usually is consumed by mainstream culture, unless the pop icon changes. For example, who’s heard much about Christina Aguilera these days? At one time she was a pop culture icon, but she rarely makes the news any more. She is now part of the mainstream.
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