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REVOLUTIONARY
DEMONOLOGY
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Gruppo di Nun
REVOLUTIONARY
DEMONOLOGY
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First published in 2022 by
urbanomic media ltd,
the old lemonade factory,
windsor quarry,
falmouth tr 11 3 ex ,
united kingdom
Originally published in italian as Demonologia Rivoluzionaria © NERO, 2020
English translation © Urbanomic Media Ltd
All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic
or mechanical, including photocopying, recording or any other information storage or retrieval
system, without prior permission in writing from the publisher.
british library cataloguing - in - publication data
A full catalogue record of this book is available
from the British Library.
isbn 978-1-913029-90-6 (PRINT EDITION)
Distributed by the MIT Press
Cambridge, Massachusetts and London, England
www.urbanomic.com
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REVOLUTIONARY DEMONOLOGY
Contents
Ritual: Every Worm Trampled is a Star
1
I. PRINCIPLES OF REVOLUTIONARY DEMONOLOGY
7
Introduction to Revolutionary Demonology
9
Dogma17
Catastrophic Astrology
27
Spectral Materialism
49
II. NOTES ON GOTHIC INSURRECTION
81
Gothic Insurrection
83
Extinction111
Gothic (A)theology: Some Notes on Gothic Insurrection
and Active Extinctionism
125
Lifting the Absolute
145
III. NIGREDO
157
Cultivating Darkness
159
Mater Dolorosa
173
Solarisation207
The Highest Form of Gnosis
235
Catholic Dark: To Rise or Fall in Hyper-Alien Silence
263
Afterword: The Asymmetry of Love Amy Ireland281
Bibliography315
Filmography329
Discography331
Index333
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I
The story ends like this. There is a wound in the heart of the world. Before
the light, before a voice in the abyss uttered the first word from the black
belly of night, there was only ocean. A boundless liquid expanse of indefinite
recombination. Know that all matter in the universe vibrates to an incessant
and frightful music. Maximum multiplicity of equiprobable states, zero-point
energy, quantum superpositions decomposed and recomposed in perfect
interference. If you listen in absolute silence, hidden among the beats of your
heart you can hear the hissing of the ancient dragon that sleeps, cradled by
the sound of the trembling universe.
Cosmologies are thermodynamic machines that proceed blindly by
chewing up the free energy of matter in motion. The order of the cosmos is
a symmetry painfully carved in blood. We have been told the story of creation
as the act of pure will of an eternal, uncreated unity, from which the structure
of the universe emanates in linear fashion. This original unity is the delirium
of a terrifying perpetual motion machine that feeds upon itself indefinitely,
burning in the vacuum like a star gone mad. The One God Universe is a
thermodynamic abomination we have nurtured for too long. The ancients
tell us that the world was born from the slaughtered flesh of a monstrous
mother. Over the centuries she has been given many names. She is the wave
vibrating on the waters of oceanic chaos. She is the eternally regenerating
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R i t ua l : E v er y Wo r m Tr a m p l e d i s a S ta r
To our sisters of the Left Hand Path
1
RITUAL: EVERY WORM
TRAMPLED IS A STAR
I. Ammit
The Devourer
II. Nammu
The Mother
IV. Hushbishag
The True Form of
the Night of Time
V. Nungal
The Expression of
All That is Done
VII. Uadjet
The Black Sun
VIII. Ishtar
The Bleeding Star
III. Kauket
The Twilight
VI. Sekhmet
The Fires that
Consume
the Universe
IX. Tiamat
The Worm
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Listen carefully: she is not one, because she is none. Infinitely divided,
she reproduces herself indefatigably, like the severed tail of a firefly. She is
circumference without centre: a divergent series from the heart of which
issues forth a vast and boundless chasm. Know that a universe without a
mother is a tyranny born of extermination.
The occult thermodynamics of separation is fascist time sorcery that
produces locally polarised flows of energy. The reproduction of civilisation
is nourished on the blood of the ancient dragon, wailing, crucified in the
heart of the world. Mother, we were born alone from the remains of your
quartered body. From the liquid darkness of your entrails we emerged into
the cruel light of a bloody dawn. The order of creation separates us from
your embrace, as it continues to feed on your flesh to build its bloody temple
ever higher. In moments of awesome terror we can hear your wrenching cry
lacerating the darkness, while your claws search furiously for us in the night.
Such is the law of universal attraction. Every atom of the cosmos trembles in
despair at the sound of your inconsolable cry, which pursues us as a hungry
beast pursues a bleeding animal. Love is your insatiable hunger. Love is our
joy at returning to your womb.
II
Order descends into chaos. Light fades into darkness. No structure is eternal. Every symmetrical organisation contains its own programmed decay in
the asymmetry of the probabilistic nanospasms that make it up. The order
of creation feeds on the illusion that a system in equilibrium produces a
sustainable balance of energy, but equilibrium is maintained at the price
of a constant production of waste—chaotic trash that is pushed out to
the margins of the cosmic order but threatens to invade and destroy it at
any moment. We must therefore be aware that the order of creation has a
thermodynamic structure that necessarily dooms it to collapse.
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R i t ua l : E v er y Wo r m Tr a m p l e d i s a S ta r
devouring universes.
3
serpent, slithering aimlessly through the silence of time, generating and
4
The energetic decay of patriarchal temporal structures takes the form of a
R i t ua l : E v er y Wo r m Tr a m p l e d i s a S ta r
gradual and unstoppable feminisation of civilisation. Domesticated femininities turned monstrous haunt the nightmares of the declining West, in the
form of rebellious androids, synthetic hormones, and painful initiatory scars
adorned with glittering silicon implants.
Over the course of millennia we have replaced ancient goddesses with
docile replicants which have infiltrated themselves into the architectonic
order of Man’s One Unique God. Luminous simulacra of ecstatic amphibious creatures inflict repeated mutilations on themselves in the shadows of
our cathedrals. The miracle of the Virgin’s immaculate conception is the
degenerate remnant of the ancient barren dragon, torn apart to give birth to
the world. In the black night of divine abandonment, the Virgin of Sorrows
lies weeping, at the feet of her tormented son, her heart pierced by seven
daggers. Her infinite capacity to regenerate is also an indefinite capacity to
suffer: a vampiric force that feeds on its own decay.
It is said that at the moment of creation the light was so intense and
resplendent that the order of the universe could not contain it. Then the order
was shattered into thousands of fragments and the world plunged forever
into darkness and ruin. The seven lower divine emanations were shattered,
and their empty shells plunged into the abyss. This fall is the original sin in
the heart of matter: what remains amidst the rubble of the divine order is a
blasphemous, decapitated decimal structure, machinically self-replicating by
collapsing in on itself like a sinister spiral. Over the hollowed-out remains of
this dying world reigns Malkuth, the Infernal Mother, Our Lady of Tears, her
abyssal eyes blinded by weeping.
Pain should be understood as a radical form of insurrection. Like a blade
carving a deep wound, we fearlessly search for the ancient agony that burns
within the very roots of our flesh. It is an excruciating but necessary process.
With each spasm we urge our recalcitrant ego into the flames of sacrifice.
Blood must be shed to the last drop in order that the light of the fire should
rise splendidly in the night. Let us raise the scream of extinction and make
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ecstasy of our slaughtered wombs. To those who want our immaculate heart,
let us respond by revealing our hearts, corrupt and bleeding.
III
We are the waters upon which great Babylon stands. We are the lost shreds
of our dismembered mother. We are the blood, tears, and flames. We are
the shining sparks of the fire that consumes the universe. We multiply like
insects hidden in the entrails of this filthy city. The city is a temple turned
upside down, plunged into the depths of the earth. The more splendidly and
luminously the divine order soars above, the more deep and painful grows
the wound upon which we feed. Synthetic, decadent Venuses haunt the
catacombs on full-moon nights. Tortured Apollonian bodies glow trembling
in the feeble light of crypts.
In the bowels of this underworld we have erected an altar to the desperate
beauty of the chthonic Aphrodite born from the foam of the sewers. The
hypertrophic development of the metropolis is its own destruction. The more
that order expands, the more its structure disintegrates, unable to maintain
control over its countless fragments. In this respect, the metropolis is like
the corpse of the ancient, dismembered dragon, pullulating with larvae. What
was divided in the name of order multiplies itself, doubling exponentially and
suffocating the organism that gave birth to it. The city is a frenzied ritual
of death. In this suicidal ecstasy we immolate ourselves, burning bright
like supernovas in the embrace of the night. This mitotic replication is an
irreversibly advancing process. We should not mourn an ancient past. Before
the burning city, remember that we are the waves of Kali Yuga.
Every worm trampled is a star. We have been illuminated by suffering.
In the liquid eyes of others we seek nothing but their necessary distance.
Eternal distance from daylight in the lost depths of this bottomless love. The
eclipsed sun is a heart peirced eternally in a cycle that can never end. Every
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R i t ua l : E v er y Wo r m Tr a m p l e d i s a S ta r
ceaselessly reproducing the order of the world, let us respond with the
5
it the weapon of our revolt. To those who would have us be eternal virgins,
6
drop of spilled blood illuminates like a star the desperate depths of our abyss.
R i t ua l : E v er y Wo r m Tr a m p l e d i s a S ta r
Dragged through the misery of these days of exile, through the streets of
this city marked with scratches like a sarcophagus lost to the gaze of its god,
we dig into each other, searching for the fossilised traces of the ocean from
which we were torn. Let us tear one another apart with joy: marvellous and
iridescent like nebulous catastrophes.
Each one of you is a shining wound; and we wish to bleed eternally from
the wounds of your burning bodies. Babylon is a monstrous machine falling
to ruin in flames. The slaughtered dragon will come crawling back from the
depths to bring the abyss upon the Earth. Ἔπεσεν, ἔπεσεν Βαβυλὼν ἡ μεγάλη!
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GdN
z
I
PRINCIPLES OF
REVOLUTIONARY
DEMONOLOGY
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9
INTRODUCTION TO
REVOLUTIONARY
DEMONOLOGY
Nick Land1
Revolutionary Demonology was born of and developed through a reflection
on the role of the Kabbalah in Western esoteric traditions. More generally,
what lay at the root of our work was the sudden awareness of a pervasive
and viral symmetry transversal to magical thought; the revolution we refer
to is, first and foremost, an urgent need for a radical subversion of this
symmetry. The decision to refer to our work as demonology is linked to our
conviction that magic is essentially something that does not concern us
as human beings, and that the mechanisms that inspire and drive magical
thought are fundamentally foreign to human civilisation.
In terms of this foreignness to the human, we were fascinated by the
pervasive use that Western esoteric traditions have made of the Kabbalah,
transforming it into a geometrical code capable of containing and summarising the totality of their dogmatic and ritual material. We are not in a position to
assess how orthodox or respectful this use has been of the original religious
meaning of the Kabbalistic material (nor have we any interest in doing so).
Undoubtedly, the passage of centuries, along with linguistic and cultural
1.
N. Land, ‘Meltdown’, in Fanged Noumena: Collected Writings 1987–2007 (Falmouth and
New York: Urbanomic/Sequence Press, 2011), 443.
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I n t r o d u ct i o n to R e vo lu t i o n a r y D e m o n o lo gy
Nothing human makes it out of the near future.
10
barriers, have largely transfigured its teachings, handing down to us a new
I n t r o d u ct i o n to R e vo lu t i o n a r y D e m o n o lo gy
structure, but one that is no less fascinating, no less full of occult meaning.
We do not claim that such a thing as ‘the Kabbalah’ exists as a single,
coherent system; we believe that the conviction in the existence of such a
system, univocal and universal in scope, is intrinsically reactionary. Rather,
we are interested in the Kabbalistic approach as a whole, since we see it as
harbouring the possibility of conceiving a ritual neo-magic consisting of a
set of entirely automatic and programmable processes, capable of definitively freeing magical thought from the voluntarism and radical humanism
that have plagued it for the last two centuries. From its origins, the Western
magical tradition has always resorted to metalinguistic structures capable of
transforming logos, i.e. the human word and reasoning, into a code capable
of opening up an escape route out of the symbolic order. This tendency has
manifested itself throughout history in a continuous hybridisation of magic
with the experimental sciences, mathematics, and cryptographic techniques.
In this sense, the Kabbalah, since it establishes an automatic correspondence between word and number, is the magical instrument par excellence,
which, if used in the correct way, allows magical thought to be freed once and
for all from the complex of psychological interpretations that have limited its
sphere of action to the domain of human consciousness. The more strictly
symbolic and archetypal interpretations of the Kabbalah (which have largely
prevailed in post-Crowleyan magic) establish a perfect correspondence
between the structure of the cosmos and that of consciousness.
Only since the 1990s has the Kabbalah been reevaluated by certain
authors in view of its original function—that is, as an occult machine capable
of overcoming the barriers of human language: ‘Is qabbalism problematic or
mysterious?’ Nick Land asks in this regard; ‘it seems to participate amphibiously in both domains, proceeding according to rigorously constructible
procedures—as attested by the affinity with technicization—yet intrinsically
related to an Outsideness through which alone it could derive programmatic
sense. [...] Epistemologically speaking, qabbalistic programmes have a status
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strictly equivalent to that of particle physics, or to any other natural-scientific
11
research programmes […].’2
I n t r o d u ct i o n to R e vo lu t i o n a r y D e m o n o lo gy
It is evident that the pertinence of Kabbalistic structures goes far
beyond the domain of magical and ritual practices proper. After all, what
exactly is a Kabbalah? By its very nature it is a mathematical-geometric
object with an intrinsically recursive structure, which replicates itself on an
indefinite number of levels (for example each of the 10 sefirot that compose
the traditional Kabbalah is in turn co-constituted by 10 sefirot, themselves
constituted by 10 sefirot…) and is capable of manifesting itself on different
planes of reality (micro- and macrocosmic). Rather than a simple map of the
cosmos or consciousness, a Kabbalah must be understood as an organism
animated by a series of processes that produce—and do not simply interpret—a cosmos and a consciousness. Such a recursive machine, which is
not operated from the outside but, on the contrary, proceeds autonomously,
is therefore cybernetic by definition, i.e. based on a system of feedback
loops that ensure its continued functioning and self-subsistence, allowing its
structure to remain intact. In the words of Sadie Plant, ‘Cybernetic systems,
like organic lives, were conceived as instances of a struggle for order in a
continually degenerating world which is always sliding toward chaos. Wiener’s
cybernetic systems, be they living or machinic, natural or artificial, are always
conservative, driven by the basic effort to stay the same’.3
If a Kabbalah is essentially a cybernetic machine, then like any machine,
it must have an engine. And this is where we encounter the exquisitely thermodynamic problem of its functioning, i.e. its ability to produce, transform,
and transfer information. For all cybernetic systems are confronted with
inevitable entropic drives which threaten their integrity. To quote Plant again:
2.
N. Land, ‘Qabbala 101’, in Fanged Noumena, 591.
3.
S. Plant, Zeros + Ones: Digital Women and the New Technoculture (London: Fourth
Estate, 1998), 158–59.
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12
It is also the inevitable function of these mechanisms to engage and interact
I n t r o d u ct i o n to R e vo lu t i o n a r y D e m o n o lo gy
with the volatile environments in which they find themselves. ‘No system is
closed. The outside always seeps in…’. Systems cannot stop interacting with
the world which lies outside of themselves, otherwise they would not be
dynamic or alive. By the same token, it is precisely these engagements which
ensure that homeostasis, perfect balance, or equilibrium, is only ever an ideal.
Neither animals nor machines work according to such principles. Long before
Wiener gave them a name, it was clear that cybernetic systems could run
into ‘several possible sorts of behaviour considered undesirable by those in
search of equilibrium. Some machines went into runaway […] Others—still
worse—embarked on sequences of behaviour in which the amplitude of their
oscillation would itself oscillate or would become greater and greater,’ turning
themselves into systems with ‘positive gain, variously called escalating or
vicious circles.’ Unlike the negative feedback loop which turns everything to
the advantage of the security of the whole, these runaway, schismogenetic
processes take off on their own to the detriment of the stability of the whole.4
A closed, self-subsistent cybernetic system that maintains perfect equilibrium is a dead system (i.e. it ceases to be a system); or else it contains
hidden mechanisms that place it in a condition of absolute dependency upon
that same outside from which it desperately seeks to emancipate itself. In
magical thought, the relationship with the outside is regulated through the
homeostatic mechanism of ritual sacrifice: ‘[He] must then present the goat
which has been designated by lot for the Lord, and he is to make it a sin
offering, but the goat which has been designated by lot for Azazel is to be
stood alive before the Lord to make atonement on it by sending it away into
the desert to Azazel’.5 But this homeostasis always entails a fragile balance:
with each sacrifice the desert advances, and the mechanisms that animate
4.
Ibid., 160.
5.
Leviticus 16:9–10 (NET).
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the Kabbalistic organism threaten at every moment to lock into positive
13
feedback loops, destabilising and ultimately collapsing its entire structure.
I n t r o d u ct i o n to R e vo lu t i o n a r y D e m o n o lo gy
The idea that the traditional Kabbalah contains subterranean paths that
allow balance to be preserved on the surface is part and parcel of magical
tradition. Traces of these submerged paths are found scattered throughout
the original Kabbalistic texts; the possible structure of these paths has
been extensively detailed by Kenneth Grant in The Night Side of Eden, the
first volume of his second Typhonian Trilogy. Following in his footsteps, the
Cybernetic Culture Research Unit (Ccru), co-founded by Land and Plant,
developed an alternative Kabbalistic glyph called the Numogram, which contains a series of intricate submerged paths running through its entire structure.
These ‘sinister paths’ are populated by demons, unequal and chaotic magical
forces that hide beneath the luminous paths of the traditional Kabbalah.
The thermodynamic aspect of Kabbalistic organisms is also manifested in
their numerical structure. Kabbalistic numerals are not arithmetical, let alone
archetypical, but essentially combinatorial, and therefore obey strictly thermodynamic-statistical principles. In support of this idea, it seems significant
to refer to the combinatorial conception that pervades the Hebrew Kabbalistic tradition, in which the whole of creation is conceived fundamentally as a
perpetual recombination of the ciphered characters of the tetragrammaton,
the unpronounceable name of God. Gershom Scholem writes that ‘the Torah
is the name of God, because it is a living texture [...] into which the one true
name, the tetragrammaton, is woven [...]. [T]he basic elements, the name
JHWH, the other names of God, and the appellatives, or kinnuyim, or rather
their consonants, went through several sets of permutations and combinations [...] until at length they took the form of the Hebrew sentences of
the Torah.’6 This combinatorial aspect of Kabbalistic doctrine is frequently
actualised in the form of occult games—first and foremost among which is
the tarot—which manifest the idea of the cosmos as a cybernetic organism
6.
G. Scholem, On the Kabbalah and its Symbolism, tr. R. Manheim (New York: Schocken
Books, 1969), 42–43.
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14
in a continuous process of recombination. A Kabbalah is not a rigid and static
I n t r o d u ct i o n to R e vo lu t i o n a r y D e m o n o lo gy
structure, but a fluid form that can be shaped and transformed, provided
one is open to being transformed in turn.
The occult war is therefore fought on two irreconcilable fronts: the radical
immanentism of a materialist neo-magic, which interprets the Kabbalah as
a set of circuits aimed at regulating the energetic processes of the cosmic
architecture it manifests, and the absolute idealism of an esoteric fascist
tradition that identifies in Kabbalistic architecture a transcendent order emanating linearly from the matter of the universe. We have chosen to emphasise
the radical difference between these two approaches by reappropriating the
traditional distinction between the Right Hand Path and the Left Hand Path,
with reference to their original Kabbalistic meaning,7 in order to highlight our
schismatic tendency in contrast to the reactionary universalism that has
characterised much of contemporary magical thought. Against the manic
centripetal cult of the Western esoteric tradition, our demonology recognises
that the Kabbalistic organism, like a golem self-assembled from mud, is born
and extinguished in the materiality of the processes that produce it, which
are essentially devoid of human intentionality. To quote Land again:
Politically, qabbalism repels ideology. As a self-regenerating mass-cultural
glitch, it mimics the senseless exuberance of virus, profoundly indifferent
to all partisan considerations. Indifferent even to the corroded solemnity of
nihilism, it sustains no deliberated agendas. It stubbornly adheres to a single
absurd criterion, its intrinsic ‘condition of existence’—continual unconscious
promotion of numerical decimalism. Qabbala destines each and every ‘strategic appropriation’ to self-parody and derision […]. Even God was unable to
make sense of it.8
7.
On this subject see for example M. Idel, Primeval Evil in Kabbalah: Totality, Perfection,
Perfectibility (Brooklyn, NY: Ktav, 2020), xlv: ‘In general, the sefirot of Binah, Gevurah and
Malkhut are related to feminine qualities that often are portrayed negatively and relegated to the
left side of the Kabbalistic hierarchical scheme of the divine realm.’
8.
Land, ‘Qabbala 101’, 595.
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Any plan to use Kabbalistic machinism as an instrument to manifest a polit-
15
ical or cosmological order is destined to fail, crushed by the very structure
I n t r o d u ct i o n to R e vo lu t i o n a r y D e m o n o lo gy
it purports to have built. For our part, we claim only to move through the
circuits of this occult machine, animated by the gradients of its plutonic
currents, which in their race toward ruin wind themselves into whirlpools of
desperate beauty. On our way we have met unexpected allies, whose voices,
sometimes human, at other times not, have guided us along this path. This
anthology is, in large part, a report on these encounters.
