Stephen Skinner (author) explained

Stephen Skinner
Birth Date:1948 3, df=yes
Birth Place:Sydney, Australia
Occupation:Author, publisher and lecturer
Alma Mater:Sydney University (BA),
University of Newcastle (PhD)

Stephen Skinner (born 22 March 1948) is an Australian author, editor, publisher and lecturer. He is known for authoring books on magic, feng shui, sacred geometry and alchemy. He has published more than 46 books in more than 20 languages.

Early life and education

Born in Sydney, Australia in March 1948, he lived there till 1972. He attended Trinity Grammar Preparatory School (Strathfield) and Sydney Grammar Secondary School from 1959 to 1964, matriculating with First Class Honors in English, and honors in Geography. He earned his BA (Arts) at Sydney University from 1965 to 1968, majoring in English Literature and Geography, plus Philosophy (Greek Philosophy and formal Logic).

In 1967 he launched and edited two underground magazines in Sydney, titled Lucifer and Chaos.[1] He worked for one year in the Intelligence section of the Department of Trade & Industry (1969), before an interest in the stock market lead to working full-time as a portfolio manager. From there he moved to teaching as a Geography Master at St. Joseph's College, Hunters Hill, Sydney (1970), followed by Geography Lecturer at Sydney Technical College (now called the University of Technology) in 1971–72.

He received his Ph.D. in classics from the School of Humanities and Social Science, University of Newcastle in 2014 for a thesis on the transmission of magical techniques and equipment from the Graeco-Egyptian magical papyri (1st-5th century C.E.) via the Byzantine Magical Treatise of Solomon (Hygromanteia) to the 16th-18th century grimoires of Western Europe, specifically the Clavicula Salomonis.[2] The thesis was later developed into two books: Techniques of Graeco-Egyptian Magic[3] and Techniques of Solomonic Magic.

Career

He migrated to London in December 1972, where his career alternated between book and magazine publishing and computer programming. In 1973, he founded Askin Publishers Ltd, and became its managing director, in order to print editions of the magical writings of Dr. John Dee, Cornelius Agrippa, Paracelsus, Austin Osman Spare and Aleister Crowley. In 1976 he helped in the production of the Crowley Thoth Tarot card pack by arranging the re-photography of the original paintings in the Warburg Institute, which were later used in the revised edition published by U.S. Games Inc in that year.[4]

In 1998[5] he launched and published Feng Shui for Modern Living magazine.[6] Skinner organised and ran the London International Feng Shui Conference (co-sponsored by the Daily Express newspaper) at the Islington Exhibition Centre, London on 21–23 May 1999.[7] In 2000, he was nominated for Publisher of the Year at the PPA Awards in London for the magazine Feng Shui for Modern Living.[8]

Before leaving London, Skinner founded Golden Hoard Press Pte. Ltd, a book publishing company specializing in the publication of the classics of magic and feng shui, and began publishing the Source Works of Ceremonial Magic series with co-author David Rankine.[9] [10]

In 2003 he migrated to Johor Bahru in Malaysia, to facilitate his research into feng shui. In 2004 Skinner helped found the International Feng Shui Association in Singapore.[11] He subsequently gave a number of lectures at their annual conventions. At the 27th International I-Ching Conference 2015 in Singapore, Skinner gave a lecture on the Hexagrams and Song Dynasty Feng Shui (14 November 2015). In April 2018 he relaunched Feng Shui for Modern Living Magazine online, publishing selected articles from the original 30 Volume 1 Editions along with new Volume 2 Editions. In 2010 he married Navaneeta Das, and moved to Singapore. In 2021 he moved back to London, where he currently lives.

