TORCH: Divination, Oracles, and Omens Network
This network will run from January 2025 to December 2026.
Making decisions in the face of the unknowable is a universal human experience. Every day we confront the limits of our own capabilities when it comes to the enigmas of the past and the uncertainties of the future. Across history and around the world, humans have developed techniques that promise to unveil the concealed, disclosing knowledge that offers answers to private or shared dilemmas.
Today, forecasting is the bread and butter of many disciplines, from medicine and epidemiology to economics, meteorology, and climate science. Historically, these fields have sat on the same spectrum as more arcane practices of divination, such as astrology, Tarot, and extispicy. At least as far back as ancient Mesopotamia, the same kinds of questions have been asked of specialist forecasters: Will I be happy? Should I take this job? Should I make this investment? When will my city recover from this epidemic? Techniques of divination come in a wide variety of forms, but all have helped and continue to help people diagnose present problems and make decisions about future actions, gratifying the human desire for certainty.
The Divination, Oracles, and Omens Network is dedicated to the interdisciplinary, global, and transhistorical study of divination and forecasting. The Network is established on the back of the ‘Oracles, Omens & Answers’ exhibition (curated by Michelle Aroney and David Zeitlyn), which is open to all at the Weston Library from 6 December 2024 to 27 April 2025.
Contact email: mailto:divination_project@anthro.ox.ac.uk
Type: None
Series organisers:
Dr Michelle Pfeffer (Faculty of History),
Dr Parsa Daneshmand (Faculty of Asian & Middle Eastern Studies),
Professor David Zeitlyn (Faculty of Anthropology)
Web Address:
https://www.torch.ox.ac.uk/divination-oracles-and-omens
Organising department: The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities (TORCH)
Talks:
Friday 9 May 2025
Cartomancy (card-reading) Day
Date: 9 May 2025, 10:00 - 17:00
Speaker
Various Speakers
Venue: 61 Banbury Road, 61 Banbury Road OX2 6PF
Venue Details: School of Anthropology and Museum Ethnography
Organiser:
Dr Michelle Pfeffer (Faculty of History)
Hosts:
TBA
Editors:
Laura Spence,
Belinda Clark