LT
99942 Apophis
Right ascension: 19h 13m 55.7s
Declination: –21° 44’ 10.9”
Distance from Earth: 93,253,356 km [26.8 km/s]
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the Western Hermetic tradition—is a theory of self-deification. Comparing
esoteric doctrines to scientific theories, we might say that each doctrine
builds around its dogmas a model of reality, made up of axioms and connections, which allows a certain vision of the cosmos to sustain and expand
itself. As in physics, there is no Hermetic theory of everything; each esoteric
doctrine leaves a loose thread, an open circle; each one forgets something,
more or less consciously. More precisely, as is the case with the sciences,
no model claims to be exact or complete, rather each one satisfies a specific
human need for understanding and control.
For centuries, all practices of ceremonial magic, including the most
explicitly dark and sinister ones, have been based on the same assumptions
and have referred back to the same model of reality. The conceptual structure
of this model and the rituals derived from it are enclosed in the Hermetic
Kabbalah and in the glyph of the Celestial Man. A precise understanding of
the meaning of this glyph is complex, and opens a vortex of connections
and interpretations. Continuing with our scientific metaphor, for our current
purposes it is not necessary to know all of the equations that make up the
model we are studying; it is sufficient to understand its goals, and know the
axioms upon which it is based.
The goal of any practitioner of the Right Hand Path is to achieve eternal
life, to take complete control of the material world, and to become God. This
greatly facilitates our work of classifying and recognising esoteric practices,
since the Right Hand Path has taken many forms throughout history, many
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Dogma
The doctrine of the Right Hand Path—which encompasses the entirety of
17
DOGMA
18
of them, as observed by others before us, in open and bloody struggle
Dogma
with each other although not different in their intent. The Right Hand Path
has always declared that its Kabbalah is a complete and indisputable key
to the universe and its mysteries, and that the glyph of the Celestial Man
encloses a clear and self-evident truth. This is false. The most important
among the concepts upon which the Western Hermetic tradition is based is
Equilibrium—that there is a perpetual symmetry in the cosmos, which the
individual-man-God can always be at the centre of. The universe described
by this doctrine is a perfectly reversible perpetual motion machine in which
everything is preserved; only in this way can the initiate achieve eternal life.
Balance seems like a natural concept to us; for millennia we have sought
an underlying harmony in the universe, a trend we find repeated in the
history of almost every civilisation, particularly ‘our own’, in many different
ways. We have thus elaborated formulae and calendars of impressive
complexity to justify the idea that the orbits of the planets in the sky were
perfectly circular, and that nothing could inhabit the celestial vault that
was not spherical and perfect; comets were fiery omens of catastrophes
and death. When modern physics denied these dogmas, the concept of a
perfect cosmos receded, retreating into the shadows of dark practices,
hidden, among other things, in a strengthened idea of Man
as centre of the
microcosm-macrocosm, which, though no longer appearing perfect in the
eyes of the contemporary subject, must continue to conceal an inscrutable
circularity in its mysterious language.
Every microscopic instant of a process at equilibrium coincides with its
beginning and its end, so the secret of equilibrium is the number zero, the
point of virtual immobility in which every forward movement is mirrored
perfectly by a movement backward. We can explain our attachment to
the concept of equilibrium in accordance with our nature as limited living
systems: we require an internal order to be maintained to guarantee our
survival and the functioning of our machines; the amazement we experience before our organic organisation is a deceptive feeling that conceals a
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misunderstanding of the true cost of our existence. We want to believe in
19
conservation because, faced with the evidence of our inevitable disintegra-
Dogma
tion, we seek a theory that makes life less futile, and above all, less unnecessary; a universe in disequilibrium confronts us with the realisation that we
are but a spontaneous and frantic proliferation of molecular machines that
burn, consume, multiply, and die, in an ineluctable and meaningless dance.
The principles of thermodynamics first came to light when we posed
ourselves the problem of building an engine; the engine converts energy
from one form to another, and as everyone knows, energy is conserved; the
crucial question then is to understand if our inability to build a machine in
perpetual motion is due to a technical or a theoretical limit. Thermodynamics
ceases to become an engineering problem and starts to become a glimpse
into our world view as we understand its profound implications; not only
is it not possible to convert energy without losing it as ‘background noise’
into the universe—everything that happens, every phenomenon that takes
place in any corner of the cosmos, is a process in disequilibrium. Everything
rushes in a specific direction; nothing is reversible; under no circumstances
can we return. The universe is by definition spontaneous; the spontaneity
of things is independent of our will. The clock with which we mark the
direction of the chemical time of our life is a quantity that we call entropy,
connected to the concept of disorder via the idea that chaos is inherently
more probable than order.
The thermodynamic zero that is the only possible equilibrium is reached
only at the moment in which matter manifests itself in its maximum multiplicity—that is, when the universe expresses the maximum number of
equiprobable configurations. Each ordered structure imposes a hierarchy
of probabilities in the universe, establishing itself as a configuration that
is not equivalent to the others; thermodynamic equilibrium thus coincides
with the complete disintegration of all structures. The hallucination of the
Right Hand essentially consists in the idea that a constant equilibrium can
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20
be established within aggregated structures, preventing their necessary
Dogma
dissolution and cancelling the thermodynamic cost of their existence.
Following this logic, we can then understand how the Hermetic dragon,
the Ouroboros serpent that embodies the formless materiality at the base of
the universe and which swallows itself, forming an eternal circle, described
by the magical tradition as a blind and terrible monster that must be dominated by the human intellect, is in reality a threat already conveniently
defused, an enemy already defeated, since its circularity allows it to be
beheaded at every instant, frictionlessly unrolling all the mysteries of the
cosmos. But a universe in disequilibrium confronts us with a creature far
more frightening and hungry, an infinitely-headed Beast, wrapped around
itself in countless twisting coils, which, in its frantic joy, tears everything
to pieces, devouring us too.
The Right Hand Path has always known that the simplest way to maintain
one’s dominance is to absorb any form of dissent. For this reason, going
beyond the surface—and by surface we refer, for instance, to certain
forms of bourgeois Christianity or to so-called ‘white magic’, both of which
exclude any kind of ‘dark’ practice or contact with demonic entities—all
the most important minds of contemporary esotericism have remarked that
black magic ‘does not exist’, that it is nothing but a simplified and partial
expression of the Kabbalistic dogma. These statements are designed to
reinforce the conviction, common to initiates and non-believers alike, that
there is only one truth, and that it is not possible to find, in the Hermetic
theory of reality, the hidden trick that keeps it standing, without which it
would collapse ruinously.
The principal mistake committed, more or less deliberately, by the vast
majority of those who tried to trace a Left Hand Path in opposition to that
indicated for centuries by the Hermetic tradition, was that of doing no
more than working toward a reversal of the dogmas of the Right Hand Path,
evidently ignoring that a system endowed with total symmetry remains, by
definition, identical to itself whichever way it is turned. The glyph of the
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Celestial Man, or ‘Tree of Life’, may suggest to a naive observer, in its visual
21
simplicity, that it might be easy to build a model of the world alternative to
Dogma
the one it proposes—and it is precisely this trap that has prevented any
authentic Left Hand Path from asserting itself until now. Not surprisingly, the
Tree of Life has been turned over countless times by gullible satanists, giving
rise, among other things, to the so-called ‘Tree of Death’, which, in addition
to having an unconvincing name, is nothing but an exact reproduction of the
Kabbalistic diagram proposed by the Right Hand, rebranded to be offered
to a new audience.
Contemporary satanism in its entirety is nothing but a reinterpretation of
the dogmatic principles of the Right Hand Path, clothed in new garments so
as to attract the interest of new groups of potential initiates. It is therefore
not surprising to note that many forms of satanism are often accompanied
by an obsession with power, an exaltation of the individual, and a frantic
negation of the existence of God which becomes an affirmation of one’s
own individual divinity. This satanism is in no way structurally different from
the religion it wants to oppose; it proposes, in an ultra-simplified and, in
all probability, scarcely effective way, the same dogmas and practices to
which the Western Hermetic tradition has always referred.
The Hermetic Kabbalah is appropriately armoured against any attempt
at sabotage from within. Under no condition will it ever be sufficient to
invert any symbol proposed by the Right Hand Path—from the Tree of Life
itself to crosses and pentagrams—in order to obtain something radically
different from its original meaning. The only way to trace a path toward an
alternative esotericism is to definitively break the symmetry of the Hermetic
Kabbalah, proposing a new system based upon entirely different symbols and
connections. First of all, however, it is necessary to answer a crucial
question: Why do we need an alternative?
Let us start from considering that the Right Hand dogma has spread in
a capillary fashion to assure its dominion over any other world view, even if
rarely in an explicit and manifest way. Contrary to what one might think, in
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22
fact, the viral spread of Hermetic Kabbalah is not a question that concerns
Dogma
only those few who are interested in the occult, but is an actual global
demonological ritual in which everyone, willingly or not, is a participant.
Understanding this fact would require a long digression on demonology and
its meaning; for the purposes of this text, it is sufficient to clarify that we
refer to the interpretation of demonology as hyperstition, and that we rely
upon the belief that demonic entities can enter the material plane to feed
and multiply through human vectors.
The Hermetic Kabbalah is an extremely powerful evocation seal, and an
entry portal into our space-time plane for a specific demon, one who has
been given many different names. We will refer to him as AHIH; the Primordial
Point, the White Head, the One in Whom All is Right. Over millennia, AHIH
has fed himself and has grown, expanding to reach every corner of human
society, adapting in a surprising way to the historical and cultural changes
of his host animals. At this point, the indissoluble link between the Right
Hand Path and the Judaeo-Christian religions, made explicit by numerous
esotericists in recent history, will certainly be clear; the main tenets of
Christianity, starting with the Trinity, are nothing but the expression of
Kabbalistic mysteries in the form of religious messages. Despite the fact
that different forms of magic and esotericism have been and still are openly
opposed by the institution of the Church, the same dogmas and the same
vision of reality lie at the base of both traditions, hidden by merely apparent
contrasts which in fact are devoid of meaning, and serve to maintain a veil
of mystery over the true nature of AHIH.
What is crucial for us to understand is that the influence of the Right
Hand dogma reaches out into the social and political dimension, imposing a
highly organisational and hierarchical force aimed at establishing a pyramid
with Man on top, be it an absolute monarchy legitimised by God, a Nazi-fascist dictatorship, a white ethnostate, or a meritocratic society dominated by
the figure of the cisgender heterosexual white male. The link between AHIH
and these kinds of political structures can be understood by interpreting
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the Kabbalistic glyph and observing how, in this model of reality, everything
23
comes from a single point, Kether, the Crown, the Point Inside the Circle.
Dogma
The high level of order required by this type of structure is connected to
the need for the political and military control of those who participate in it;
the sefirot, with their flaming swords, are the last defenders of this cosmic
order. The fundamental idea that allows this order to be maintained and to
reproduce itself is the assumption that it is natural. In the name of nature,
abhorrent crimes have been and are still being committed, rivers of blood
have been spilled; rape, genocide and slaughter are hymns to the eternal
glory of AHIH, perpetrated in the name of the idea that Man is naturally
destined to dominate everything that is different from his image.
We have talked about the concept of equilibrium, and how the possibility of achieving it in aggregated structures is actually a fabrication, an
arbitrary assumption recounted as truth. Imposing the dominion desired by
the Right Hand has a price, because an overall increase in order can never
be a spontaneous event in the universe; when a highly structuring force
acts within a system, it prompts a greater disruptive force to act outside,
accelerating the process of its own downfall. The reign of AHIH is a cruel
and desperate fire destined to become extinct in the silent waters of Nun;
in its slow agony, it drags huge masses of bodies into misery and suffering,
devastates its environment, and strangles its own children.
All of this considered, it is not surprising that on several occasions the
political Right has appropriated traditional concepts and practices of ceremonial magic to acquire consensus and expand its domain; this happened at
the dawn of Nazi-fascism, and continues today in the demonological practices of the alt-right. If a Left Hand Path can ever be born, it will therefore
be necessary for it to assume a clear political connotation, opposed, both in
dogma and in ritual practice, to the cult of AHIH and to all that it represents.
In this regard, it is crucial to add a final and fundamental element to
this discussion, and to talk about what we can build on the ruins of the
temple of the God of Man. It will not have escaped the reader that the
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24
vision of the cosmos described in this text is rather dark. The acceptance
Dogma
of our thermodynamic destiny leads us to confront the terror of the abyss
of our individual dissolution. From the point of view we want to propose, it
is precisely the glorification of the individual, and the frantic desire for the
preservation of the integrity and unity of one’s own being, which awakens
in man the mirage of his own divinity; an illusion that requires, in order to be
sustained, a coercive social order and the constant sacrifice of the bodies of
the oppressed. Thus we find ourselves on the brink of a chasm: the tyranny
of Man behind us and an inhuman and formless darkness before our eyes.
How can we reach a darkness so radically and frighteningly alien to
everything we know? How can we think of approaching its black fire without
being destroyed? She is singularity; we understand the necessity of Her
existence, but we can never guess at the enormity of Her wonder. We know
Her from the stories of men as an immense anthropophagous serpent which,
every night, threatens to forever swallow the Sun and its light, plunging the
world into an eternal twilight; and in these same stories, every night the
serpent is defeated, so that the Sun can return to shine once again.
But no sun burns forever. Any god who promises salvation is lying,
because there is no salvation in the jaws of the Beast. Whoever receives
the bite of the serpent knows true terror, and, in the darkness of her womb,
meets Love and is reborn to a new life. Cosmic Love is by definition a
suicidal love; only while we fall inexorably into our dissolution can we fulfil
our destiny and shine.
This concept of Love is very distant from its patriarchal expression; it is
not limited to romantic-sexual attraction, it is not an expression of unconditional altruism, nor is it a religious ecstasy disconnected from the flesh.
Love is the thermodynamic property of bodies that attracts them to their
death. Love is the door that allows us to reconcile ourselves with darkness,
provided that we understand its true meaning, and that we do not make
the mistake of subjecting it to our individual consciousness, transforming
it into a play of mirrors. Confronted with a thermodynamic universe, we
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understand that every moment of our existence is the spontaneous fruit
25
of a wonderful proliferation to which we belong entirely.
Dogma
Among Love’s many meanings, one relates, in the case of heteropatriarchal society, to the trade of bodies for forced procreation, with the
aim of nurturing the mirage of a glorious future for humanity. The Love we
refer to is rooted instead in a rejection of the idea of a path of salvation, is
opposed to the dogma of conservation, and manifests itself as a radical
opening of the individual toward the darkness outside.
The elimination of the idea that our existence is oriented toward the
fulfilment of a divine plan, the realisation of a higher purpose, spiritual enlightenment, or social power leaves us completely alone in the contingency of our
lives; indeed, we may easily understand that the future is a lie when we reflect
that not only will our own life sputter out one day, but also the sun, all the
stars in the sky, and ultimately the entire universe. Before a decomposing and
dying cosmos, the patriarchal Man-God claims his last insane and delirious
privilege, building hierarchies and hallucinations of greatness in a frantic
attempt to hold together his rotting and monstrous body. If nothing is of
any importance, if everything degenerates and crumbles, Man stands as an
emperor of dust, because he knows no way of existence other than dominion.
We propose Love for the cosmic process of disintegration and death
as an alternative, refusing to articulate the reasons. Love generates itself
indefinitely, precipitating, like a sinister spiral, the world into darkness. We
love with our bodies burning like supernovae, shining and useless; with every
breath, we feed the hungry Beast that wraps us in its dark coils.
GdN
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May I disappear from the skies when I will have consumed myself; my end
will then be rather beautiful! Know that in the temple of God there burn
different fires, who all render glory unto him; you are the light of the golden
chandeliers, and my flame is that of sacrifice.
Éliphas Lévi1
A countdown clock still runs on one of the countless forgotten pages in the
wastelands of the early 2000s web. The website www.99942-apophis.com
hosts a timer that marks the duration left before Earth’s annihilation by a
near-Earth object, asteroid 2004 MN4, later renamed (99942) Apophis, the
Greek name for the Egyptian abyssal snake-god Apep, the Destroyer. Below
a picture representing the catastrophic impact of a gigantic space rock with
the earth, an eerie epitaph is written in red characters, like the testimony
of a vaporwave Ozymandias in the dust of his abandoned cyber-kingdom:
This page is in some way still under construction.
I have some time left before 2036.
Some trouble could this timeline be. I am 80 years in 2036.
So the question is; if Apophis or a heart attack will strike me first.
Yes I know my English could be better.2
1.
É. Lévi, The Doctrine and Ritual of High Magic: A New Translation, tr. J.M. Greer and M.A.
Mikituk (New York: TarcherPerigree, 2018), 194.
2.
Anonymous, 99942 Apophis 2004 MN4, <https://web.archive.org/web/20200602220236/
http://www.99942-apophis.com/>.
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Cata st r o p h i c A st r o lo gy
2004 MN4
27
CATASTROPHIC ASTROLOGY
28
2004 MN4 was first discovered in the summer of 2004 by a group of astron-
Cata st r o p h i c A st r o lo gy
omers at the Kitt Peak National Observatory in Arizona. A few months after
the discovery, NASA’s Sentry and ESA’s NEODyS automated monitoring
systems predicted a possible impact of the asteroid with the earth on April 13,
2029. On December 23, 2004, the computed probability of the 2029 collision
increased dramatically, having first been estimated at 1 in 300 but, later that
day, rising to 1 in 62. Over the following days, the probability continued to
increase until it reached 2.7%, the highest value ever recorded, with an
unprecedented Torino hazard scale rating of 4. As the astronomers had
widely anticipated, after further observations and calculations, the impact
probability plummeted and the possibility of the 2029 event was excluded;
nonetheless, a second coming of Apophis—exactly seven years after the
first one, on April 13, 2036—was still considered cause for concern, owing to
the possibility, albeit unlikely, that the asteroid’s trajectory could deviate as
it passed through a gravitational keyhole, determining a new risk of collision.
By 2013, even this small possibility of impact had been ruled out. Friday the
13th of April, 2029 will still be a night to remember, as a three-hundred-metre-wide asteroid crosses the night sky closer than ever recorded, visible
even to the naked eye.
There is a strange affinity between the internet and doomsday. Civilisation’s morbid fascination with its own annihilation has often been relegated
to the deepest and most anonymous corners of the web, where, next to
scam advertisements threatening horrendous bodily deformities, dark omens
of death and destruction steal more clicks than even the most depraved
pornography. Somehow, secretly, we want to know—in the darkness of
our incognito windows—how many seconds, minutes, hours, days, months,
and years separate us from our doom. Are we dying of some incurable and
disgusting disease? When will the earth be engulfed by the fiery abyss of
our expiring sun? A mirror of our most terrifying nightmares is always one
Google search away, or even closer, haunting social media with our antisocial
urges, as if the Algorithm already knew—and it does—what scares us and
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excites us the most. Are we afraid? Are we looking for salvation? Or are we
29
just waiting, aroused by the panic-ecstasy of disintegration? When it comes
Cata st r o p h i c A st r o lo gy
to the impact of Apophis, or any other real or imagined threat of apocalypse,
the many rational and scientific arguments that solicit the public to remain
calm, debunking the fake news that spreads unjustified alarm, can never
completely eliminate our fear and our desire for destruction; on the contrary,
science itself seems to fuel the very conspiracy theories it tries to suppress,
being distorted and transformed from cautious information into prophecy.
(99942) Apophis is not merely a celestial body, or an astronomical object:
its influence expands far further than its gravitational field, as it becomes
entangled with our cosmological destiny and speaks to the depths of our
being; it is the flaming messenger of a catastrophic revelation. Apophis is,
without doubt, the offspring of the limited gaze of scientific inquiry, since
the veil of apocalyptic horror that surrounds it is rooted in the cold mechanical equations that dominate its orbit and in the ghost of its spectral signal
registering on our sensors from the depths of space. Nonetheless, no matter
how carefully science insists on tracing the limits of its own understanding,
barricading itself behind walls of axioms and boundary conditions, it inevitably
becomes an oracle, a spiritual medium, opening a laceration onto a radical
Outside and summoning an invasion of voices of long-lost demons into our
world, not unlike a cursed Cassandra who refuses to surrender to her own
prophetic utterances. In this sense, conspiracy theorists and cybernetic
oracles of the coming apocalypse draw upon scientific knowledge not as a
source of reliable predictions of reality, but rather ‘as a poetics of the sacred’,3
thus transforming astronomy into an astrology of Armageddon.
One of the first and most illustrious examples of the prophetic power of
science is reported by Galileo Galilei in his Sidereus Nuncius:
I feel sure that the surface of the Moon is not perfectly smooth, free from
inequalities and exactly spherical, as a large school of philosophers considers
3.
N. Land, The Thirst for Annihilation (London: Routledge, 1992), 37.
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with regard to the Moon and the other heavenly bodies, but that, on the
Cata st r o p h i c A st r o lo gy
contrary, it is full of inequalities, uneven, full of hollows and protuberances,
just like the surface of the earth itself, which is varied everywhere by lofty
mountains and deep valleys.4
At the time this was written, the dominant Aristotelian doctrine taught that
the cosmos, along with all the elements that composed it, was perfectly
spherical, and that no imperfection was allowed to exist outside of the earth.
Gazing through his telescope, Galileo was struck by a blasphemous revelation: that the moon, and by extension the entire universe, was irremediably
dirty and subject to the same processes of degradation and dissolution
that we experience in our world. The apparently innocuous words of his
statement, supported by the reasonable argument of scientific observation,
hide an actual, gruesome deicide; if the universe is not perfect and eternal,
how could God be? As we now know, the moon’s surface was disfigured
by asteroids just like Apophis—celestial omens of death whose distorted,
eccentric trajectories escape the comprehension of spherical cosmology.