In January 2022 Stephen was featured in the list of "The 100 Most Spiritually Influential People Living in 2022" in issue 68 of Watkins Mind Body and Spirit magazine.[12]

Writing

Skinner is an author of books on the Western Esoteric Tradition, magic and feng shui.His first book (with co-author Nevill Drury) was Search for Abraxas published in 1972,[13] and subsequently re-published in 2013 and 2016.[14] With the publication of the Living Earth Manual of Feng Shui in 1976, the first book on feng shui in English written in the 20th century Skinner was "credited with bringing feng shui to the West".[15] [16]

In 2006, he published The Complete Magician's Tables which contains tables on Magic, Kabbalah, Angels, Astrology, Alchemy, Demons, Geomancy, Grimoires, Gematria, I Ching, Tarot, Pagan pantheons, Plants, Perfumes and Character correspondences in more than 800 Tables,[17] four times as many tables as Aleister Crowley's Liber 777.

In 2008, he completed the Guide to the Feng Shui Compass, the most detailed study of the rings of the Chinese luopan in any language. A review of this book in a recent sinological academic journal, the reviewer stated "Stephen Skinner is probably the most important Western scholar taking the science of Feng shui seriously. In the past few decades he has made important contributions to clarifying the rather vague image from which Feng shui suffers in the West".[18] This was followed by the publication of Feng Shui History: the story of Classical Feng Shui in China and the West from 221 BC to 2012 AD in 2013.[19]

In 2011 he completed the editing and rectification of the text (using the original manuscripts) of Dr John Dee's A True & Faithful Relation of what passed for many years between Dr. John Dee...and some Spirits. This was published as Dr John Dee's Spiritual Diaries(1583-1608) in 2011. As well as original works he edited a number of 16th-18th century manuscripts on magic, making them available in print for the first time in the Sourceworks of Ceremonial Magic series.

Periplus contracted him to write a coffee table book on feng shui, Feng Shui Style.[20] He set up a feng shui consultancy for both immigrants and the local Chinese community in both Singapore and Malaysia.[21] There he continued writing books on magic, and publishing the Source Works of Ceremonial Magic series. The first volume of this series was The Practical Angel Magic of Dr. John Dee's Enochian Tables, opening the doors on 17th century angel magic. This was followed by The Keys to the Gateway of Magic and then The Goetia of Dr Rudd, a 17th-century version of the four books of the Lemegeton otherwise known as the Lesser Key of Solomon. The next volume in the series was an edition of three manuscripts of one of the most famous grimoires, The Veritable Key of Solomon.[22]

He has written over 38 full length published books on magic and feng shui, with a further 11 edited and introduced, making a total of over 49 books mainly on magic and feng shui, but with a few others on alchemy, astrology and sacred geometry.[23]

His publishers include Periplus, Routledge, Tuttle, Salamander, Llewellyn Worldwide, Sterling, Nicholas Hayes, Penguin, Ibis Press,[24] Simon & Schuster, Inner Traditions,[25] Golden Hoard,[26] Haldane Mason, Parragon, Cico, Trafalgar, etc.

His books have been translated into more than 20 languages and appear in many separate English editions in UK, US, Australia, Canada, South Africa, India and Singapore, making a total of over 90+ different editions. His books have had introductions written by such diverse people as Colin Wilson, and Jimmy Choo.

Bibliography

Books on Magic, Western Esoteric Tradition, etc.

