RT Article T1 Imaginal research for unlearning mastery: Divination with tarot as decolonizing methodology JF Anthropology of consciousness VO 34 IS 2 SP 527 OP 549 A1 Greenberg, Yvan LA English PB American Anthropological Association YR 2023 UL https://www.ixtheo.de/Record/1862623708 AB Tarot use has become increasingly popular in contemporary society. However, unlike the position afforded divination in some cultures, it is not culturally consecrated as a legitimate way of knowing in the so-called Modern West—in large part, due to the attempted disenchantment of the world by the colonial project of modernity. This paper posits that engagement with tarot divination can be a decolonizing methodology. I explore how divination's dependence on chance, the imagination, and engagement with spirits can heal the Cartesian mental models that underly modernity's hold on our society. Academic writing on divination has, until recently, largely been authored by people who are not also practitioners of divination themselves. Writing as both a scholar and practitioner of tarot, I use the cards as a form of “imaginal research” to directly assist in the creation of this paper—allowing the tarot itself to speak (as much as me speak about it). K1 Tarot K1 and analogy K1 Metaphor K1 Imagination K1 Divination K1 decolonizing methodologies K1 Chance DO 10.1111/anoc.12198