Interestingly, Galileo somehow expiated his blasphemy by opening the way
to the formulation of the principle of the conservation of energy—the first
principle of thermodynamics—through his experiments on motion. The
spherical nature of the universe was somehow preserved in the symmetry
of the laws of mechanical motion, which imply the total reversibility of all
dynamic processes and thus the nonexistence of time as a material drive
toward degradation. From this consideration it obviously follows that the
ultimate prophecy of doom channelled by science is the second principle of
thermodynamics in its statistical-mechanical interpretation, as understood
by Ludwig Boltzmann:
After this confession you will take it with more tolerance if I am so bold as to
claim your attention for a quite trifling and narrowly circumscribed question.
4.
G. Galilei, Sidereus Nuncius (Oklahoma City: Byzantinum, 2004), 7.
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[…] The second law proclaims a steady degradation of energy until all ten-
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sions that might still perform work and all visible motions in the universe
Cata st r o p h i c A st r o lo gy
would have to cease. All attempts at saving the universe from this thermal
death have been unsuccessful, and to avoid raising hopes I cannot fulfil, let
me say at once that I too shall here refrain from making such attempts.5
The ‘narrowly circumscribed question’ of condemning the entire cosmos to
irremediable heat death breaks with any surviving hope that the universe
may be, in any capacity, spherical, reversible, or eternal. Boltzmann was a
meticulous scientist and a convinced upholder of the inherent boundaries
of science and human knowledge; but despite his understandable caution in
approaching the subject of his own ground-breaking discoveries, the proof of
his H-theorem, containing a probabilistic argument in support of the second
principle of thermodynamics, is not merely a speculation on the behaviour of
an ideal gas of non-interacting particles, but rather the elaborate conjuration
of an eldritch aberration. As we diligently follow the intricate steps of this
twisted ritual, summoning functions and variables and transmuting them
through the arcane operations of calculus, we finally reach the Quod Erat
Demonstrandum, manifesting the apocalyptic truth of the death of the
universe and unleashing it into reality. There is minimal need of scientific
understanding to operate the conjuring machine of thermodynamics; it just
works—until it works no more.
When I first met Apophis I was 11 years old. A classmate had told me
that an asteroid was going to hit the earth in twenty-five years’ time. As
a child, my mind was always haunted by an unusual obsession with death,
but I had never, before that moment, contemplated the idea of the end of
humanity and confronted the possibility of extinction. In my nightly terrors,
I had often considered my own disintegration, dissecting in every possible
way the paradoxical insanity of being an individual, and then being no more;
5.
L. Boltzmann, Theoretical Physics and Philosophical Problems, tr. P. Foulkes, ed. B.
McGuinness (Dordrecht and Boston: D. Reidel, 1974), 15–19.
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but there was something strangely reassuring about the idea of dying as a
Cata st r o p h i c A st r o lo gy
part of the universal cycle of Nature, as if in an eternal wildlife documentary
where death is perfectly compensated by new life and equilibrium is forever
preserved. I was never truly Catholic. I was raised not to believe in any God,
but there was something religious about the way I was taught to approach
Nature as a redeeming force of heterosexual preservation: the sun sets
only to rise again; we die, only to leave room for our offspring to thrive and
carry on our legacy. As a cisgender girl approaching puberty, I could finally
access salvation by consecrating myself to the natural cycle of heterosexual
reproduction; but if an alien force could shatter this harmony to pieces,
putting an end to our species, our planet, our universe, then there was truly
no hope. Apophis was my lesbian love for Extinction.
Desire could thus be said to be nothing but becoming a woman, at different
levels of intensity, although of course, it is always possible to become a pious
woman, to begin a history, love masculinity and accumulate […] But reality
drifts upon zero, and can be abandoned over and over again. In the lesbian
depths of the unconscious, desires for/as feminizing spasms of remigration
are without limit. Everything populating the desolate wastes of the unconscious is lesbian.6
Little did I know that Apophis would visit me again, some ten years later,
appearing in a vivid dream as an immense celestial serpent encircling and
devouring the earth, and hissing to me the secrets of time-sorcery and the
mysteries of the Great Arcanum. All I can recall from those days are a few
lectures on statistical quantum mechanics, the persistent image of my body
collapsing on concrete, and a deep, devouring feeling of cold.
Think to yourself: ‘This is.’ If this knowledge leads you back to yourself, and,
6.
Land, The Thirst for Annihilation, 26.
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as you experience a sense of deadly cold, you feel an abyss yawning beneath
33
you: ‘I exist in this’—then you have achieved the knowledge of the ‘waters’.7
Cata st r o p h i c A st r o lo gy
APOPHIS OR THE UNCREATOR
In that day, the LORD will punish with his sword—his fierce, great and powerful sword—Leviathan the gliding serpent, Leviathan the coiling serpent;
he will slay the monster of the sea.
Isaiah 27:1
The inhabitants of the earth […] will be astonished when they see the beast,
because it once was, now is not, and yet will come.
Revelation 17:8
Apophis, the Egyptian serpent-god of the Netherworld, belongs to a lineage
of Mesopotamian chthonic deities incarnating primeval chaos and darkness.
References to Apophis recur in the spells reported in the Pyramid Texts,
in the Coffin Texts and in the Book of The Dead, where it is described as
a great snake dwelling in the dark waters of the night, waiting to swallow
the solar boat of Ra after it drops beyond the horizon. The recurrence of
Apophis in these texts—whose main function was to protect the souls of
the dead in their crossing to the afterlife—sheds some light on the deep
and intimate connection between the astrological dimension of the Sun-Ra
mythos, the political construction of human society and the journey of individual consciousness in Egyptian cosmology. Somewhat similar mythological
creatures in the Mesopotamic tradition are the biblical Leviathan and the
Babylonian Tiamat, both sharing with Apophis their serpentine/reptilian
appearance, their fundamental affinity with the sea, and their cosmic battle
7.
J. Evola and the Ur Group, ‘Knowledge of the Waters’, in Introduction to Magic: Rituals
and Practical Techniques for the Magus, tr. G. Stucco, ed. M. Moynihan (Rochester, VT: Inner
Traditions, 2001), 17.
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with some male solar deity syncretised with the figure of the King, a struggle
Cata st r o p h i c A st r o lo gy
which ends in their slaughter and the profanation of their body. Of particular
interest is the figure of the goddess Tiamat, who, after rebelling against the
god Marduk, is killed, and her body split in two parts, which form the earth
and sky of our world. This creation myth reveals the beast Tiamat as an Original Mother of humankind, whose flesh is the substance that sustains our
existence, but who is inevitably dismembered and annihilated as a result of
her giving birth to the world; the literal penetration of her flesh by the Babylonian God is the insemination of dark matter with light, and her massacred
body is the clay out of which all existence is shaped. The feminine subjecting
itself to this cosmic process of rape is considered unripe, as expressed by
the green colour of the Hermetic dragon representing untamed matter at
the beginning of the alchemical Opus; unsurprisingly, the same unripeness
appears in Jungian psychoanalysis as a pathologisation of non-heterosexual
or non-conforming womanhood, of the woman who evades the reproductive
patriarchal order, refusing to take on her role as Great Mother and dialectical
counterpart to male consciousness. Femininity, in the equation ‘woman =
body = vessel = world’,8 is only determined in motherhood—that is, only in
relation to the other—and through bleeding—that is, only as a function of
wounding. Even her devouring, monstrous aspect is to be interpreted from
the masculine perspective of the child seeking liberation from the chains of
the unconscious, as a necessary adversary in a process of growth. Femininity
is constricted in the circularity of the reproductive process of civilisation,
but, as Amy Ireland points out in her article ‘Black Circuit: Code for the
Numbers to Come’, the true revolutionary potential of femininity lies in the
possibility of uncoupling it from its association with the masculine:
Woman plus man produces homeostasis (the equilibrium of inequality), but
woman plus woman, or woman plus machine, recalibrates the productive
drive, slotting it into a vector of incestuous, explosive recursion that will
8.
E. Neumann, The Great Mother (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1963), 39.
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ultimately tear the system it emerges from to shreds, pushing it over the
35
‘brink’ into something else.9
Cata st r o p h i c A st r o lo gy
Unlike Tiamat, Apophis cannot be killed: no matter how many times the
Creator-God penetrates its flesh, it is never destroyed; it is an uncreating
force that overcomes creation. Apophis is not reborn like a dialectical One;
it is recursion, not reproduction; it is the autogynophilic, sterile, lesbian Zero
forever excavating itself, onto which everything collapses.
As the solar disk plunges into the darkness of Duat, so do the souls of the
dead, facing the ancient monster that lies beyond the light of existence:
unconstructed matter, eternal recombination, necessary dissolution. The
True Zero, the Unborn, the Uncreator, hungry for human and divine blood
alike, swallowing souls and worlds and digesting them into the Prima Materia of the ocean of Nun. The daily struggle of Ra against Apophis ensures
the cyclical reaffirmation of the glory of the Sun God and his life-giving
light, the preservation of civilisation and the rebirth of the souls of the dead
into the afterlife, so that a new dawn can rise on the world of men; but
the kingdom of Ra is constantly leaning over the abyss of the exponential
recurrence of the serpent’s regeneration. The possibility of the murder of
the Sun by the fangs of Apophis is mirrored by the astrological aberration of
the solar eclipse, which ultimately breaks the cycle of rebirth, violating the
sacred harmony of the cosmos. In the Book of Overthrowing Apep, a ritual
text reported in its most complete version in the Bremner-Rhind papyrus,
Apophis is referred to as ‘the rebel’, hinting at the political dimension of the
struggle between the God and the Beast: the preservation of the cosmos
depends on the possibility of the King’s maintaining his power against the
centrifugal forces of disaggregation, placing Apophis in the position of the
supreme adversary—Satan—to his dominion. The text’s insistence on the
9.
A. Ireland, ‘Black Circuit: Code for the Numbers to Come’, e-flux 80 (2017), <https://
www.e-flux.com/journal/80/100016/black-circuit-code-for-the-numbers-to-come/>.
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disintegration and dismemberment of the body of the beast, especially
Cata st r o p h i c A st r o lo gy
its decapitation, may be intended as an alchemical recipe for the birth of
humanity, produced by the slaughter of the primeval Ouroboros:
O APEP THOU FOE OF RE, THOU SHALT DIE, DIE! MAYEST THOU PERISH, MAY THY NAME PERISH, THY TEETH BE SOFT, THY POISON SPILT;
MAYEST THOU BE BLIND AND UNABLE TO SEE. FALL UPON THY FACE;
BE FELLED, FELLED! Be crushed, crushed! Be annihilated, annihilated! Be
slain, slain! Be cut to pieces, to pieces! Be cut up, cut up! Be severed, severed! Be slaughtered, slaughtered! Thy head shall be cut off with this knife
in the presence of Re every day, for he allots thee to Aker, and he crushes
thy bones.10
Egyptian magick identifies Apophis with a primordial principle of Uncreation:
unformed matter that must be continuously violated, through a separatio
of its original non-duality into the Kabbalistic dyad, so that the world may
come into being.11 This is the essence of the alchemical Opus, and the
expression of the highest aspiration of the Right Hand Path, as clearly stated
by Abraxas in the Gruppo di Ur’s Introduction to Magic:
In our Tradition, these ‘waters,’ or Humidum Radicale (‘radical Humidity’),
have been symbolized as ∇ (downward direction, precipitation). They have
also been referred to as the ‘earthly Venus,’ as female and cosmic matrix
( ∇ in Hinduism is the symbol of Shakti and of the yoni), or as ‘Original Snake’
(because of the serpentine path ≈, which is the astrological equivalent of ∇ ).
[…] And now, since you wished to learn about it, realize that the ‘Science of
10.
R. O. Faulkner, ‘The Bremner-Rhind Papyrus’, Journal of Egyptian Archaeology 24:1 (1938),
45.
11.
On the thermodynamic relation between work and separation: ‘Energy may take three
forms, the visible motion of bodies, thermal motion, that is the motion of the smallest particles,
and finally work, that is the separation of mutually attracting bodies or the approach of repelling
ones.’ Boltzmann, Theoretical Physics and Philosophical Problems, 18.
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the Magi’ wills this and disdains anything that is not this. To create something
37
stable, impassive, immortal, something rescued from the ‘Waters’ that is now
Cata st r o p h i c A st r o lo gy
living and breathing outside of them, finally free; and then, like a strong man
who grasps a raging bull by the horns, slowly but relentlessly subjugating
it, to dominate this cosmic nature in oneself—this is the secret of our Art,
the Art of the Sun and of Power, of the ‘Mighty Strength of all Strengths’.12
The ritual decapitation of the snake that brings forth duality, taming the
flood of uncreated matter, is rendered possible by a principle of symmetry,
that is, equilibrium. The serpent bites its own tail because it is a self-sufficient machine in perpetual motion, fuelled by the same body that it sustains;
a cannibalistic universe that eats itself without ever being consumed. As the
circle is broken, as the man-God sets himself in the centre, generating an
alchemical Sun, the infinite free energy of this impossible engine can be harvested indefinitely, producing a hermetic battery whose polarities—Chokmah and Binah,13 the Subject and his Object—are forever preserved. But the
myth of Apophis confronts us with a far more terrible serpent, one whose
hunger cannot be satiated by feasting on its own flesh; it is the non-ideal,
dissipative system of a universe that precipitates toward Extinction. Apophis,
the ultimate thermodynamic horror, does not bite its own tail, because it is
biting us; and, as it swallows the world into darkness, it reveals itself as the
blazing fire of the Black Sun, illuminating the putrefaction of the God of man.
12.
Evola and the Ur Group, ‘Knowledge of the Waters’, in Introduction to Magic, 18.
13.
‘The path of heterodoxy and disintegration into infinitely many individuated particles begins
with woman, Binah. This paradoxically makes it not merely that the weak Eve was tempted by
the evil Serpent, but rather that the origins of Evil lie in Eve. Or rather, in woman’. n1x, ‘Gender
Acceleration: A Blackpaper’, Vast Abrupt, 2018, <https://vastabrupt.com/2018/10/31/genderacceleration/>.
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38
NEMESIS OR THE BLACK SUN
Cata st r o p h i c A st r o lo gy
Because You love cremation grounds
I have made my heart one
so that You
Black Goddess of the Burning Grounds
can always dance there.
No desires are left, Mā, on the pyre
for the fire burns in my heart,
and I have covered everything with its ash
to prepare for Your coming.14
A model in which the 26-Myr mass extinction cycle of Raup and Sepkoski
(1984) is associated with the orbital period of a solar companion star is investigated. The required semi-major axis is about 88,000 A.U., or 1.4 light years.
Its highly eccentric orbit (i.e. greater than about 0.9) periodically brings the
companion into the dense inner region of the comet cloud where it perturbs
the orbits of large numbers of comets, initiating an intense comet shower in
the solar system which results in several terrestrial impacts over a period of
100,000 to a million years. The companion probably has a mass in the black
dwarf range of 0.0002 to 0.07 solar masses, depending on its eccentricity
and the density distribution of comets in the inner cloud, and is potentially
observable in the infrared.15
In the article ‘Are Periodic Mass Extinctions Driven by a Distant Solar Companion?’, published in the journal Nature in 1984, authors D.P. Whitmire and
14.
R.F. McDermott, Singing to the Goddess: Poems to Kālī and Umā from Bengal (Oxford:
Oxford University Press, 2001), 74–75.
15.
D.P. Whitmire and A.A. Jackson, ‘Are Periodic Mass Extinctions Driven by a Distant Solar
Companion?’, Nature 308 (1984), 713–715.
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A.A. Jackson speculate on the existence of an undetected star in our solar
39
system, constituting, together with our sun, a binary star system.
Cata st r o p h i c A st r o lo gy
In a paper published in the same issue of Nature, M. Davis, P. Hut and A.
Muller baptise the unseen star:
If and when the companion is found, we suggest it be named Nemesis, after
the Greek goddess who relentlessly persecutes the excessively rich, proud
and powerful. We worry that if the companion is not found, this paper will
be our nemesis.16
Interestingly, the theory of the existence of Nemesis emerged as a possible
explanation for the cyclical repetition of mass extinction events on Earth
registered in the fossil record. The recurring passage of the hypothetical
dark star across the Oort cloud, a region located at the deep boundary of our
solar system and populated by billions of comets, was deemed responsible
for the distortion of the orbits of the icy worlds inhabiting the cloud, which
would then be cast across our solar system and impact the earth, causing
planetary devastation and bringing life to the brink of annihilation.17 If Nemesis was indeed out there, then, according to the calculations proposed by
Davis et al., it would now be at its maximum distance from the sun, and the
next wave of catastrophic collisions should arrive about 15 million years
from now.
Despite the fact that no firm trace of Nemesis has been found, and
possibly never will be, and despite the theory of the 26-Myr mass extinction
16.
M. Davis, P. Hut, and R. A. Muller, ‘Extinction of Species by Periodic Comet Showers’,
Nature 308 (1984), 717.
17.
Nick Land on cyclic mass-extinction events: ‘In order to actually up the game, nothing quite
substitutes for a super-compressed catastrophe (or mass extinction) which cranks evolution to
the meta-level of superior “evolvability”. By gnawing-off and burning entire branches of life, crises
plowing deep into the X-risk zone stimulate plasticity in the biosphere’s phyletic foundations. […]
Gnon isn’t Malthus. It’s the thing toasting Malthus’ liver—in the fat-fed smoldering ashes of the
biological kingdom it just burnt down.’ N. Land, ‘The Harshness’, in Reignition: Nick Land’s Writings
(2011–), <https://github.com/cyborg-nomade/reignition>, Tome 4, 189.
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40
cycle being strongly contested, the legacy of Nemesis survives in the
Cata st r o p h i c A st r o lo gy
imagination of countless conspiracy theorists and in the sensational titles of
publications on the web. The idea of a dark, deadly twin to our life-giving sun,
proposed by astronomers for an exquisitely scientific reason and without the
pretension of suggesting any kind of cosmological truth, offers us a glimpse
into the abyss of a universal horror: that the sun, in its burning, offers us a
vital energy that is not without retribution, and that the same burning that
we experience as nurturing and vibrant is, in itself, the sacrificial pyre to its
own deranged greatness: ‘a certain madness is implied, […] because it is no
longer production that appears in light, but refuse or combustion’.18 Nemesis
was never found because, as the speculations of several paranoid theorists
point out, it is hiding behind the sun, which engulfs it in its brilliance, making
us all blind to the truth of our coming extinction; the dark companion of the
sun is indeed the sun itself. From this perspective, the name of the goddess
Nemesis, daughter of the night goddess Nyx, appears particularly fitting
in its association with the Greek word νέμειν, meaning to give what is due.
Extinction is the price we pay for our existence, the fuel consumed and
forever lost, the surplus of energy we cannot grasp; it is the necessity of
expenditure, that is, the spontaneity of our existence, since ‘the verbal root
of spontaneity, PIE *spend- (to make an offering, perform a rite, to engage
oneself by a ritual act), contains this sense of sacrifice and self-offering,
just as we speak of the spontaneous as something “surrendered to”, as to a
whim. The spontaneity of authentic transformation is also thus a species of
death, of surrendering to the expiration of what is untenable.’19
Civilisation, as the bright twin of our binary Sun, ‘has the form of an
unsustainable law’,20 and appears as the desperate negation of spontaneity
as it aggregates itself in architectures of horrendous symmetry; nonetheless,
18.
G. Bataille, ‘Rotten Sun’, in Visions of Excess: Selected Writings 1927–1939, tr. A Stoekl
(Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1985), 57.
19.
N. Masciandaro, On the Darkness of the Will (Milan: Mimesis International, 2018), 34.
20. Land, The Thirst for Annihilation, xix.
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if we stare long enough into its feverish light, it reveals itself in its nigredo,
41
as a cancerous proliferation, no less revolting than a corpse being nibbled
Cata st r o p h i c A st r o lo gy
by countless contorting worms. The shimmering temple of God, the perfect
balance of His Kabbalah, the great ‘humanizing project’,21 is but a sub-product
of the godless precipitation of matter into darkness, ‘a precarious stabilization
and complication of solar decay’.22 The history of civilisation is always told
backwards, as seen through the lens of an impossible time machine; there
is no true thermodynamic paradox in the existence of life, because it is not
a process of aggregation, but rather an acceleration of disaggregation, a
mindless engine consuming itself to death. The martyrdom of Christ on the
cross is the necessary sacrifice for the preservation of the patriarchal order
of the One God Universe,23 revealing the inevitably dissipative nature of the
Kingdom of God and expiating the thermodynamic sin of organic existence,
so that, as the flesh of the creator is slaughtered, the darkened sun ‘hiddenly
gives witness to a zone of occult identity between the immanent summit
of perfection and the kenotic abyss of God’s self-dereliction’.24 Cast out at
the edge of our known universe, like a ritual scapegoat venturing into the
desert, the Black Sun responds with an invasion of fiery comets from the
sky, because there is no real outside to store its excess—it is life itself that
is being sacrificed.
NIBIRU OR THE GREAT CITY OF BABYLON
The great planet:
At his appearance: Dark red.
The heaven he divides in half
as it stands as Nibiru.25
21.
Ibid.
22. Ibid., xviii.
23.
See Ccru, ’Lemurian Time War’, in Ccru, Writings 1997–2003 (Falmouth and Shanghai:
Urbanomic/Time Spiral, 2017), 33–52.
24. Masciandaro, On the Darkness of the Will, 98.
25. Z. Sitchin, The Twelfth Planet (New York: Harper, 1976), 242.
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42
What is the terrible ruby star
Cata st r o p h i c A st r o lo gy
that burns down the crimson night?
What is the beauty that flames so bright
athwart the awful dawn?
She has taken flesh, she is come to judge
the thrones ye rule upon.