Books edited and introduced by

Books on Feng Shui

References

Notes and References

  1. Peter Mudie, Sydney Underground Movies: Ubu Films 1965-1970, UNSW Press, 1997, p.18
  2. http://ogma.newcastle.edu.au:8080/vital/access/manager/Repository/uon:13943?queryType=vitalDismax&query=skinner Entry for "Magical techniques and implements present in Graeco-Egyptian magical papyri, Byzantine Greek Solomonic manuscripts and European grimoires: transmission, continuity and commonality (the technology of Solomonic magic)," by Stephen Skinner
  3. Franz Stephan Ladinig-Morawetz The Definition of Magic. A Proposal as 'Working-Tool' https://www.academia.edu/28640187/The_Definition_of_Magic._A_Proposal_as_Working-Tool?s=t via @academia
  4. Duquette, Lon Milo, Understanding Aleister Crowley's Thoth Tarot 2003, Weiser, page 315.
  5. http://www.fengshui.co.uk/jon-sandifer/ Sandifer article showing duration of publication of magazine 1998-2000
  6. https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/interiors-like-totally-auspicious-1136821.html Independent newspaper article on Skinners launch of Feng Shui for Modern Living magazine.
  7. http://www.lillian-too.com/news_london.php Lillian Too's review of the London International Feng Shui Conference
  8. Web site: 9th International Feng Shui Convention brochure. ttgasia.com. 24 January 2015.
  9. https://davidrankine.wordpress.com/
  10. Nevill Drury - The Watkins Dictionary of Magic London, Watkins 2007, 2011, article on Stephen Skinner.
  11. http://www.intfsa.org/ifsa/aboutifsa.html/ International Feng Shui Association
  12. Web site: 68, Winter 2022 – Watkins Mind Body Spirit.
  13. http://www.shadowplayzine.com/Interviews/nevill_interview.htm In Search of Visions: an interview with Nevill Drury
  14. http://www.salamanderandsons.com/product/the-search-for-abraxas-second-edition-nevill-drury-and-stephen-skinner Salamander publishers site
  15. http://occulture.tv/stephen-skinner/ Stephen Skinnner on Occulture TV
  16. Nevill Drury - The Watkins Dictionary of Magic London, Watkins 2007, 2011, article on Stephen Skinner.
  17. Increased to 840 tables in the expanded 2015 edition
  18. Dr Ulrich Theobald, lecturer for Chinese history and Classical Chinese at Tübingen University in East Asian Science, Technology, and Medicine Number 37 (2013) 2014, International Society for the History of East Asian Science, Technology, and Medicine, pp. 111-114
  19. Referenced 17 times in Kirsten Day Fengshui as a narrative of localisation: case studies of contemporary architecture in Hong Kong and Shanghai Ph.D thesis Swinburne University, 2015
  20. Haven magazine Malaysia. Review of Skinner's Feng Shui Style, August/September 2004.
  21. Shin Min Daily News, 8 May 2004 (in Chinese), article on Skinner, page 10.
  22. Robert Matheison More Keys of Solomon Providence: Witches' Almanac, 2011, p. 77.
  23. http://jwmt.org/v2n13/geometry.html review of Sacred Geometry
  24. http://ibispress.net/oscom/product_info.php?cPath=25&products_id=85&osCsid=9htt16hvb78icoqdalj7p0us17 Ibis Press authors' page
  25. http://www.innertraditions.com/catalogsearch/result/?q=stephen+skinner Inner Traditions author's page - Skinner
  26. http://goldenhoard.net/authors.htm Golden Hoard author's page for Stephen Skinner
  27. http://authors.simonandschuster.com/Stephen-Skinner/460360656 Simon & Schuster author page
  28. Emilie Savage-Smith Geomancy in the Islamic World in Encyclopaedia of the History of Science, Technology and Medicine in Non-Western Cultures - Helaine Selin.
  29. http://jwmt.org/v2n13/geometry.html review by Samuel Scarborough of Sacred Geometry
  30. Reese, Garth D.. 2014. "Review". Review of Sepher Raziel, Also Known as Liber Salomonis: A 1564 English Grimoire from Sloane MS 3826. Preternature: Critical and Historical Studies on the Preternatural 3 (2). Penn State University Press: 406–8. doi:10.5325/preternature.3.2.0406.
  31. Reviewed in the Times 6 July 2017 and in the Guardian 5 July 2017.
  32. Feng Shui News, U.K. Review of Skinner's Flying Star Feng Shui, 1 Dec 2003.
  33. Stephen Sennott (ed.) Encyclopedia of 20th century Architecture, Vol. 1, p. 861.
  34. Singapore Review October/November 2004 on Skinner's Feng Shui Style, page 12.