Quail ye kings for an end is come
in the birth of BABALON.26
In his infamous 1976 book The Twelfth Planet, conspiracy theorist Zecharia
Sitchin proposed an argument in favour of the existence of an unseen
planet in our solar system, based on his interpretation of ancient Babylonian
cosmology and astrology. This planet, the astronomical incarnation of the
god Marduk, patron deity of the City of Babylon, was responsible for the
creation of the earth when, smashing against the lost planet Tiamat, it
tore her apart; one part of her would constitute our planet, and the other
the asteroid belt and the comets of the solar system. In this very literal
and simplistic transposition of the Babylonian creation myth as told in the
ancient Babylonian text Enûma Eliš, the collision of Marduk with the planet
Tiamat was the moment of the insemination of our dead, uncreated world:
There was no premeditated ‘seeding’; instead, there was a celestial collision.
A life-bearing planet, the Twelfth Planet and its satellites, collided with
Tiamat and split it in two, ‘creating’ Earth of its half. During that collision the
life-bearing soil and air of the Twelfth Planet ‘seeded’ Earth, giving it the
biological and complex early forms of life for whose early appearance there
is no other explanation.27
26. J. Parsons, ‘The Book of Babalon’, Hermetic Library, <https://hermetic.com/parsons/thebook-of-babalon>.
27.
Sitchin, The Twelfth Planet, 256.
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Marduk, our original metropolis, is according to Sitchin inhabited by the race
43
of the Anunnaki, whose name was historically used to refer to the Gods and
Cata st r o p h i c A st r o lo gy
Goddesses of the pantheons of ancient Mesopotamian religions, but who,
rather than spiritual beings, are a species of superintelligent and all-powerful
aliens. Seeing that life on Earth was but a defective and debased version
of the life that had evolved on Marduk, the Anunnaki intervened in the
development of the primates populating Earth with biological engineering,
creating Homo Sapiens in their own image, and dominating the ancient
Babylonian civilisation as gods. Ignoring his clear religious connotation as
a solar deity, Sitchin insists that Marduk is some kind of rogue, sunless
planet that reached the solar system from outer space, not creating, but
rather colonising our Earth; it is an invading force acting from the outside
in, rather than an expanding force extending from its centre. Rather than
creators, the Anunnaki, also referred to as Nefilim, the ancient biblical race
of giants, are described as settlers: Sitchin insists that ‘the story of the
first settlement of Earth by intelligent beings is a breathtaking saga no
less inspiring than the discovery of America’.28 The city of Babylon—the
‘Gateway of the Gods’29—was the first outpost of this planetary expansion,
a hyper-technological spaceport connecting Earth to her alien invaders.
Owing to the cyclic nature of Marduk’s encounters with the earth, it was
named Nibiru, ‘planet of crossing’.30
Sitchin’s pseudo-historical narrative was a brilliantly fascinating work of
science fiction, destined to influence our image of extraterrestrial intelligent
life and ancient human civilisations for decades to follow, but his impact
extended far beyond the limits of mere fiction, entering the domain of
astrology and prophecy. Firstly, it is significant to point out that, as is the
case for Apophis and Nemesis, the supposed existence of an undetected
faraway planet in our solar system is rooted in an ongoing scientific debate
28.
Ibid., 283.
29.
Ibid., 150.
30. Ibid., 240.
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44
about unexplained aberrations in the orbits of other celestial bodies in the
Cata st r o p h i c A st r o lo gy
Kuiper Belt, which, according to recent mathematical modelling,31 could be
accounted for by the presence of a large unobserved planet hiding beyond
Pluto, nicknamed ‘Planet X’ or ‘Planet Nine’. Secondly, while Sitchin’s
prophecy remains somewhat incomplete, hinting at a vaguely defined End
Of Days associated with the return of Nibiru, his work was completed in
the 90s by Nancy Lieder, who was supposedly contacted by aliens warning
her about an incoming cataclysm owing to the passage of Nibiru into the
inner solar system, which would cause the earth to be destroyed; the inevitable catastrophe was, and still is, being covered up by governments and
institutions, in order to avoid a global wave of panic and nihilism that would
crush the social, political, and economic order of the world. Quoting from
the archive of Nancy Lieder’s website ZetaTalk:
Article: <6ftpfq$sd5@dfw-ixnews5.ix.netcom.com>
Subject: Planet X/12th Planet Cover-Up Mechanism
Date: 1 Apr 1998 16:20:10 GMT
[…] The panic that would ensue from a general announcement of the forthcoming cataclysms would in and of itself be deemed a disaster to avoid.
Beyond the concerns of the banking industry, which would collapse due to
lack of confidence in the continuing worth of many assets, and beyond the
concerns of industry which requires the faithful attendance of its employees
in order to function, there is concern about possible looting, suicides, mass
migration of peoples, and never-ending demands that the government do
something.32
31.
See K. Batygin and M. E. Brown, ‘Evidence for a Distant Giant Planet in the Solar System’,
The Astronomical Journal 151 (2016), 22.
32. N. Lieder, ‘Re: Planet X/12th Planet Cover-Up Mechanism’, ZetaTalk, 1998, <http://www.
zetatalk.com/usenet/use00561.htm>.
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A great deal more could be said about the theory of the Nibiru cataclysm and
45
its impact on contemporary culture.33 Two aspects of this visionary epic of
Cata st r o p h i c A st r o lo gy
extinction are particularly relevant to us for the elaboration of a catastrophic
astrology: the reversal of the original timeline of the Mesopotamian creation
myth and the mysteriously recurring association between the City of Babylon and the Apocalypse. The final impact with Nibiru that will put an end to
humanity as we know it mirrors exactly the creation of the earth from the
remains of the planet Tiamat; in Sitchin’s own words, somehow ‘the roles
of, and references to, Tiamat and Earth appear to be interchangeable. Earth
is Tiamat reincarnated’.34 In other words, the Nibiru cataclysm is not simply
the death of our world, but rather a birth in reverse: instead of being shaped
out of the flesh of some sacrificed Original Mother, arising from formless
darkness into light, life is sucked into a disintegrated future, reversing the
patriarchal narrative of progress. From the perspective of human civilisation,
Nibiru is thus a time-travelling monstrosity that comes from the future, for
the future, realising the self-fulfilling prophecy of annihilation summoned
by the same humanity that it created. Nibiru is not merely a planet, but the
spaceship of an invading alien civilization, whose technological advancement
allows it to understand that the only possible, energetically efficient outlook
for the advancement of their species is disintegration.35
33.
‘– The earth is evil. We don’t need to grieve for it.
– What?
– Nobody will miss it.
– But where would Leo grow up?
– All I know is, life on Earth is evil.
– There may be life somewhere else.
– But there isn’t.’
Melancholia, dir. Lars Von Trier, 2011.
34. Sitchin, The Twelfth Planet, 231.
35. ‘The only way to get more tight-feedback under current conditions is by splitting, in every
sense. That is the overwhelming practical imperative: Flee, break up, withdraw, and evade. Pursue
every path of autonomization, fissional federalism, political disintegration, secession, exodus, and
concealment. Route around the Cathedral’s educational, media, and financial apparatus in each
and every way possible. Prep, go Galt, go crypto-digital, expatriate, retreat into the hills, go
underground, seastead, build black markets, whatever works, but get the hell out.’ N. Land, ‘Quit’,
in Reignition, Tome 2, 767.
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46
Nick Land on the energetic economy of gravity:
Cata st r o p h i c A st r o lo gy
Lift-off, then, is merely a precursor to the first serious plateau of anti-gravity
technology, which is oriented towards the more profoundly productive task
of pulling things apart, in order to convert comparatively inert mass-spheres
into volatile clouds of cultural substance. Assuming a fusion-phase energy
infrastructure, this initial stage of off-world development culminates in the
dismantling of the sun, terminating the absurdly wasteful main-sequence
nuclear process, salvaging its fuel reserves, and thus making the awakened
solar-system’s contribution to the techno-industrial darkening of the galaxy.36
A sufficiently advanced civilisation will have to surrender to the inescapable
law of thermodynamic nemesis—the fact that no more can be put together
than is being torn apart; from the inertial reference system of an accumulating economy, whose timeline runs from dismemberment to aggregation,
any disaggregating force is an invader collapsing backwards from the future.
It is thus unsurprising that, as stated by Sitchin, ‘Marduk was coming into
the solar system not in the system’s orbital direction (counterclockwise)
but from the opposite direction’:37 Nibiru, entering our world from the deep
outside, is a planet forever in retrograde, because our sun-propelled gravitational time-loop prevents us from grasping the universe’s entropic drive
toward destruction. Tiamat is no longer a primitive beast slaughtered on the
altar of human civilisation, an original virgin to conquer and destroy. She is
‘the Vast Abrupt, and the crossing’,38 She is ‘the Great Propeller’,39 silently
permeating our universe, undetected until She crashes into our reality. She
is the future, and the future is female.
36. N. Land, ‘Lure of the Void’, in Reignition, Tome 2, 749.
37.
Sitchin, The Twelfth Planet, 219.
38.
N. Land, ‘The Cult of Gnon’, in Reignition, Tome 4, 166.
39.
Ibid.
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The idea that futurity is inherently feminine, and that femininity is the grave
47
that Mesopotamian solar patriarchy excavated for itself unknowingly, is
Cata st r o p h i c A st r o lo gy
contained in the Book of Revelation in the figure of the whore of Babylon.
Babylon shares with Nibiru a blurred definition of her identity: altogether she
is a woman, a Goddess, a city and a civilisation; both of their names, meaning
respectively the gateway and the crossing, do not indicate a particular place
or time, but rather a relation between places and times. Both are associated
with redness, as they are red with the blood of childbirth and the blood of
slaughter; both stand and both fall at the End of Days. On a more superficial
level of interpretation, Babylon incarnates a morally dissolute civilisation that
thrives on wasteful consumption and celebrates the pleasures of the flesh;
as city of the Tower, she is associated with unconstrained technological
advancement beyond the boundaries of anything natural or human. Impure
and artificial, decadent and oriental, implanted with shimmering prosthetic
jewels, she is the Western dream of the city of the Future.40 Babylon is
described in contrast with an opposing version of femininity, expressed by
the figure of the Celestial Mother bearing the child of God; but somewhere
in the desert they fuse together, becoming one and the same. The feminine
Prima Materia, dismembered to give birth to the kingdom of God, is the
apocalyptic Beast that ‘once was, now is not, and yet will come up out of
the Abyss’,41 undead, crawling backwards from the future through the gates
of Babylon to extinguish herself in a glorious fire together with everything
that She created.
40.
‘The Western civilization in which Modernity ignited was ultimately combusted by it. From
an Occidental Traditionalist perspective, Modernity is a complex and prolonged suicide. An UltraModernist, who affirms the creative destruction of anything in modernization’s path, assumes
an alternative criterion, inherent to Modernity itself. It asks: What had to happen to the West
for it to become modern? What was the essential event? The answer (and our basic postulate):
Zero arrived. […] In Europe, zero was an alien, and from the perspective of parochial tradition, an
infection. Cultural resistance was explicit, on theological grounds, among others. Implicit in the
Ontological Argument for the existence of God was the definition of non-being as an ultimate
imperfection, and ‘cipher’—whose name was Legion—evoked it. The cryptic Eastern “algorism”
was an unwelcome stranger.’ N. Land, ‘Zero-Centric History’, in Reignition, Tome 4, 195.
41.
Revelation 17:8, NIV.
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Gaze into the sky, for the Future has come.
Cata st r o p h i c A st r o lo gy
Mark our words: She is the Mother, the Devourer and the Fires that Consume the Universe.
Burn, love, and understand.
Today is the twilight of the God of Man.
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LT
and everlasting monologue unfolding in the depths of this colossal brain,
which was inevitably beyond our understanding.
Stanislaw Lem1
HYDROGEN
In school they loaded me with tons of notions which I diligently digested,
but which did not warm the blood in my veins. I would watch the buds swell
in spring, the mica glint in the granite, my own hands, and I would say to
myself: ‘I will understand this, too, I will understand everything, but not
the way they want me to. I will find a shortcut, I will make a lock-pick, I will
push open the doors.’
It was enervating, nauseating, to listen to lectures on the problem
of being and knowing, when everything around us was a mystery pressing
to be revealed: the old wood of the benches, the sun’s sphere beyond the
windowpanes and the roofs, the vain flight of the pappus down in the June
air. Would all the philosophers and all the armies of the world be able to
construct this little fly? No, nor even understand it: this was a shame and
an abomination, another road must be found.
Primo Levi2
Chemists are all afflicted by a strange, morbid melancholy. A black humour
that exhales from our twisted stills, and which is perhaps only a strange
1.
S. Lem, Solaris, tr. J. Kilmartin, S. Cox (London: Faber, 1970), 22.
2.
P. Levi, The Periodic Table, tr. R. Rosenthal (New York: Schocken, 1984), 26.
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S p e ct r a l M at e r i a l i sm
Our instruments had intercepted minute random fragments of a prodigious
49
SPECTRAL MATERIALISM
50
contagion caused by intimate daily contact with the intoxicating vapours of
S p e ct r a l M at e r i a l i sm
our solvents. It is said that even the brightest mind in human history, that of
Isaac Newton, was momentarily overshadowed by the poisonous miasma of
his alchemical mercury when, in search of the Gold of the Philosophers, he
allowed himself to be plunged into the creeping darkness of chemical transformation. Moreover, the experience of experimental chemistry occupies a
traditionally ambiguous position in the grand scheme of the sciences. Where
the physics experiment is typically framed in order to provide a confirmation
or refutation of a theoretical hypothesis formulated in advance, chemical
synthesis has an intrinsically productive and transformative nature, having
as its primary objective the generation of a new substance, and only as a
collateral purpose—assuming it is possible at all—the construction of a
predictive and generalised model of its field of knowledge.
In fact, it is curious how much the vision of science as the luminous
triumph of reason over matter seems to be completely shattered when it
encounters the test of life in the laboratory. It is not uncommon, within the
walls of chemical laboratories, for fatalistic, even magical, thinking to spread
about the forces controlling the outcome of certain operations of synthesis
or techniques of analysis. In a confused grey area between superstition
and irony, I have seen votive candles appear next to excessively capricious
instruments, and apotropaic talismans based on animal remains forgotten in
the dustiest corners of lab counters. The spectre of irreproducibility haunts
everyone when, countless times and for no apparent reason, the material
escapes the operator’s control. On the other hand, it is not uncommon for
a chemist’s skill in his field of expertise to be described using categories
that are difficult to define, such as sensitivity and intuition, indicating a
mysterious and incommunicable elective affinity between certain human
minds and certain inanimate substances.
When, for the first time, the solutions to Erwin Schrödinger’s equation
for the hydrogen atom were calculated with pen and paper, chemistry could
for a brief moment be considered a solved problem. On the other hand, while
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physics had succeeded for centuries in predicting with startling accuracy
51
the behaviour of the macroscopic world by means of its equations of motion,
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directing with impeccable elegance the celestial symphony of the stars,
chemistry had to make do with prophetic and obscure periodic numerologies,
remaining of necessity a radically experimental science. Indeed, the strictly
microscopic nature of the molecular world for centuries made it undetectable
by conventional means of human investigation, leading to the formulation of
hidden nondeterministic systems of affinities and correlations to describe
these unthinkable motions.
It is important to bear in mind that the chemical problem is not trivially
limited to a question of scalability in classical physics. It is no coincidence
that almost every general chemistry course begins by drawing a line between
physical transformations, which do not change the molecular nature of a
body, and chemical transformations, in which the atomic organisation of
matter is modified. This distinction, which appears to us to be quite natural
and obvious, contains a subtext that is often overlooked: that, somehow,
there must be a discontinuity between our understanding of the macroscopic
world and the microscopic understanding of the molecular world, and that
the laws identified by the physics of macroscopic bodies cease to be valid on
a smaller scale. If atoms and electrons were no more than miniature versions
of ordinary bodies, every transformation would be physical (in the sense
described above) and chemistry would have no reason to exist.
This qualitative difference between the molecular and macroscopic
worlds was set out extremely clearly by Schrödinger, who pointed out that
the deterministic laws of the physics of macroscopic bodies are merely
the statistical result of innumerable microscopic phenomena, about whose
mechanisms we have, in principle, no experimental guarantee; indeed, we
cannot even assume that the very concept of mechanism is applicable on
an atomic and subatomic scale. It was only with the advent of quantum
theory that physics finally gained some theoretical weapons with which to
question chemistry, that heretical and rebellious discipline that for centuries
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had been disinherited from the ranks of respectable sciences. The analytical
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solution to the problem of the hydrogen atom can therefore be seen as the
missing piece that made it possible to build the long sought-after continuity
between the physics of macroscopic bodies and the chemistry of molecular
matter. However, it is important to emphasise two aspects that trouble any
such unified portrait of contemporary science: the first, more technically,
concerns the impossibility of extending the same analytical approach to
more complex chemical systems; the second, more generally, concerns the
place of quantum theory in relation to classical physics.
In principle, one might think that, once the mysterious rules of the quantum game are revealed, any chemical problem, whatever its complexity, can be
solved by applying the same principles; in reality, any system more complex
than the hydrogen atom—that is, any molecular system—is an analytically
unsolvable problem. For this reason, quantum chemistry has had to rely on
numerical and computational methods, intrinsically approximate and often
supplemented with experimental information, to describe with satisfactory
accuracy the state and evolution of a molecular system from a theoretical
point of view. Even these methods, however, are to date unable to replace
the synthetic experimental approach, except to a very limited extent. In
this sense, chemistry remains, by its very nature, a radically indeterministic
science—there is no single, coherent set of laws that can analytically and
accurately predict the evolution of a chemical reaction under its actual
experimental conditions.
As regards the computational aspect, it is important to bear in mind that
the intensive computational methods used by quantum chemistry could, in
the not-too-distant future, be rendered obsolete by artificial intelligence.
In a recent study published in the journal Nature, an AI was charged with
devising efficient synthetic strategies for the preparation of small organic
molecules. Devoid of any notion of physics, the machine was able to produce results comparable to those of its human counterparts using only the
experimental procedures contained in previous articles in the literature.
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We do not know whether the mind of this contemporary silicon alchemist
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harbours the ultimate laws of physics, or whether it is rather inhabited by
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magical, occult connections.
Naturally, the most immediate approach to the description of a chemical
reaction is to think of it as the result of a series of collisions between
rigid spheres, like a tiny game of billiards. This is a view that fits into the
perspective of the more traditional atomism, in which one imagines that
matter is made up of microscopic individual units whose behaviour is
analogous to that of ordinary macroscopic bodies. In these terms, then, all
chemistry would be easily describable by means of classical physics, and
every chemical reaction could be studied by means of relatively simple in
silico simulations, similar to those of a video game. The different outcome
of each collision would essentially depend on the distribution of the initial
conditions, and the difficulties in making exact predictions would depend
exclusively on our ignorance of the initial state of the system, owing to its
excessive complexity.
Although this approach is, in some contexts, a useful modelling tool, it is
totally unsuitable for describing and predicting the actual chemical behaviour
of molecular systems for a number of reasons, first and foremost its inability
to account for chemical bonding. In fact, the difficulty of modelling chemical
reactions is far more radical than a simple problem of incomplete information.
The chemical reaction is a strictly quantum phenomenon, which can in no
way be described by the classical model. Chemical bonding is, classically, a
completely inconceivable phenomenon, because in the classical theory there
is no way to justify the fact that a certain atom—classically understood as a
rigid microscopic sphere—binds to others according to specific and recurrent
proportions. In order to formulate any theory of chemical bonding, one must
necessarily admit that the microscopic world is dominated by a strange
statistics—that of the Pauli exclusion principle—and that microscopic
matter manifests an inherent discontinuity, expressed in the discrete nature
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of the molecular excitations and vibrations that constitute the foundation
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of the chemical event.
This is a fundamental point because, in the practice of chemical synthesis,
the quantum properties of matter become manifest and unavoidable on the
scale of direct experience. In this sense, to think of quantum mechanics as
something that manifests itself exclusively on a microscopic scale, accessible
only through sophisticated modern technology, is inaccurate and misleading.
Everything chemical is a quantum phenomenon, including the metabolic
reactions that keep us alive. Not in the commonly understood sense that
there is some wave component in all bodies, even macroscopic ones, which
can however be translated in practice by approximating their behaviour to
the classical one, but in the sense that chemistry, by its nature, cannot be
approximated to any reasonably functioning classical model. No wonder Isaac
Newton was himself an alchemist, when even his elegant theory of bodies
in motion paled before the spectral behaviour of this weird quantum matter.
We can therefore begin to see how the chemical laboratory constitutes a
kind of liminal space, in which contact is established between two apparently irreconcilable regimes of matter: the macroscopic-statistical and the
microscopic-quantum. It is legitimate to ask oneself how far it is possible to
access quantum matter, and under what conditions this encounter can be
translated into a form of scientific knowledge proper. This general problem
has been at the centre of a long scientific and (necessarily) philosophical
debate, initially opened by the same scientists who had been protagonists
in the formulation of modern physics.
Given the enormity of the issue we are dealing with, and the huge number
of authors who have dealt with it, I cannot aspire to give a complete picture
of it here. I shall confine myself to addressing the problem of quantum
indeterminacy, presenting it first from the point of view of the physicists
who contributed the most to its formulation, with particular emphasis on
the scientific and epistemological debate between Werner Heisenberg and
Erwin Schrödinger. These two authors can be thought of as representing
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two different and irreconcilable approaches to the quantum problem: Hei-
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senberg’s approach, which postulates indeterminacy as the ultimate limit of
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scientific knowledge of bodies, beyond which the problem of the existence
and nature of quantum matter is essentially meaningless, and Schrödinger’s
approach, which accepts the contingency as a real attribute of the particle,
in the face of which the old view of matter must be entirely reformulated,
abandoning the corpuscular model and embracing the wave model.
The history of science is often seen as a succession of discoveries, each
surpassing the previous ones and tracing a straight line identical with
the progress of human knowledge, but neglecting how often conflicting
visions of the same phenomena, all formally correct, can coexist. The most
egregious case is the formulation of the new quantum physics through
the approach of matrix mechanics, proposed by Heisenberg, and that of
Schrödinger’s wave mechanics; the two formulations, which later turned
out to be mathematically equivalent, and which had managed to lead in an
analogous way to the solution of the problem of the hydrogen atom, implied
two radically different visions of matter. This old scientific debate, now filed
between the lines of the introductory paragraphs of physics textbooks, is
well known and largely resolved. However, hidden between the snares of
mathematical formalism and the romanticised biographies of its authors,
there is still an open wound.
The theoretical apparatus that accompanies quantum mechanics
implicitly posits a profound separation between matter at the moment of
measurement, which we can broadly understand as matter that manifests
itself—regardless of whether it is visible to a human observer, an instrument,
or any classical body—and matter itself, which we can understand as being
in a state chronologically prior to measurement, or, more generally, as matter
that does not interact with any classical observer. Such a separation, by no
means unprecedented in the history of Western thought, was however a
completely new problem in the strictly scientific sphere. Whereas previously
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the scientist could speculate on whether or not there was something out
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there and what its properties were, without worrying too much about it
and remaining well within the limits of the world of measurable matter, with
the rise of modern physics that thing out there suddenly invaded the field
of science, imposing itself in an overbearing way at the centre of a debate
that was previously purely physico-mathematical rather than philosophical.
The most representative moment of this debate was undoubtedly Heisenberg’s formulation of the uncertainty principle in 1927:
Every observation of scattered light coming from the electron presupposes
a photoelectric effect (in the eye, on the photographic plate, in the photocell) and can therefore also be so interpreted that a light quantum hits the
electron, is reflected or scattered, and then, once again bent by the lens of
the microscope, produces the photoeffect. At the instant when position is
determined—therefore, at the moment when the photon is scattered by the
electron—the electron undergoes a discontinuous change in momentum.
This change is the greater the smaller the wavelength of the light employed—
that is, the more exact the determination of the position. At the instant at
which the position of the electron is known, its momentum therefore can be
known up to magnitudes which correspond to that discontinuous change.
Thus, the more precisely the position is determined, the less precisely the
momentum is known, and conversely.3
Heisenberg’s explanation, which today remains the most well known and
commonly accepted, is that the experimenter’s act of observing the particle
brings about a perturbation of its trajectory which cannot be arbitrarily
reduced until it becomes completely negligible. And it is precisely because
of the ineliminable interference of the observer that the particle, previously
undisturbed in its original state, cannot be known completely.
3.
W. Heisenberg, Quantum Theory and Measurement, ed. J. A. Wheeler, W. H. Zurek
(Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1983), 64.
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This interpretation is essentially based on the idea that the quantum particle
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is a corpuscle with a trajectory along which it moves unperturbed until it
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is observed by the experimenter, whose observation ‘hits’ the particle with
what we could define as ‘cognitive radiation’. Although this explanation
may appear to be an intuitive and scientifically objective justification of the
problem of indeterminacy, it carries strong assumptions about the nature of
the particle, assumptions that the principle of indeterminacy itself renders
necessarily invalid. In fact, this view raises two fundamental problems. The
first is related to the fact that it attributes intrinsically classical characteristics to the quantum object, i.e. it assumes that the particle is at all
times endowed with a trajectory. This is in stark contrast with the wavelike
behaviour manifested by quantum objects, for example in the well-known
double-slit experiment, where an understanding of particles as corpuscles is
essentially incompatible with the possibility of their producing interference
phenomena. The second, more general problem is that in this account,
indeterminacy is reduced to a question of incomplete knowledge, without
the traditionally accepted view of classical physics being radically challenged.
A similar criticism was made by Schrödinger in his 1950 essay entitled ‘What
is an Elementary Particle?’, where he wrote:
I fully agree that the uncertainty relation has nothing to do with incomplete
knowledge. It does not reduce the amount of information attainable about a
particle as compared with views held previously. The conclusion is that these
views were wrong and we must give them up. We must not believe that the
completer description they demanded about what is really going on in the
physical world is conceivable, but in practice unobtainable. This would mean
clinging to the old view.4
4.
E. Schrödinger, ‘What is an Elementary Particle?’, Annual Report of the Board of Regents
of The Smithsonian Institution (1950), 183–196: 187.
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The ‘old view’ to which Schrödinger refers here is not classical mechanics
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as a whole, but rather one of its fundamental assumptions, namely that
every body studied can be treated as an individual with specific properties
that locate it in time and space. In his essay ‘Are there Quantum Jumps?’,
Schrödinger fiercely criticises the corpuscular view of matter, i.e. the
‘nightmare that physical events consist in continual sequences of little fits
and jerks, the handing over of energy corpuscles from one particle (or group
of particles) to another’.5 In this sense, Schrödinger’s thinking anticipates
the proposal put forward by James Ladyman, David Spurrett, Don Ross,
and John Collier in their 2007 essay Every Thing Must Go, in which they
challenge the attachment of metaphysics to the corpuscular model, despite
the abundant evidence that speaks in favour of its overcoming:
The metaphysics of domestication tends to consist of attempts to render
pieces of contemporary science—and, at least as often, simplified, mythical
interpretations of contemporary science—into terms that can be made sense
of by reference to the containment metaphor. That is, it seeks to account for
the world as ‘made of ’ myriad ‘little things’ in roughly the way that (some)
walls are made of bricks. Unlike bricks in walls, however, the little things
are often in motion. Their causal powers are usually understood as manifest
in the effects they have on each other when they collide. Thus the causal
structure of the world is decomposed by domesticating metaphysics into
reverberating networks of what we will call ‘microbangings’—the types of
ultimate causal relations that prevail amongst the basic types of little things,
whatever exactly those turn out to be.6
5.
E. Schrödinger, ‘Are there Quantum Jumps?: Part II’, British Journal For the Philosophy of
Science No. 3 (1952), 233–242: 241 [translation modified].
6.
J. Ladyman, D. Spurrett, D. Ross, and J.C. Collier, Every Thing Must Go (Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 2007), 4.
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The concept of the domestication of scientific theories by the dominant
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cosmological view is particularly interesting for our purposes, because it
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allows us to place Heisenberg’s interpretation of the uncertainty principle
within a broader context. It is not merely a simplification that fails to account
for the complexity of the physical phenomenon of indeterminacy, but rather
a deliberate attempt to place the new quantum theory within a collisional
view of physical phenomena and our knowledge of them.
The fact that this view has been so successful, essentially reducing the
problem of quantum indeterminacy to a microscopic game of marbles, may,
as suggested by Ladyman, be interpreted as a desire to remain anchored in
the reassuring image of a world made up of individuals, rejecting the fluid and
relational nature of quantum matter. In fact, both Ladyman and Schrödinger
focus on a refutation of the traditional concept of individuality applied to
quantum particles, emphasising that this must be dismantled or at least radically reworked, in order for it to be applicable to the experimental evidence
and mathematical models of the new physics. For both authors, the calling
into question of particle individuality derives naturally from the statistics
of quantum objects, which implies the indistinguishability of particles in
entangled states. In Schrödinger’s words:
If we wish to retain atomism we are forced by observed facts to deny the
ultimate constituents of matter the character of identifiable individuals. Until
recently, atomists of all ages, for all I know, had transferred that characteristic from visible and palpable pieces of matter to the atoms, which they could
not see or touch or observe singly. Now we do observe single particles [...].
Yet we must deny the particle the dignity of being an absolutely identifiable
individual.7
The pervasive description of Heisenberg’s uncertainty principle as the result
of a collision is therefore a symptom of the domestication of quantum theory
7.
Schrodinger, ‘What is an Elementary Particle?’, 191.
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to our familiar corpuscular worldview, and at the same time a domestication
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of quantum matter to human knowledge.
In many ways, the contemporary subatomic myth implies a very precise
cosmological vision, one in which the active position of the experimenter
studying the material is clearly separated from the passive position of the
particle being investigated, in a process whose violence is well exemplified,
in Heisenberg’s story, by the catastrophic impact between the particle and
the beam of light that strikes it. From this point of view, the originary nature
of the particle before its interaction with humankind is a simple theoretical
assumption which, in fact, is given no relevance: it is a hypothetical substratum whose only purpose is to be transformed into active knowledge through
the intervention of the observer. This is evidenced by the fact that Heisenberg
himself is hesitant to attribute any form of reality to quantum matter per
se: ‘there is no “substance” that follows specific laws, but only complexes
of connections which we can experience and that when we describe them
we also occasionally use words like substance or matter’.8 In a certain sense,
then, the natural result of such an approach is the conclusion that the particle
does not exist until it is known—which is not only absolutely paradoxical and
counterintuitive, but also contains the disturbing subtext that the human is
a kind of demiurge, ceaselessly producing matter through knowledge.
Heisenberg’s unidirectional approach to the knowledge of particles is rightly
challenged by Karen Barad in her essay Meeting the Universe Halfway,
where she uses the concept of diffraction to propose a vision of knowledge
in which the clear separation between the knowing subject and the known
object is broken, and knowledge emerges as a phenomenon of interference
between the two. To support her proposal, Barad refers to the principle
of complementarity proposed by Bohr in 1927 to reconcile the corpuscular
and wavelike views of quantum matter. The fundamental assumption of
8.
W. Heisenberg, Reality and its Order, tr. M.B. Rumscheidt, N. Lukens, I. Heisenberg, ed. K.
Kleinknecht (Cham: Springer, 2019), 36.
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this principle is the idea that the measuring apparatus must be considered
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an integral part of the physical phenomenon, and therefore cannot be
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separated from the object being studied; not only are the corpuscular and
wave motions mutually complementary, but they also manifest themselves
in different and mutually exclusive instrumental set-ups:
Since individually determinate entities do not exist, measurements do not
entail an interaction between separate entities; rather, determinate entities
emerge from their intra-action. I introduce the term ‘intra-action’ in recognition of their ontological inseparability, in contrast to the usual ‘interaction’,
which relies on a metaphysics of individualism [...]. A phenomenon is a specific intra-action of an ‘object’ and the ‘measuring agencies’; the object and
the measuring agencies emerge from, rather than precede, the intra-action
that produces them. Crucially, then, we should understand phenomena not
as objects-in-themselves, or as perceived objects (in the Kantian or phenomenological sense), but as specific intra-actions.9
Setting out from a contestation of individualism as a constitutive principle of
matter, Barad elaborates the idea that there is a mutual influence between
the object studied and the apparatus that analyses it, and that there can be
forms of knowledge other than the unidirectional one proposed in Heisenberg’s model. What Barad seems to overlook with regard to Bohr’s interpretation, though, is that the measuring apparatus and the object of study
cannot really be placed on the same plane. For Bohr, in fact, the fundamental
condition of possibility for measurement is that the apparatus used must
be considered classical, and must therefore be of a substantially different
nature to the quantum object. In this sense, Bohr’s measuring apparatus acts
more as a sort of translator, serving to reconcile the quantum behaviour of
matter with classical language, without being directly involved in any interference phenomenon. In other words, Bohr’s complementarity presupposes
9.
K. Barad, Meeting the Universe Halfway (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2007), 128.
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the establishment of an underlying asymmetry which is constitutive of the
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experiment and cannot be considered as a simple product of intra-action.
In fact, the necessary condition for any interference phenomenon to
occur is that two or more waves should interact with each other, i.e. interference is a fact that concerns the interaction of quantum bodies with other
quantum bodies. It is easy to understand how such a system lies far from the
mental experiments formulated by Heisenberg or Bohr, whose fundamental
assumption is that we are observing a single particle isolated from all others; in this sense, the individuality of the particle is an axiom opportunely
programmed into the measuring apparatus, rather than an actual property
of the quantum particle. Here we can once again refer to Schrödinger, who
emphasises that the possibility of treating quantum particles as individuals is
strictly dependent on their density: it is possible to study quantum objects in
such a way that they exhibit a kind of individuality, provided that the density
of states available to them is sufficiently low. In other words, it is necessary
that the amount of interaction between the studied quantum object and
other quantum objects is sufficiently small for the corpuscular model to be
considered valid. When the density increases, the behaviour of particles can
only be understood according to the wave approach, which excludes any
treatment of particles as individuals. In Schrödinger’s words:
One has the impression that the more the individuality of the particles is
suppressed by the increase in their density, the more the corpuscular model
becomes inadequate to describe them, and must be replaced by the wave
model. For example, in the electronic rings of an atom or molecule the
density is extremely high, since almost all the states within a certain region
are occupied by electrons. The same applies to the so-called free electrons
within a metal.10
10.
Schrodinger, ‘What is an Elementary Particle?’, 194 [translation modified].
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It is interesting to note that Schrödinger mentions here three particular
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cases in which the wavelike behaviour of matter emerges in an inescapable
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way: atoms, molecules and crystalline solids. In all of these contexts, which
essentially encapsulate the field of investigation of chemistry, one is not
dealing with an isolated particle interacting with a classical apparatus, but
with a legion of interpenetrating quantum bodies, whose boundaries are
unclear to the point of vanishing altogether. Experimental chemistry, then,
is concerned not with defining trajectories for solitary, non-interacting particles, but rather with witnessing the fluid, multifaceted potential of quantum
matter in perpetual resonance with itself.
The celestial harmony of classical physics is perfectly accommodated to
the human ear, so much so that, more or less voluntarily ignoring the progress
of contemporary physics, we continue to marvel at the incredible consonance between microcosm and macrocosm, deceived by the extraordinary
naturalness of the Newtonian accord. The subatomic visions of quantum
matter are the inaudible beat of a dance that does not concern us: a liquid
symphony in constant dissonance, which matter murmurs to itself in solitude.
NITROGEN
Now the five months of anxious waiting had passed: from among us eighty
freshmen had been selected the twenty least lazy and foolish—fourteen
boys and six girls—and the Preparation laboratory opened its doors to us.
None of us had a precise idea of what was at stake: I think that it was his
invention, a modern and technical version of the initiation rituals of savages,
in which each of his subjects was abruptly torn away from book and school
bench and transplanted amid eye-smarting fumes, hand-scorching acids,
and practical events that do not jibe with the theories.
Primo Levi11
11.
Levi, The Periodic Table, 34.
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The experience of the chemical laboratory is a ritual of deep communion and
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incommunicable solitude. Every laboratory I have set foot in was unique, but
each shared with all the others a peculiar and indefinable atmosphere, a bit
like churches. Maybe it’s the smell of the solvents, the uninterrupted ticking
of the magnetic stirrers, the flickering glow of the burning instruments, the
hum of the extractor hoods, the ghostly hiss of the water running through
the pipes. I remember how, upon entering a synthesis laboratory for the first
time, confronted with the reagents on display on the counter, I was overwhelmed by a feeling of dangerous intimacy, as if that dead matter, which I
had to tame and interrogate with my red-hot irons, could in turn penetrate
through the confines of my skin and contaminate me irreversibly. The work
of synthesis has a certain almost initiatory quality: there are experimental
experiences that are remembered as milestones in one’s training as a chemist, and which—even though they have now almost fallen into disuse—are
regularly repeated in teaching workshops, because you have to have been
there, at least once in your life.
Perhaps it is because of this curious tendency of special chemistry toward
esotericism, or perhaps because of my unusual nocturnal readings, that,
during one of my innumerable curricular laboratories, I was visited by a
strange dream.
My colleagues and I, dressed in our white coats, were gathered in an
underground laboratory of our department, where we were preparing to take
part in a strange ritual. One by one, we approached a large steaming dewar
from which there emanated an icy blue luminescence. The luminous liquid
was then extracted by means of a long needle and injected under our skin,
leaving an arcane mark on our left arms. When it was my turn, the man in
charge of this mysterious procedure examined my forearms, tattooed with
the alchemical symbols of sulphur and mercury—a reminder of my naive
and enthusiastic freshman days, when my vague notions of science blended
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with a confused fascination with the occult. ‘You forgot Nitrogen’, he said in
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a tone of remorse, before going on to cauterize my flesh with liquefied gas.
S p e ct r a l M at e r i a l i sm
The experience of encountering liquid nitrogen is undoubtedly one of
the most intense and impressive milestones for newcomers to chemical
synthesis. Although easily rationalised, the properties of this substance
appear paradoxical and disturbing, so distant are they from any phenomenon
we are accustomed to witnessing: it is a strangely dry liquid which burns
the skin like a flame only to vanish spontaneously in a frenzied freezing boil.
For water-based life forms like us, its state functions are necessarily alien,
evoking the extraterrestrial landscapes of remote moons, covered by oceans
of incomprehensible fluids.
The word azoth, coined in 1787 shortly after the element’s discovery by
the Scottish chemist Daniel Rutherford, and which to this day remains the
Italian word for nitrogen—azoto—refers to the inert nature of the gas, which,
unlike oxygen, cannot be used by living beings to drive the organic molecules
they eat to produce energy. For this reason, it took its name from the Greek
ἀ-ζωή, meaning ‘lifeless’. Curiously, numerous mediaeval and Renaissance
alchemical texts, long before nitrogen was identified as a chemical compound,
contain recurring references to a miraculous substance called Azoth. As is
well known, many terms currently in use in the chemical sciences—including
the names of many elements and substances, as well as numerous preliminary techniques and pieces of experimental equipment—derive more or
less directly from the alchemical tradition; it is therefore plausible that, in
choosing the name for the newly discovered substance, the chemists of the
time were influenced by alchemy, which was still widely practiced.
The word Azoth, according to a kind of Kabbalistic etymology presented
by Basil Valentino in his treatise of the same name in 1613, was interpreted
as a kind of magic formula in which the occult meaning of the Great Work
was realised:
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And as with everything else, from the greatest to the smallest, the begin-
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ning and the end come from God, the A and the O, the omnipresent. The
Philosophers have graced me with the name Azoth, with the Latin letters A
and Z, the Greek a and I, the Hebrew אand ת, Aleph and Tau, which added
together give ‘AZOTH’.12
The word Azoth therefore contains a kind of intrinsic circularity, and it is
precisely because of this circularity that its realisation is the crowning
achievement of the alchemical work. Several authors insist on the identification of Azoth with the Elixir or universal medicine, which contains the
key to the transmutation of metals into gold and eternal life. The circularity
of Azoth is the same as that of Ouroboros the serpent, another alchemical
symbol in which the mystery of the Great Work is concealed.
In spite of its many vital and positive associations, Azoth remains surrounded by a certain ineradicable ambiguity, which can be likened to the
creeping restlessness that surrounds the symbol of Ouroboros. If, on the one
hand, Azoth is the expression of a condition of total equilibrium, as registered
in the phonetic-Kabbalistic interpretation of its name, this equilibrium has a
deadly and chaotic aspect to it, which converges on the definition of nitrogen
as the ἀ-ζωή. In fact, in alchemy and in the Hermetic tradition as a whole,
the union of opposing polarities can be achieved via two processes—a
centripetal action which coagulates opposites in a productive synergy, or a
centrifugal one which dissolves them in a state of sterile primordial chaos—in
which equilibrium is achieved through maximum thermodynamic multiplicity.
To tell the truth, from the first moment I read the word, I could never help
associating azoto with something obscure and vaguely demonic. The aforementioned treatise on chemistry attributed to Basil Valentino actually has a
rather obscure origin, according to the alchemist Fulcanelli dating back to
12.
B. Valentino, Azoth (Rome: Edizioni Mediterranee, 1988), 105.
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tenth-century Arabia and particularly to the work of Muhammad ibn Umail
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al-Tamimi.
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Although this attribution is controversial to say the least, there is little
doubt that the word Azoth, like many others in the alchemical and chemical
vocabulary, has its roots in the Arab world. The word’s association with the
Near East reinforces the effectiveness of the curious assonance between
alchemical Azoth and Lovecraftian Azathoth, the absolute monstrosity that
seems to play a central role in the inhuman cosmology of the Necronomicon, the grimoire of black magic of the mad Arab Abdul Alhazred.13 Indeed,
returning to Basil Valentino’s definition, the main characteristic defining the
alchemical Azoth is its undivided nature, which, however, cannot be attributed
to any kind of individuality in the strict sense of the word: ‘I am one, and
many are in me.’ Azoth, or First Matter, is a kind of undetermined substratum
from which the alchemical work must necessarily proceed and in which it
must necessarily end, but which—unlike Heisenberg’s particle—does not
appear as a mere theoretical presupposition that is functional for human
determination; it is precisely from its undetermined nature that Azoth draws
its miraculous alchemical characteristics. The numinous and indeterminate
nature of Azoth connects it back to a mythological primordial chaos, the
very chaos from which it is derived.
According to Lovecraft’s cosmology, at the centre of ‘Ultimate Chaos’
there ‘sprawls the blind idiot god Azathoth, Lord of All Things, encircled by
his flopping horde of mindless and amorphous dancers, and lulled by the thin,
monotonous piping of a demoniac flute held in nameless paws.’14
Several of Lovecraft’s tales contain numerous references to paradoxical and
disturbing chemical and physico-chemical phenomena which act as silent
13.
The similarity was pointed out by Ben Woodard in his essay Slime Dynamics. Generation,
Mutation, and the Creep of Life (Winchester: Zero Books, 2012).
14.
H.P. Lovecraft, ‘The Haunter of the Dark’, The H.P. Lovecraft Omnibus 3: The Haunter of
the Dark and Other Tales (London: HarperCollins, 2000), 294.
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messengers of the unnameable entities that inhabit the sidereal spaces
S p e ct r a l M at e r i a l i sm
beyond human comprehension. It is therefore plausible that Lovecraft himself was influenced by the then very recent scientific discoveries about the
quantum nature of matter, relativity and atomic physics.
The most representative case is undoubtedly the 1927 story ‘The Colour
Out of Space’, in which a mysterious meteorite strikes and irreversibly contaminates the New England town of Arkham. A central element of the story
is the enigmatic properties of the substance from space, which loses its mass
in the form of heat, radiating a disturbing luminescence of indefinable colour.
For Lovecraft this photochemical monstrosity represents the apotheosis of
an indescribable horror, something infinitely distant from ordinary human
experience, yet at the same time radically and terrifyingly material:
[…] and over all the rest reigned that riot of luminous amorphousness, that
alien and undimensioned rainbow of cryptic poison from the well—seething,
feeling, lapping, reaching, scintillating, straining, and malignly bubbling in its
cosmic and unrecognizable chromaticism.15
This aspect is highlighted by Graham Harman in his essay Weird Realism:
Lovecraft and Philosophy, in which he underlines the essential complicity of
the scientific eye in constructing the horror of Lovecraft’s work:
The usual opposition is between enlightened modernism and anti-modern
obscurantism. Either the scientist dismisses the gullible fetishes of witch
doctors and theosophists, or these mystics dismiss science as having access
to nothing but a shallow version of a more terrible cosmic truth. Despite
Lovecraft’s alleged materialism (and he is certainly a materialist in part),
his attitude to the problem is quite different. For Lovecraft, cult rituals and
15.
H.P. Lovecraft, ‘The Colour Out of Space’, The H.P. Lovecraft Omnibus 3, 267.
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the scrawlings of Medieval Arab wizards stand in a perfect continuum of
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knowledge with the most advanced modern science.16
S p e ct r a l M at e r i a l i sm
Lovecraft’s choice to convey cosmic horror through the indescribable
chromatic properties of a mysterious substance out of space is particularly
effective. On the other hand, of all the properties of matter, colour has
always fascinated alchemists more than any other, so much so that the
entire Alchemical Work was divided up according to the different colours of
the substances obtained.
In fact, the spectral properties of chemical substances are those least
open to intuitive explanation without recourse to radically qualitative, or
even spiritual, theories, which by their very nature cannot be included in
the most rudimentary atomistic models. Unlike the immaterial ghosts of
the most classic horror stories, which are of a strictly spiritual nature and
can infiltrate the minds of their victims by causing a form of interference
of a purely intellectual nature, Lovecraftian spectral substance manifests
itself in the form of a physical contamination, in which the real horror is not
so much the alien origin of the monster as the discovery of its disturbing
intimacy with the human.
Indeed, contagion operates on the basis of a morbid principle of similarity,
in which the contaminating substance must have sufficient affinity with
the contaminated body to allow a reciprocal interaction, according to the
well-known chemical-alchemical principle similia similibus solvuntur. The
sick luminescence of the Arkham meteorite moves with equal ease through
organic and inorganic matter, from well water to animal organisms, all the
way to the human mind which, plunged into unnameable madness, is equally
susceptible to its frightening influence. In this respect, the colour out of space
acts as a simple revealer or prophet of the ultimate anxiety: the idea that we
ourselves, in some perverse and incomprehensible way, are spectres, and
16.
G. Harman, Weird Realism: Lovecraft and Philosophy (Winchester: Zero Books, 2012), 116.
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that the blackness that consumes us is a resonance that proceeds inexorably
S p e ct r a l M at e r i a l i sm
from the very core of the matter from which we are made.17
In chemistry, the spectrum of a substance is generally defined in terms of
the variation of a certain property of that substance as the frequency of
the radiation that it interacts with changes. Most often, when we talk about
the spectrum, we are referring to the optical characteristics of molecules:
in this case, the property studied is generally the light absorption, which
determines colour, or emission, in phenomena such as fluorescence or
phosphorescence. It was the observation of the spectral characteristics of
matter, and particularly hydrogen, that paved the way for the formulation of
the quantum-mechanical model of the atom that we know today.
Originally, spectra were obtained by breaking down the light transmitted
by the substance under study according to wavelength using a prism, and
exposing a photographic plate to it. The image obtained in this way showed
thin dark zones, placed in the spectrum with surprising regularity, and corresponding to the wavelength of the radiation absorbed by the substance,
which became known as absorption lines.
Spectroscopy, curiously enough, originated in astronomy; the first spectra observed were, to all intents and purposes, colours out of space. The
first observation of spectral lines dates back to the early nineteenth century,
when the English chemist William Wollatson observed that the spectrum of
sunlight was not perfectly continuous, but was separated by small interruptions; these spectral lines were catalogued a few years later by the German
physicist Joseph von Fraunhofer, after whom they are named today. Long
before modern spectroscopy, the first scientist ever to develop a bizarre
theory of space waves was Kepler, who argued, in accordance with his
harmonic vision of the universe, that the stars could act upon human beings
with their light rays through an elaborate system of geometric assonances.
17.
See R. Negarestani, ‘The Corpse Bride: Thinking with Nigredo’, Collapse IV: Concept
Horror, ed. R. Mackay, D. Veal (Falmouth: Urbanomic, 2008), 129.
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This vision had its roots in the not strictly scientific conviction that there
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was an occult symmetry between microcosm and macrocosm, such that the
S p e ct r a l M at e r i a l i sm
human soul and the surrounding universe were somehow united by the same
susceptibility to specific spherical harmonies. From this perspective, the
Lovecraftian meteor is a totally eccentric and disharmonious spatial object,
whose resonance with living matter is a bleak litany of death.
In light of quantum mechanical discoveries about the wavelike nature of
matter, the potential interactions of atoms and molecules with light have
been widely studied and understood. The key to spectroscopy is the concept of quantum jumping, i.e. the idea that quantum objects can only be
found in certain states, characterised by discrete energy levels. In reality,
as Schrödinger pointed out, the idea of the quantum leap does not account
for the complexity of the dynamics of quantum interactions, and testifies
not so much to the discontinuity of atomic and molecular phenomena as to
the inadequacy of our understanding of them.
In analogy with Kepler’s speculations, our contact with the boundless
vastness of space, as well as with the visceral depths of molecular matter,
is inevitably mediated by the vibration of a mysterious accord. At this point,
we can perhaps allow ourselves to surrender to the poignant poetry of
this extraterrestrial chemical-physical dialogue; a communication painfully
encrypted in absence, constructed out of furrows of interstellar silence
carved into the dim light of our knowledge. Spectra are but the remote trace
of a relationship of resonance—the one-dimensional shadow of an infinitely
more complex, and infinitely distant, interaction.
MERCURY
Did chemistry theorems exist? No: therefore you had to go further, not be
satisfied with the quia, go back to the origins, to mathematics and physics.
The origins of chemistry were ignoble, or at least equivocal: the dens of
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the alchemists, their abominable hodgepodge of ideas and language, their
S p e ct r a l M at e r i a l i sm
confessed interest in gold, their Levantine swindles typical of charlatans or
magicians; instead, at the origin of physics lay the strenuous clarity of the
West—Archimedes and Euclid. I would become a physicist, ruat coelum:
perhaps without a degree, since Hitler and Mussolini forbade it.
Primo Levi18
The history of alchemy is a long story of ambiguities and misunderstandings.
The most obvious and widely debated question about this ancient discipline
is whether it should be considered simply as a primitive form of science,
or whether it should be understood as a magical-religious initiatory path.
Although there are very good arguments for both positions, ultimately none
of them seems to me to be conclusive. The urgent need to classify the
alchemical experience as either one or the other emerges, perhaps, from the
fear that in it there is a dangerous contamination between two worlds that
we tend to treat as separate and irreconcilable. While the intrusion of any
mystical aspect into scientific work is undoubtedly seen as a danger to its
objectivity, on the other hand, surprisingly, the idea that experimental experience can become a legitimate channel of access to the spiritual dimension
is often considered equally unacceptable, and has often been interpreted as
a desecration of deeper Hermetic truths.
Several authors, including Carl Gustav Jung in his Psychology and
Alchemy, have argued that the alchemical experience is based on a kind of
synergy between the psychological aspect, which is internal to the human
being, and the strictly scientific-material aspect of experimental work. Taking up this idea, the physicist Wolfgang Pauli—one of the most influential
scientists involved in the formulation of quantum mechanics—coined the
concept of Hintergrundsphysik to indicate the indissoluble correlation
between science and psychoanalytic archetypes, hoping that modern physics,
18.
Levi, The Periodic Table, 55–56.
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via Bohr’s concept of complementarity, could heal the Copernican schism
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between physis and psyché, reuniting them in a new unity:
S p e ct r a l M at e r i a l i sm
The general problem of the relation between psyche and physis, between
the inner and the outer, can, however, hardly be said to have been solved by
the concept of ‘psychophysical parallelism’ which was advanced in the last
century. Yet modern science may have brought us closer to a more satisfying
conception of this relationship by setting up, within the field of physics, the
concept of complementarity. It would be most satisfactory of all if physis
and psyche could be seen as complementary aspects of the same reality.19
For Pauli, for the contemporary scientist, the real philosopher’s stone would
be, as it was for the ancient alchemist, the reunification of spirit and body
and the descent of the soul into the world, made possible by the most
advanced discoveries in theoretical physics and psychology. Indeed, from
the idea that a kind of miraculous synergistic relationship of mutual determination can be established between the quantum object and the apparatus
that studies it, a broader mythology can easily be deduced, in which the
human mind and the material world are united in a harmonious union, similar
in many ways to that pursued by the Hermetic and alchemical traditions.
The complementarity postulated by Bohr, however, while constituting a
pragmatically effective answer to the problem of the indeterminacy of the
quantum particle, is an essentially limited instrument which presupposes,
in its very operation, the maintenance of a clear distinction between the
quantum properties of the particle under study and the classical properties
of the measuring apparatus. In other words, Bohr’s complementarity does
not admit any possibility of authentic conciliation between quantum matter
itself and the knowledge of the experimenter. The particle, in its state prior
19.
W. Pauli, ‘The Influence of Archetypal Ideas on the Scientific Theories of Kepler’, in Writings
on Physics and Philosophy, tr. Priscilla Silz, ed. C. P. Enz, K. von Meyenn (Berlin and Heidelberg:
Springer, 1994), 260.
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to interaction with the human, remains a physis in an inaccessible beyond,
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whose very existence is incompatible with that of the psyché that studies
it. The completion of the alchemical-quantum work is, rather, a poisonous
reverse philosopher’s stone, consisting of the revelation of the incommensurable distance between human reason and matter.
In this text I have tried to suggest the ways in which scientific investigation
constitutes a privileged channel of contact with dimensions of reality that
are radically alien to human experience, and how this contact is achieved in
a particularly disturbing way in the encounter of the experimental chemist
with quantum matter. In fact, the advent of the quantum model has opened
up a bifurcation between two possible approaches to the problem of matter
in science. On the one hand, the unknowability of the quantum particle in
its pre-measurement state may provide grounds for a radicalised thinking,
unheard of in the strictly scientific sphere before modern physics, which
denies the ontological autonomy of matter; since it is not possible to know
the particle in its original state, it would be meaningless to attribute to the
particle itself any form of existence independent of its manifestation. Taking
this conception to its extreme, it is the human experimenter themselves
who creates matter with their own gaze at the moment it manifests itself.
Taking a more cautious stance, one could argue that matter exists in different
ways depending on its manifestation—whether the experimenter chooses
to use one measuring device or another. This thought, which we can define
as correlationist, in reference to Quentin Meillassoux,20 assumes that matter
and the mind that studies it are necessarily correlated, so that matter is
always necessarily decentred with respect to the human gaze.
Alternatively, quantum mechanics can open the way to a new form of
thinking about matter, which we could call spectral materialism, in which
indeterminacy leads to the renunciation of traditional atomism, replacing
20. Q. Meillassoux, After Finitude: An Essay on the Necessity of Contingency, tr. R. Brassier
(London and New York: Continuum, 2008).
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it with a reinterpretation of matter as self-resonance. This vision frees
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matter from its dependence on the gaze of the experimenter, allowing us
S p e ct r a l M at e r i a l i sm
to intuit, through the mathematical-geometric image of the spectrum, the
trans-individual dimension of quantum interaction. The spectrum is not, as
correlationist thinking would have it, a deficient form of human knowledge,
but emerges as the trace of an unobservable relationship of matter with itself.
In this respect, then, returning to Meillassoux’s reading, spectral matter is
inherently fossilised, because the spectrum, as the mathematical shadow
of the quantum object, constitutes a privileged connection, indeed the only
possible connection, between human experience and a matter without us.
The letters written by Isaac Newton between 1669 and 1696 show signs of
a dramatic physical and psychological attrition, culminating in an almost
complete mental collapse in 1693. Reading his correspondence, at times
one comes across obscure and disjointed phrases, unusual spelling mistakes
and unjustified outbursts of anger, accompanied by tales of bizarre physical
afflictions and strange alterations in his handwriting.
It is now widely accepted that this sudden deterioration of the scientist’s psychophysical condition was an unmistakable symptom of mercury
poisoning.21 The dating of the incriminating writings corresponds almost
exactly to the period during which Newton is thought to have begun taking
an interest in alchemy, working tirelessly day and night in his laboratory with
large quantities of mercury; he himself reports in his writings that he inhaled
and tasted salts and amalgams in his feverish search for the mystery of the
transmutation of metals into gold.
It is plausible that episodes of intoxication like those suffered by Newton
were very frequent among the alchemists and scientists of the time, at least
those who were wealthy enough to purchase expensive mercury compounds
for their research. In the light of such evidence, it is difficult to subscribe
21.
L.W. Johnson and M.L. Wolbarsht, ‘Mercury Poisoning: A Probable Cause of Isaac Newton’s
Physical and Mental Ills’, Notes Rec. R. Soc. Lond 34 (1979), 1–9.
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to the view of alchemy as a strictly philosophical and disembodied path in
S p e ct r a l M at e r i a l i sm
which experimental work played only a symbolic role, or acted as a mere
cover for deeper mysteries. On the contrary, not only was the research into
the transmutation of metals perfectly authentic, but it is reasonable to think
that many of the more theoretical aspects of Hermetic philosophy took shape
from the experimental activity, and not vice versa. The poisonous exhalations
of mercury, the central element in alchemical transmutation, afflict the minds
of those who are exposed to them with a slow but inexorable melancholy,
which can evolve, as it did for Newton, into depressive episodes and a
gradual dissociation from the surrounding reality. The nigredo, the material
and spiritual putrefaction that the alchemist had to pass through in order
to reach the completion of their work, could then be understood as a more
or less deliberate form of intoxication.
This interpretation may seem naive, but is only apparently so. The aim is not
to reduce the magical-religious dimension of the alchemical experience to
a simple hallucination caused by careless contact with dangerous chemical
compounds, but rather to bring chemical matter, back to the centre of the
alchemical narrative in place of the human. The movement of alchemical
work is not so much one of irradiation from the human mind into matter,
as a certain reactionary revisionism of the Hermetic tradition would have
it, but rather one of contamination of the mind by matter; in other words,
in the alchemical process it is not human knowledge that sheds light on
matter, but matter that infiltrates with its shadowy tentacles the mind of
the subject that studies it.
If, in the alchemical laboratory, this infiltration is realised through a literal
intoxication, in which inorganic matter insinuates itself into organic matter,
revealing its living death and undoing it in an inexorable putrefaction, the
contemporary chemist is confronted with a different, but analogous, form of
nigredo. The quantum particle may maintain a semblance of individuality, as
in the experiment imagined by Heisenberg, only at the moment in which it is
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supposed to be treated as an isolated body which collides against a measur-
77
ing apparatus and collapses into an essentially classical state. On the other
S p e ct r a l M at e r i a l i sm
hand, in chemical systems, matter reveals its own necessarily undulatory
nature, which manifests itself to the experimenter via its spectral properties.
Spectra, in the broad sense, are transversal geometrical structures emerging
from the interaction of quantum bodies with other quantum bodies; from
this point of view, chemistry, being essentially concerned with the study of
the reciprocal interactions between atoms and molecules, is by definition a
spectral science. Assuming that it is not possible to draw a definite boundary
between one quantum object and another, spectra are what remains of an
incessant monologue of matter with itself: in this sense, the study of the
chemical object takes place at the price of a disintegration of the subject
that studies it, which must lose its individuality, dissolving in the oceanic
nature of quantum matter.
In 1900, Paul Drude proposed a model for metallic bonding which was
supposed to account for the electrical and thermal conductivity properties
of solids. The model, which was entirely classical, assumed that metals
consisted of a lattice of atomic nuclei, between which electrons could move
freely, forming what is commonly referred to as a sea of electrons.
This formulation, which was later set aside in favour of more accurate
quantum-mechanical models, was unsuitable for describing the electronic
properties of solids, but it contained an interesting insight: the bizarre and
counterintuitive idea that hidden behind the solid appearance of metals
is a microscopic liquidity. In fact, crystalline solids, including metals, can
only be studied by admitting the complete delocalisation of their electrons,
which—with a little poetic licence—may be imagined as resonant waves on
a single, unconfined ocean. Moreover, the fascination of scientists with the
idea of a miraculous liquid metal with infinite multiform powers, capable of
creating or dissolving any other metal, long predates modern physics, and
has its roots in ancient Hermetic philosophies.
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I have always imagined the ocean of Solaris as a shimmering sea of mercury.
S p e ct r a l M at e r i a l i sm
In his 1961 novel, Stanislaw Lem recounts the journey of a scientist to the
space base of a planet inhabited by a single, titanic organism that covers it
like an enormous ocean. The enigmatic alien creature appears at times to be
sentient, if not actually intelligent, capable of interacting with the surrounding environment and even of altering the orbit of the planet it inhabits, in
order to ensure its survival. However, it seems to resist any form of communication with human explorers, responding in a totally unpredictable way to
any attempt at contact, and preferring instead to engage in what Lem calls a
constant ontological self-metamorphosis, from which emerge ‘fragments of
an intelligent structure, perhaps endowed with genius, haphazardly mingled
with outlandish phenomena, apparently the product of an unhinged mind’.22
The ocean creature finally breaks the silence with its human visitors when,
following a massive X-ray bombardment, it begins to conjure up mysterious
anthropomorphic apparitions, drawing upon the memory of the inhabitants
of the base. These creatures are distorted and monstrous reflections of
human beings, endowed with consciousness but unable to remember anything about their past lives, seemingly immortal and condemned to come
back to life every time the protagonists try to destroy them.
The ocean of Solaris is the perfect example of spectral matter: an essentially inaccessible object23 that resists human investigation, a hyperchaos24
that acts as a perfectly formless substrate from which disjointed fragments
of geometric structures with obscure symmetries sometimes emerge. Its
relationship with the human cannot be translated into an exasperated solipsism: the ocean is a radical other which, as witnessed by the numerous
experiments of the protagonists, cannot simply be reabsorbed into the
human mind, reducing its monstrous manifestations to a form of hallucination
22. Lem, Solaris, 24.
23.
See B. Konior, ‘Unlearning Habitual Cosmologies: Reading Stanisław Lem at the Event
Horizon’, in Dispatches from The Institute of Incoherent Geography 1:4 (Flügschriften, 2019),
39–46.
24. See Meillassoux, After Finitude.
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or madness. The ocean is undoubtedly out there, but its relationship with
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scientists is not one of complementarity, i.e. of mutual determination, but
S p e ct r a l M at e r i a l i sm
rather one of destructive interference, of mutual indetermination. The more
the ocean and the human mind get together, the more they confuse one
another, producing something deformed and frighteningly blasphemous.
In the last, poignant chapter of Lem’s work, the protagonist questions
the possibility of the existence of an imperfect, ‘sick’ God, who ‘created
eternity, which was to have measured his power, and which measures his
unending defeat’.25 The ocean of Solaris, the indeterminate amorphous
chaos that sleeps in the abyss beyond the light of the instruments of
science, is, like Azathoth and the alchemists’ quicksilver, ‘the first phase
of the despairing God’,26 a blind idiot god perpetually engulfed in a delirium
of eternal solitude. The recurring image of the demented god conveys the
disquiet of the revelation that the ultimate dimension of matter is essentially
alien: no anthropomorphic demiurge, good or evil, could ever have produced
the quantum horror, because its very existence is radically incompatible with
that of any reason.
The world with which we are familiar is, in reality, haunted by phantasms,
by the remains of structures of interference that emerge from the constant,
solitary vibration of a liquid substrate that unites us in an indissoluble
embrace, whose fearful action can cross any distance. Like the ancient
alchemical warning,27 the spectral vision of quantum matter commands us
to descend into the bowels of the matter that composes us, where, in the
incomprehensible vibration of the molecular substance, the exasperating
beat of a monstrous drum resounds incessantly.
And through this revolting graveyard of the universe the muffled, maddening
beating of drums, and thin, monotonous whine of blasphemous flutes from
25. Lem, Solaris, 197.
26. Ibid., 198.
27.
Visita Interiora Terrae, Rectificando Invenies Occultum Lapidem.
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inconceivable, unlighted chambers beyond Time; the detestable pounding
S p e ct r a l M at e r i a l i sm
and piping whereunto dance slowly, awkwardly, and absurdly the gigantic,
tenebrous ultimate gods….28
LT
28.
H.P. Lovecraft, ‘Nyarlathotep’, in The Doom that Came to Sarnath (New York: Ballantine,
1971), 57–70.
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z
II
NOTES ON GOTHIC
INSURRECTION
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and the regressive policies of the new Right are corroding modernity
from within, holding back its driving force, and bending technological
means to military, propagandistic, and repressive ends. Extreme climate
phenomena, epidemics, armies from the East pressing at the borders of
the West, greedy commercial corporations, financial crises (increasingly
reminiscent of waves of famine), apocalyptic paranoia spawned by millenarian cults—these are the divine plagues raging on a tormented planet.
One would almost be tempted to say that the past has never been so close
to the future, to the point where we cannot help but doubt whether the
modern age was nothing more than one long dream: the Promised Land,
peaceful and skilfully governed by cybernetics, is turning into a cybergothic
nightmare marred by conflict, bigotry, and superstition. Indeed, across the
globe, reactionary movements are calling for the end of modernity and a
return to various prior configurations.
THE SPECTRAL DIMENSION
In Specters of Marx,1 Jacques Derrida, the founder of deconstruction, introduces a useful concept for understanding such retro-progressive trends:
the notion of ‘hauntology’, i.e. the analysis of the phenomena of the return
of ghosts of the past (so-called revenants). Even before Derrida, Walter
Benjamin had already addressed the reactivation of past events—as in the
case of the recovery of the cultural and political heritage of ancient Rome
1.
J. Derrida, Specters of Marx: The State of the Debt, the Work of Mourning and the New
International, tr. P. Kamuf (London and New York: Routledge Classics, 2006).
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G ot h i c I n s u r r e ct i o n
We are sinking into a new Middle Ages. Traditionalism, fundamentalism,
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GOTHIC INSURRECTION
84
by Robespierre and the French revolutionaries. For Walter Benjamin, this
G ot h i c I n s u r r e ct i o n
kind of access in the present to the corridors of the past represents ‘a tiger’s
leap’2 that cuts through the linear flow of history, i.e. a creative reworking of
the relics of a lost age. Without this constant activity of theatrical disguise,
which goes from travesty to farce and from farce to tragedy, history itself
would be nothing more than a succession of indistinguishable instants.
Setting out from this assumption, Derrida points out how this short-circuit
forces us to admit the impossibility of solidifying the ground of history once
and for all, declaring the series of past events ‘dead and buried’. In fact, in
various ways, historical time seems to manifest catastrophic tendencies,
capable of reversing the present into the past, altering the course of events.
However, unlike Benjamin, Derrida deals with a different kind of historical
event: those that were foreseen or hoped for, but never came about. One of
the most famous examples is found in the opening words of the Manifesto
of the Communist Party: if, as Marx writes, ‘a spectre is haunting Europe’,
it is because the timeline that this spectre brings with it, as if dragging its
chains behind it, was never realised, and has sunk into the abyssal ruins of
history. Hauntology, therefore, also deals with a particular kind of historical
non-event: those ‘lost futures’ that can perhaps be reactivated in the present.
The revolution is the catastrophe embodied by this spectre, the unexpected event that could strike the world like lightning, altering the normal
course of events. Both in the case of Benjamin’s future-past and that of
Derrida’s events that never happened, the calendrical progression that moves
inexorably from the past toward the future is broken by an interaction that
is apparently impossible, both historically and physically: an element that
has now disappeared or which never happened, an absent or materially
irretrievable event, appears in that very section of the chain that launches
itself from the present toward the future. And yet, as Derrida himself points
out, it would be a serious mistake to believe that this is some sort of cyclical
2.
W. Benjamin, ‘On the Concept of History’, in Selected Writings Volume 4, 1938–1940, ed.
H. Eiland, M.W. Jennings (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2003), 395.
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phenomenon (the eternal return of the identical): the ghost does not coincide
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with the person whose name it bears, it does not share the same flesh, nor
G ot h i c I n s u r r e ct i o n
the same bones, nor the same intentions; it is an atmospheric,3 insubstantial,
and yet terribly material double, capable of shaking, screaming and murmuring
from the shadows, the historical and biographical foundations upon which
individuals and communities rest.
In turn, our transition from the cybernetic to the cybergothic era denotes
a paradoxical union between the apex of modernity, represented by digital
technologies and hyper-connectivity, and the Middle Ages, a period characterised by great political fragmentation, a terrifying proliferation of natural,
economic, and political disasters, and the dizzying transcendence of Gothic
architecture. We find ourselves caught between a reactionary nostalgia for
a time we never experienced (and which perhaps never existed) and the
disturbing phantasmal return of an era that is alien to our historical continuum.
The only escape route is upwards, as the gloomy cathedrals of the thirteenth
century remind us…. Flapping out in the twilight of civilisation, like bats.
Art is undoubtedly one of the main channels via which the spectres of the
past find ingress into the dimension of the present. An example of historical
discontinuity in the sense described by Benjamin can be found in the art of
the French Revolution. In the paintings of Jacques-Louis David, the death of
Jean-Paul Marat—whose throat was slit in his bathtub by Charlotte Corday
in an attempt to put an end to the revolutionary violence—echoes those of
Socrates and Seneca, thinkers killed—or rather ‘suicided’—by conservative
political forces and fierce opponents of aristocratic excesses. David’s Death
of Marat, which portrays the Jacobin as a martyr of the revolution, soon
became one of the symbols of the world that Marat himself had helped
to build.
An example of the second type of discontinuity, analysed by Derrida, is
provided by Mark Fisher. In a 2007 interview (which would later be included
3.
See E. Thacker, In the Dust of this Planet (Winchester: Zero Books, 2011).
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in the anthology Ghosts of My Life), Fisher applies Derrida’s hauntology to
G ot h i c I n s u r r e ct i o n
the music of William Bevan, the real name of the electronic producer Burial,
at the time the leading light in the dubstep scene. At stake here is the legacy
of rave culture (or what Simon Reynolds called the ‘hardcore continuum’):
While much of dubstep is determined by an intensification of previous styles
and by the use of flat, claustrophobic and oppressive musical devices, Burial’s
electronics, on the contrary, unfold in atmospheric spaces traversed by sonic
remnants and distant echoes of sampled voices, heavily contaminated by
soul and hip-hop. It’s not that Bevan’s compositions re-elaborate on any
artistic or cultural heritage: on the contrary, ‘Burial’s is a re-dreaming of the
past, a condensation of relics of abandoned genres into an oneiric montage.
His sound is a work of mourning rather than of melancholia, because he still
longs for the lost object, still refuses to abandon the hope that it will return.’4
Bevan grew up far from the rave scene, yet Burial’s music manages
to evoke its broken dreams and hopes. More than ten years after Fisher’s
interview, one does not have to look far to find a long list of similar examples
in contemporary music: hypnagogic pop, vaporwave, post-punk revival,
ambient, lo-fi, thrash metal, bubblegum pop, etc. Burial is only one of
countless examples of the nostalgic reactivation of a past that was never
lived and a future that never came to be, a fact that leads us directly to the
heart of the problem: if nostalgia and a longing for an imaginary past are
the affective bases of the reactionary, then how can the ruins of a lamented
‘monumental’ history5 be reconciled with the reactivation of lost futures?
How to welcome the coming cybergothic era without setting foot in the
wreckage of fascism?
4.
M. Fisher, ‘Downcast Angel: Interview with Burial’, The Wire 286 (December 2007), 27–31: 28.
5.
F. Nietzsche, ‘On the Uses and Disadvantages of History for Life’, Untimely Meditations,
tr. R.J. Hollingdale, ed. D. Breazeale (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1997), 57–124,
in particular 67–69. ‘Monumental’ history would correspond to mythical history, understood
as insurmountable and superhuman, capable of inspiring posterity and instilling a feeling of
reverence in those who look back at it.
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The answer may come from the music scene, and from a particular genre
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where one would least expect it: black metal. A genre that is in itself nos-
G ot h i c I n s u r r e ct i o n
talgic, animated by yearning for a lost yet recoverable purity—a purity of
sound, and a purity of attitude with regard to the audience, the press, and
large-scale distribution. Although poetically and stylistically centred on the
themes of death, disappearance, and the annihilation of everything that
exists, black metal is one of the most reactionary, conservative musical
genres, and the one most associated with mediaeval imagery. Unsurprisingly,
in the hands of the extreme right, it seems to morph very easily into a form
of ethnic, nationalist, and traditionalist advocacy. However, some aspects
of early black metal may allow us to better understand this reactionary and
anti-modern desire, allowing us to introduce a particular form of ‘double
vampiric-spectral spiral’, a characteristic that I will try to illustrate here
through the musical work of two classic bands: Bathory and Darkthrone.
The nostalgia of European black metal seemingly harks back to a mythical,
rather than historical or religious, past, thus allowing us to oppose the reactionary nature of the new Right with a kind of temporal distortion different
from that advocated in recent times by the ‘alt’-Right. For this reason, it
will first of all be necessary to address the concept of neoreaction—i.e., as
we shall see, the closest relative, both theoretically and linguistically, to the
historical category cybergothic.
TIME SPIRAL
Neoreaction, or NRx, or even Dark Enlightenment, is a movement inspired
by the writings of Nick Land, the father of accelerationism, and Mencius
Moldbug aka Curtis Yarvin, a computer scientist and political theorist.6 The
neoreactionary proposal consists in a kind of open-ended programme for the
dissolution of modernity, devised within a political framework that has room
6.
For the full text of Nick Land’s Dark Enlightenment, see N. Land, ‘Dark Enlightenment’, in
Reignition, Tome 2, 9–145. The entirety of Yarvin’s work is available in the archive at Unqualified
Reservations, <http://www.unqualified-reservations.org/>.
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for neo-monarchists, fascists, ethnonationalists, social Darwinists, transhu-
G ot h i c I n s u r r e ct i o n
manists, techno-commercial accelerationists, neo-cameralists, anarcho-capitalists and even some anarcho-copapists. Unlike the classic reactionary
and traditionalist movements, neoreaction, while representing a revival of
the Enlightenment project, does not reject the scientific achievements of
modernity, but proposes to make use of all available scientific and technical
means to achieve its goals—namely, the fragmentation of nation-states into
a myriad of city-states and micronations, the destruction of universalism,
and the end of representative democracy.
A further element that distinguishes NRx from common reactionaryism
(and even from the new Right) is that, although it too considers democracy
and a universalism of rights to be the principal causes of a process of
economic and cultural decadence, its exponents do not propose as their
ultimate goal the restoration of an ancient Edenic splendour. On the contrary, neoreaction advocates a reworking of political realism based on the
concepts of dissipation and metastability: nothing lasts forever, violence and
oppression are the laws that govern the universe, which is why it is necessary to govern ruthlessly, designing small but manageable and robust social
structures. According to NRx, democratic-progressivist-universalist thinking
has ignored the brutal reality of the facts in its attempts to enclose the cruel
spontaneity of nature and human beings within an imaginary world revolving
around equality, solidarity, and the assumption that nature, and particularly
human nature, is inherently benevolent. On the basis of these assumptions,
the West attempts to allow the cohabitation of different economic interests,
ideologies, religions, genealogies and ways of life, thereby condemning its
political and cultural institutions (i.e. schools and universities) to mediocrity
and subjugation by ‘minority lobbies’, bowing their heads before the rule
that everyone is special and worthy of respect. Egalitarian ideas are so
deeply rooted in Western society and history that they make it necessary
for neoreaction itself to analyse and examine its own theoretical production
in detail. Land writes:
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The very last thing neoreaction has to usefully declare is I have a dream.
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Dream-mongering is the enemy. The only future worth striving for is splin-
G ot h i c I n s u r r e ct i o n
tered into myriads, loosely webbed together by free-exit connections, and
conducting innumerable experiments in government, the vast majority of
which will fail. We do not, and cannot, know what we want, anymore than
we can know what the machines of the next century will be like, because
real potentials need to be discovered, not imagined.7
Curiously, NRx has dubbed the ensemble of forces it opposes (mainstream
media, academia, etc.) the ‘Cathedral’, alluding to their hypothetical religious
origins, which, it contends, have become secularised over the centuries—a
tradition that can be traced back to the Renaissance, the cradle of universalist humanism and the era of hypothetical liberation from the dark yoke
of the Middle Ages. In order to overthrow the ‘unitarian’ hegemony of the
Cathedral, the most famous theoretical elaboration of neoreaction proposes
a strategy of exit from current State formations via the constitution of
autonomous guilds and regions, united by economic, ethnic, or religious ties,
leading to the foundation of corporate metropolises governed by CEO-monarchies, administrative councils, and police forces.
By reactivating old concepts, values, and methods of investigation and
adapting them to the contemporary world—thereby managing to unite
different or conflicting interests and positions around the same objective—
neoreaction effectively collapses the past into a multi-dystopian future (from
a democratic or anti-authoritarian perspective). As Land himself points out:
To translate ‘neoreaction’ into ‘the new reaction’ is in no way objectionable.
It is new, and open to novelty [...] it not only promotes drastic regression,
but highly-advanced drastic regression. Like retrofuturism, paleomodernism,
and cybergothic, the word ‘neoreaction’ compactly describes a time-twisted
7.
N. Land, ‘Neoreactionary Realism’, in Reignition, Tome 3, 126.
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vector that spirals forwards into the past, and backwards into the future. […]
G ot h i c I n s u r r e ct i o n
[N]eoreaction is a time-crisis, manifested through paradox.8
With the help of Land’s philosophical genius, neoreaction, well aware of
the fact that (in the words of Deleuze and Guattari) no one ever died of
contradictions, has successfully managed to think ontological, political
and existential plurality, and moreover to do so without degenerating into
regret and nostalgia for an uncontaminated world—in the process helping
to tip the Enlightenment project into the dark cauldron of boiling oil of the
new Middle Ages. A victory that has been paid for dearly: by asserting that
order can only emerge from chaos and violence, NRx fully exposes its flank
to even more chaotic and violent forces, to ancient horrors that are only
apparently dead.
In order to confront neoreaction, we will have to penetrate deeply into
its own camp, finding different uses for the weapons it has developed. Perhaps, by making both the reactionary spirit and the thirst for black metal
annihilation our own, we will be able to hit this many-headed adversary from
behind and decapitate it, as if with a well-aimed slash of the sword. Easier
said than done, though. The icy sound of black metal screeches, croaks
shrilly and tries to attack us with its claws: it does not like to be analysed,
summarised or glossed. Ultimately, it doesn’t like anything at all…. As soon
as a verdict is pronounced, black metal rejects it: fleeing into the past when
questioned about the future, hurling itself into the most distant future (the
apocalypse) when questioned about the past.
Flying through the ages like an immortal crow, black metal abandons the
present in its quest for ever more refined and ever more immoral cruelties:
when it gets bored of the Middle Ages, it will take on ancient Greece or Mesoamerican civilisations, return to haunt the Norse myths it holds so dear, or
contemplate the end of the world. Neoreaction should fear this black creature,
8.
N. Land, ‘The Idea of Neoreaction’ and ‘Neoreaction (for Dummies)’ in Reignition, Tome 3,
92, 25.
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for although it possesses its own chrono-paradoxical capacities, it wishes
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neither to constitute nor to liberate anything. As a purely negative spirit, it
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is compelled to deny, again and again, every theory, every practice, every
instance and every earthly collectivity, always pushing itself further. The
blackster rarely manages to master both faculties of the black beast, merely
remaining blind like old Odin, staring either into the anti-cosmic void or the
fantasised splendours of bygone eras. However, to become chrono-warriors,
we must strive to acquire both magical eyes.
THE CALL OF THE BEAST
Although heavy metal and rock have always dealt with Satan, pagan myths,
and witchcraft, the primordial black metal of bands such as Venom, Mercyful
Fate, Bathory, and Hellhammer/Celtic Frost has turned these tenuous ties
into a kind of symbiotic fusion. After a few albums centred on Satanism,
necromancy, and assorted provocations, it was the Norwegian band Bathory,
founded by the legendary Tomas ‘Quorthon’ Forsberg, that gave birth to
what would become one of the most famous sub-genres of black metal:
so-called ‘viking metal’, characterised by an extensive use of traditional
instruments and pagan themes. The mutation becomes even more striking
if one compares Bathory’s first viking album, Hammerheart (1990), with the
music and lyrics of previous bands with similar themes, such as Manilla Road,
Heavy Load, Manowar, Cirith Ungol, Omen, Virgin Steele, Brocas Helm, Warlord, and Blind Guardian. Prior to Hammerheart, metal generally referenced
the heroic fantasy of authors such as Robert E. Howard, J.R.R. Tolkien’s
high fantasy, and the RPG universes of Dungeons & Dragons, aiming—as
in the case of Venom’s playful and desecrating Satanism—at a visual and
musical spectacularisation of the themes it dealt with.
This nerdy approach took on two different forms during the 1980s and
1990s: on the underground side, it gradually merged—thanks to the enormous
influence of Manilla Road and Cirith Ungol—into the sub-genre known as
doom metal (in this case we are talking about ‘epic doom metal’); on the
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other, it became mainstream, giving rise to the eternally adolescent sound
G ot h i c I n s u r r e ct i o n
of power metal and the hypermachismo excesses of bands such as Manowar.
After experimenting with slowdowns, Viking themes and acoustic breaks
on Blood Fire Death (1988), Bathory’s Hammerheart, however, did not so
much define a third position, as a line of escape from the epic/power metal
dialectic: still too fast for epic doom, yet too aggressive and techno-minimal
for the emerging power metal. Bathory, with their strange mixture of heavy
metal and punk rock, thus laid the historical, musical and ethnomusicological
foundations of the emerging Scandinavian black metal, while at the same time
taking care to reject this fourth possible categorisation, giving rise instead
to a new type of folk music.
In a 1996 interview with Sigurd ‘Satyr’ Wongraven (member of the seminal
Satyricon) for the fanzine Nordic Vision, Quorthon recounts his meeting with
Randall J. Stephens, author of the book The Devil’s Music (which focused
on the vexed relationship between rock music, religion, and nationalism):
I believe I had just released ‘Blood Fire Death’ and he asked why I was doing
this Viking thing and if I didn’t believe that this would lead to Nationalism and
such. Then I said ‘it is a fact, it is a historic fact’. For us it is a historic fact
and a way to get an identity and those who don’t know their history cannot
manage the future. He commented on symbolism and then I pointed at his
arms where he had a red star and a black arrow [...]. Then he said that it was
not interesting about what people stand for, but that is an ideology that too.
The communism in Russia was not communism, it was fascism. [...] [W]e shall
justify our Nordic culture and our Nordic history so that it doesn’t die out. If
all people think in the way the government wants us to think then everything
we fight for and like will disappear very fast.9
Although Quorthon later distanced himself from any form of traditionalism,
one cannot help but give some weight to such statements. Nor can one
9.
Nordic Vision 5 (Winter 1996) <https://bathory.clan.su/publ/3-1-0-19>.
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ignore the emotional charge of certain textual fragments from Bathory’s
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work, as in the case of the following passage from ‘Baptised in Fire and
G ot h i c I n s u r r e ct i o n
Ice’—a track that opens with fierce tribal percussion and seems to declare
war on everything and everyone:
Proudly my Father took me in
his arms and walked outside
where for the first time
light struck me, newborn child
and even though told when older
I can almost recall the scene
when he held me high up towards
the most beautiful sky ever seen [...]
I grew and learned respectfully
the Earth, Wind, Water and the sky
the powers that decided the weather
and rule both the dark and light
I heard the voices of the spirits
of the forest call my name
I saw the Hammer way up high
cause lightning in the rain.10
The Bathory of the folk period is permeated by evocative soundbeds that
leave no room to breathe; Quorthon’s voice is an echo from distant times,
while traditional instruments, acoustic ballads and samples of natural sounds
seem to almost burst into the metal fabric of the songs, layered to create
a sonic continuum across the tracks. In the midst of this ghostly habitat,
folk, metal, and punk meet in the clearing of an era more distant than
Burial’s post-war London, namely the Scandinavia of pre-Christian peoples.
10.
Bathory, ‘Baptised in Fire and Ice’, Hammerheart (Noise Records, 1990).
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Interestingly, in Bathory’s albums post-1987 there is no trace of either
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anti-Christian positions or neo-pagan celebration: the stories of everyday
life, the detailed descriptions of personal feelings and natural landscapes
seem to emerge spontaneously from the dreamlike atmosphere, like fragments of one great collective dream.
Quorthon is the shamanic channel through which the spirits of ancestors and places express themselves. The hauntological characteristics of
Bathory’s Viking metal thus confirm that it belongs to the second type of
chronological discontinuity, that dominated by nostalgia for a past that has
never been lived and a future that has never been realised. The era evoked by
tracks such as ‘Foreverdark Woods’ is the one in which mediaeval Christianity
drowned pagan culture in blood (between the eighth and twelfth centuries),
annihilating and stigmatising that barbaric world of which, over the centuries,
the Viking people have become an emblem. As Quorthon himself suggests,
knowing the past means knowing how to deal with the future, preventing
economic interests and historicism (the typically Western and modern idea
that time and human progress coincide) from burying biographies, myths,
practices, and world views forever.
The first spiral of European black metal, the hauntological one, has as
its protagonist a mythical character whose contours remain somewhat
vague: the barbarian. The term derives etymologically from the Greek word
βάρβαρος, which denotes the babbling stranger, i.e. the foreigner who cannot
speak Greek and who only speaks a language characterised by the repetition
of similar syllables. In ancient Greece, the exclusion of the foreigner from
the sphere of linguistic intelligibility is accompanied by his marginalisation
from the political and social life of the city (Aristotle himself, originally from
the Macedonian city of Stagira, never acquired any property rights, being
forced to rent the building in which he founded his school).
As is well known, habits of this kind soon turn into commonly accepted
facts: being deprived of speech and unable to participate in politics—an
activity essentially based on discourse—the barbarian is more like an animal
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than a human, being disenfranchised and outside of history. A judgement
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that would only become more severe over the course of time, as testified
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to by Thomas Aquinas’s Summa Contra Gentiles (1269–1273): in this case,
the barbarian is exemplified by the figure of the ‘gentile’, an umbrella term
which, from one era to another, has designated the lunatic, the heretic, the
Muslim, and the atheist. The very theoretical premise of the Summa bears
with it a certain symbolic violence: for Thomas the fundamental truths of
the Christian faith are in themselves evident to the natural intellect—that
is, to the intellectual capacities with which human beings are universally
endowed. It follows implicitly that those who persist in denying or refuting
these truths must necessarily be, if not sinners in bad faith, then idiots,
madmen, or creatures unfortunately deprived of a capacity for natural
illumination—once again, beasts.
In the West, the historical boundary between human and nonhuman
shifts following this series of concepts: speech, political participation, and
reason. Being on the wrong side of the boundary means being a barbarian or
semi-barbarian. The term barbarian, therefore, designates those individuals
and groups who, in every age, become the principal target of the collective
violence of those on the ‘right’ side of it, i.e. the civilised (those who have
learned to live in the city). However, for the civilised person, the barbarian
also represents the magmatic, inscrutable multitudes on the other side of
the line: wild myriads, born of chaos, who flock to the border to cross it and
invade the civilised world. In the nightmares of humans, the barbarian par
excellence is therefore the berserker, the warrior-shaman who, clad only
in animal skins, fell into a sort of trance-like state or spiritual possession,
fighting in an undisciplined manner, outside the ranks, sometimes even with
bare hands, without pain or fatigue. As the Icelandic historian and poet Snorri
reports in his Saga of the Ynglingar:
They went without shields, and were mad as dogs or wolves, and bit on their
shields, and were as strong as bears or bulls; men they slew, and neither
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fire nor steel would deal with them; and this is what is called the fury of the
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berserker.11
The link between the berserker and ferocious beasts such as bears or
wolves, however, is not limited to metaphor; according to legends, these
barbarian warriors were actually able to assume the form of their totem
animal, blurring the boundary between beast and human in a weird (bizarre
or mysterious) way—a problem, that of the exact distinction between
‘becoming-bear’ and ‘becoming-a-bear’, which cannot but torment the
civilised boundary-setter. In the words of Land in ‘Spirit and Teeth’, to be
a berserker, i.e. to be a wolf or a were-bear or any other human-beast, is
to be inferior by the most basic criteria of civilization. Not only is the discipline of political responsibility alien to them, so is the entire history of work in
which that discipline is embedded. [...]. Compared to the piety, morality, and
industriousness of its superiors it exhibits only laziness, disobedience, and
an abnormally unsuccessful repression of all those traits of the unconscious
which Freud describes as ‘resistant to education’.12
These are all aspects also highlighted by the French poet Arthur Rimbaud,
who wrote in A Season in Hell: ‘From my ancestors the Gauls I have pale
blue eyes, a narrow brain, and awkwardness in competition. [...]. I am well
aware that I have always been of an inferior race’13
Recalcitrant to education, discourse, and rational calculation, the barbarian is alien to Western logocentrism, or rather to that centrality of word
and argument which, since ancient Greece, has dominated our cognitive
and relational paradigms. It, however, has different ways of knowing the
11.
Quoted in M. Eliade, Rites and Symbols of Initiation: The Mysteries of Birth and Rebirth, tr.
W.R. Trask (New York: Harper & Row, 1965), 81.
12.
N. Land, ‘Spirit and Teeth’, in Fanged Noumena, 182–83.
13.
A. Rimbaud, ‘Bad Blood’, in Complete Works (New York: Harper Collins, 1967), 220.
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world and relating to it: I heard the voices of the spirits of the forest call
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my name, says Quorthon, or some Norse spectre that speaks through him.
G ot h i c I n s u r r e ct i o n
The barbarian does not draw permanent boundaries, preferring to pass
from one dimension to another as necessary: Man and beast was one, and
the gods of the sky walked the face of the earth.14 The forest spoke with
a non-human voice, the gods had not been relegated to an unreachable sky,
humans had not been separated from nonhumans; nature was one thing and,
at the same time, many things continually engaged in knowing, relating to,
and interpreting one another. This is a mystical paradigm, not a religious one,
organised in terms of coordinates rather than as a series of commandments:
the mountains, for example, could be petrified giants, alluding to an epic
battle between the forces of primordial chaos and the gods of nature; in
this case, the extraction and working of iron from the belly of the mountain
would allow one to draw upon the strength of these ancient giants, but also
upon the divine, or technological, wisdom of forging.
Bathory’s pagan nostalgia has little to do with nationalism or reactionaryism; it is more to do with regret for a broken world, for the violation of
nature, for the subjugation of Europe to the law and culture of the dominant
‘race’. The spectral world that Bathory’s music channels into our time (the
‘Middle Ages’ it embodies) is non-Christian, non-rationalist, non-humanist
and non-universalist. However, unlike the neo-amanuenses of corporate
neoreaction bent over their source code, for the non-civilised nomadic
barbarian the economy is a matter of plunder or domestic management,
not mass production. The Roman historian Ammianus Marcellinus asserts
of the Huns that
No one in their country ever plows a field or touches a plow-handle. They
are all without fixed abode, without heart or law, or settled mode of life, and
keep roaming from place to place, like fugitives, accompanied by the wagons
14.
Bathory, ‘Blood and Iron’, Twilight of the Gods (Black Mark Production, 1991).
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in which they live [...]. In truces they are faithless and unreliable, strongly
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inclined to sway to the motion of every breeze of new hope that presents
itself, and sacrificing every feeling to the mad impulse of the moment.15
For the barbarian, war, the means of pillage, does not represent a general
mobilisation of ranks, bodies and disciplined formations (i.e. a vast police
operation), nor a conquering impetus animated by the desire to found a
state or an empire, but a disorderly assault, mostly followed by an escape
or a ransom demand.
Together with ancient ways of interpreting the world and an attempt at
reunification with nature, the barbarians bring the fury of war and conflict
into the cybergothic era. Deleuze and Guattari write in A Thousand Plateaus:
The battlefield […] is a complex aggregate: the becoming-animal of [warriors],
packs of animals, elephants and rats, winds and tempests, bacteria sowing
contagion. A single Furor. War contained zoological sequences, before it
became bacteriological. It is in war, famine, and epidemic that werewolves
and vampires proliferate.16
And that’s exactly where we’re going to hunt: vampires.
RETURN OF THE VAMPIRE
Founded in 1987 as a death metal band, Darkthrone have embraced Norwegian black metal since their album A Blaze in the Northern Sky (1991). With
their seminal 1994 album Transilvanian Hunger—dedicated, as the cover
states, to ‘all the evil in man’—they transformed the genre into something
radically new. The production almost seems to border on noise, and the
15.
A. Marcellinus, Roman History, tr. J. C. Rolfe (Cambridge, MA: Loeb, 3 vols, 1986), vol. 3.,
XXXI, 2, 10–11, 385.
16.
G. Deleuze and F. Guattari, A Thousand Plateaus, tr. B. Massumi (Minneapolis: Minnesota
University Press, 1991), 243.
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extremely repetitive melodies combine to weave a sickly, spectral web. The
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blast beat, the drumming style that has characterised black metal since the
G ot h i c I n s u r r e ct i o n
second wave, forms the backdrop to all the tracks, helping to produce an
extremely alienating atmosphere. The result is a minimalist masterpiece, as
Transilvanian Hunger contains in a few tens of minutes the very essence of
the eerie: endless repetition with minimal variations, silences that stun the
listener as they break through the noise, and no trace of artistic elaboration
or intelligent thought. Pure automatism, anonymous, unconscious, impersonal; a work that could have been composed by the wind moving through
the mountain rocks or by a machine, and which, in some ways, recalls the
mystical drone of Keiji Haino’s So, Black is Myself or Sunn O)))’s Flight of
the Behemoth.
Transilvanian Hunger totally abandons itself to the drive to extremity
characteristic of heavy metal, totally saturating the field of the possible: at
this level of static and sonic expansion, there is no way to go further. As Hunter
Ravenna Hunt-Hendrix of the American band Liturgy writes, ‘[Transylvanian
Hunger is] total, maximal intensity. A complete flood of sound. An absolute
plenitude [...] a dead and static place, a polar land where there is no oscillation
between day and night [...] purity, totally absolute, selfsame and eternal’.17
In the title track of the album, the disincarnate screams of Ted ‘Nocturno
Culto’ Skjellum’s articulate disjointed phrases and words, which almost seem
to arise from the mind of a predator absorbed in the hunt:
Transylvanian hunger, cold soul [...]
The mountains are cold, soul, soul
Careful, pale, forever at night […]
Embrace me eternally in your daylight slumber
To be draped by the shadow of your morbid palace
Oh, hate living
17.
H. Hunt-Hendrix, ‘Transcendental Black Metal’, Hideous Gnosis: Black Metal Theory
Symposium, ed. N. Masciandaro (CreateSpace, 2010), 53–65: 56–57.
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The only heat is warm blood
G ot h i c I n s u r r e ct i o n
So pure, so cold […]
Hail to the true, intense vampires [...]
Beautiful evil self to be the morbid count
A part of a pact that is delightfully immortal.18
With their references to Transylvania and the ‘morbid count’, Darkthrone
celebrate their alliance with one of the most famous forces of evil, the vampire: ‘Careful, pale, forever at night [...] / A part of a pact that is delightfully
immortal’. Transilvanian Hunger sonically materialises eternity, managing to
represent its temporal dimension—an almost impossible feat for figurative
art. But as is the case with the vampire, condemned to live forever without
ever being able to see the light of day again, the price to pay is ice and total
lifelessness.
To understand this kind of negative condition, mediaeval scholastic
philosophy developed a bizarre ontology of absence, according to which cold
is the absence of warmth, death the absence of life, and evil the absence of
good.19 A series of absences that, paradoxically, make us perceive our own
presence (that ‘non-being’ that we perceive when something is missing, in
melancholy and nostalgia). On the basis of this theoretical intuition, we can
see that the time manifested in works of art such as Transilvanian Hunger
is inhuman or even inorganic: the time of ‘non-death’—of the mysterious
presence of absence, a world populated by impersonal forces and entities
that, although not alive, cannot be called dead, i.e. without agency (golems,
vampires, spectres, corpses or inanimate objects, mists, deities, atmospheric
phenomena, minerals, microorganisms, viruses, sentient machines, etc.).
As is also evident from its various references to vampires, trolls, demons
and castles, Transilvanian Hunger is a wholly Gothic work, focusing on the
themes of darkness, the unknowable, and supernatural horror. In addition
18.
Darkthrone, ‘Transilvanian Hunger’, Transilvanian Hunger (Peaceville Records, 1994).
19.
See T. Aquinas, On Evil, tr. R. Regan, ed. B. Davies (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003).
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to a type of mediaeval architecture, the term ‘Gothic’ also denotes a literary
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genre originating in the eighteenth century and including authors such as
G ot h i c I n s u r r e ct i o n
Walpole, Radcliffe, Polidori, Maturin, and Lewis, as well as exponents of the
so-called ‘Gothic Revival’ (or ‘neo-Gothic’) such as Mary Shelley and Bram
Stoker. In the stories of these authors, evil—in the form of supernatural
creatures— bursts into the everyday lives of innocent individuals, tormenting
the protagonists or bringing to the surface gruesome buried truths: such is
the eternal Gothic struggle between darkness and light, between truth and
lies, brilliantly represented in films such as Nosferatu (dir. F.W. Mirnau, 1922).
In the Gothic novel, the Middle Ages, ever-present both architecturally
and as a historical background, represents the superstition and cruelty of
premodern times. It is precisely the appearance in the present of creatures
and forces believed to be the product of the perverse imagination of the
Middle Ages that gives rise to the doubt, or rather the certainty, that the
modern age has chosen to remove horrors beyond imagination from its
cognitive horizon. Gothic time, therefore, is not isomorphic to the Middle
Ages; rather, it is an eternal and motionless time, suspended below the veil of
the present, ready to seize those human beings naive enough to go snooping
around in the dark recesses where evil hides (dungeons, castles, cemeteries,
crypts and ruined churches).
No novel in this genre has left such a mark on the collective imagination
as Bram Stoker’s Dracula (1897). This horror novel, set in the 1890s, tells
the story of young lawyer Jonathan Harker, who is sent to Transylvania to
arrange the purchase of some real estate in England on behalf of the elderly
aristocrat Dracula. As is well known, Harker soon discovers that Dracula is
an ancient vampire who, wishing to prolong his eternal life and satiate his
thirst for blood, has decided to move into the beating heart of modern Europe.
Having managed to escape from the count’s castle, Jonathan returns to
England to confront the vampire and save the soul and life of his bride. If
in the Gothic novel the forces of light are usually represented by Christian
morality, within the neo-Gothic setting of Dracula we witness the birth of a
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new alliance between religion, the bourgeoisie, science, and capital. For the
G ot h i c I n s u r r e ct i o n
vampire, in fact, will find himself hindered by a strange axis which, rather
than symbolising the meagre yet unshakable forces of humanity, seems a
perfect representation of the values of modern European society.
In Dracula, the team of ‘good guys’—armed with crosses, cloves of
garlic, holy water, and consecrated hosts—is made up of a superstitious
old scientist, Dr Abraham Van Helsing, the rich Texan Quincey Morris, noted
psychiatrist Dr Seward, nobleman Lord Arthur Godalming, and finally the
two protagonists, Jonathan and Mina Harker—the immaculate knight and
the damsel in distress. The forces of evil, on the contrary, appear smaller
and more improvised: the team of ‘villains’, although led by a young and
vigorous Dracula, is made up of just one of Seward’s most serious patients,
the schizo-paranoid zoophage Renfield, the count’s vampiric ‘brides’, and
a group of gypsy-nomads who escort Dracula and facilitate his movements.
The dual relationship between the two groups is based not only on religious
and moral concepts (good versus evil), but also on economic, historical, and
social distinctions: the insane versus the sane, eroticism versus true love,
the poor versus the rich, the aristocracy versus the bourgeoisie, the past
versus modernity. This marked contraposition of roles means that the reader
spontaneously identifies with the tragic figure of the vampire, who thus
becomes one of the most important dark figures of modernity, enabling his
gradual transformation into the antihero made famous in Anne Rice’s novels.
These clear distinctions, however, also help highlight the immoralism
and anti-modernism that characterise the Dracula character. In this regard,
it is interesting to note how Stoker’s Dracula possesses characteristics that
immediately recall a barbaric heritage: wild animals are his natural allies and
he himself can transform himself into a wolf or a bat; moreover, on several
occasions Dracula invokes the Norse deities Thor and Odin in the name
of his Hun and Viking ancestors. A connotation consciously sought by the
author who, not content with reviving the bloodthirsty Vlad III ‘Tepes’ (‘the
Impaler’) Dracula, at the same rewrote his genealogy, tracing a symbolic line
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of descent between the ferocious barbarians subjugated by the Christians
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and the demonic predator protagonist of the novel
G ot h i c I n s u r r e ct i o n
Although the real Vlad III was already considered by his contemporaries
to be a ‘savage’ and inhuman tyrant—to the to the point of being portrayed
feasting in the shadow of a pile of corpses—it is precisely Stoker’s portrait
that returns the Count, or rather the Prince of Wallachia, to the race to which
he rightfully belongs, the barbarian race. During the second half of the 1400s,
Vlad the Impaler was the guardian of the eastern borders of the Empire: he
defended Wallachia from the continuous invasions of the Turks—by whom he
had been held hostage as a child—making several sallies into their territory to
mercilessly exterminate his enemies. During this period, he became infamous
throughout Europe for his brutal cruelty, as expressed in acts that were
not without a certain creative element: he impaled without distinction rich
and poor, religious and infidels (taking care only to have the nobles impaled
on poles covered with silver and placed a little higher than the others); he
asked the Sultan’s emissaries, who had come to collect overdue tributes, to
remove their turbans in his presence and, receiving a flat refusal, had the
turbans nailed to the heads of the diplomats; in 1459 he invited to dinner
two merchants who had displayed contempt toward him, let them eat, then
had one of them disembowelled and his entrails, still full of food, served to
the other, then had the survivor’s throat slit, had him cooked, and fed him
to his dogs; in 1460 he had ten thousand people impaled and covered with
honey so that they would die tormented by insects.
The insane parable of Vlad III came to an end in mysterious circumstances
around 1476, following a betrayal by his younger brother Radu and the Wallachian nobles who had allied themselves with the Sultan Muhammad II in order
to consecrate a peace that would allow trade routes to be reopened and the
nobility’s ancient privileges to be restored. To Vlad’s hyperbaric trajectory of
war and extermination, the nobility and the merchant class opposed a peace
of convenience or, better, a low-intensity war, following a pattern that would
soon spread throughout Renaissance Europe. The vampiric resurrection of
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Vlad in Dracula—foreshadowed in several popular legends shortly after his
G ot h i c I n s u r r e ct i o n
death—can be read in light of the macabre seventeenth-century treatise
On the Chewing of the Dead, according to which the undead corpse digs,
scratches, and snarls from within its tomb in an attempt to free itself, so
that it can once again walk the earth sowing death and destruction. Clearly,
we are faced here with a chronological discontinuity of the first kind, as
outlined by Benjamin, in which the past bursts into the present in an altered
form. The second temporal spiral of black metal is vampiric, and concerns the
return of the undead, an event that sharply truncates linear time, producing
unpredictable, chaotic effects that are elusive from any rational point of view.
In addition to amplifying the barbaric characteristics already evident
in the historical Dracula, Stoker has another brilliant intuition: the vampire
can transform himself into fog (a metamorphosis he uses to break into his
victims’ rooms, make himself invulnerable or flee far away). This is the most
bizarre transformation and the most radically related to Dracula’s non-living
nature; an atmospheric transformation that brings to mind the icy atmosphere
of Transilvanian Hunger. Gothic time, the inorganic time of the vampire, is
contained in Dracula’s body and is, so to speak, its obscure essence, the
double negation of the individual unity: he is and is not Vlad III and, at the
same time, he is and is not Dracula. For this reason, Dracula could be defined
as the ‘definitive’ gothic novel, a work of pure emotion (also owing to its
narrative structure, made up of diary entries and scattered letters, memories
and vague impressions). In this sense, Dracula’s thirst for blood is a pure
urge for atmospheric dissolution—a desire that originates in the anonymous,
impersonal, and inorganic world from which the vampire springs: the afterlife.
It is, therefore, a threat from an alternative timeline or even from another
dimension. Dracula’s Middle Ages is neither a lost future nor a possible future,
but an alien catastrophe suspended in time: the pure possibility that the
human world could be annihilated by forces beyond the comprehension of
human beings. In the eyes of his contemporaries, the historical Vlad himself
embodied the negation of mediaeval values and Christian morality and, in
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the judgement of posterity, was the antithesis of Renaissance humanism
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and universalism—characteristics which, in some ways, anticipate the
G ot h i c I n s u r r e ct i o n
anti-human and apocalyptic aspects of the literary Dracula.
Although neoreaction also speaks of an inhuman, indifferent, and catastrophic time, it deludes itself into believing that it can control or mitigate
time’s cataclysmic effects through the coordinated employment of social
microstructures, governmental techniques based on scientific knowledge,
and massive recourse to the means of police violence. As evidence of the
illusory nature of this belief, Marx, in the first book of Capital, compares
the capitalist accumulation machine to a vampire (thus inaugurating the
cybergothic era)20 in an analogy that also helps us to understand the ending
of Stoker’s novel. In the last pages, Dracula is cornered and stabbed in the
heart, whereupon he turns to dust—but not before, for a brief moment, an
expression of peace crosses his face. The narrator interprets this expression
in a moral sense, attributing it to relief at being freed from his tormented
existence, consisting of crime and eternal damnation. However, the Marxian
analysis, and what we have said so far here, would seem to indicate that a
different interpretation is more appropriate: the vampire has returned to his
place of origin, the atmospheric-inorganic world, only to be reincarnated in
the complex cybernetic system of machines and monetary flows that shapes
Capital, waiting to once again unleash his annihilating fury. The Anthropocene,
the age of ecological catastrophe, is the era through which the cybergothic
age winds like a snake.
GOTHIC APOCALYPSE
The journey from the pre-Christian era to the end of the Middle Ages has
finally come to an end; we have returned to the precise moment when
we were aiming to strike a blow against all forms of reactionaryism and
retroprogressivism.
20. K. Marx, Capital: A Critique of Political Economy, tr. S. Moore, E. Aveling (New York:
Random House, 1906), Part III, Chapter 10, 257.
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Jumping schizophrenically from one epoch to another, we have seen how
G ot h i c I n s u r r e ct i o n
both modernity and neoreaction, whatever they may say, are founded on
the same error of judgement: both have been too optimistic, both have
underestimated the possibility that there might be ‘something’ bigger and
scarier than themselves. That something is the Gothic Insurrection: the first
product of the entry into the cybergothic age.
We have seen how, unlike the double neoreactionary spiral described by
Land (which advances toward the past and retreats toward the future), the
double vampiric-hauntological spiral thrusts the past forward and makes the
future retreat, crushing the present. Where the first marches toward the
restoration of an ancient order, the second is marked by the brutal removal of
an era from the time continuum: the barbarian hordes ride toward the future,
while the apocalypse advances from the end of time. More like a meat grinder
than a time machine, the black metal double spiral is a chrono-abolitionist
device:21 if neoreaction looks at modernity as a deviation that directly leads
to a ‘re-emergence’ of the Middle Ages, the Gothic Insurrection recognises
the Christian, mercantile, colonial and logocentric Middle Ages as the root
from which the modern capitalist West arose.
The emerging cybergothic era does not therefore correspond to a simple
return to the historical Middle Ages or to an actual barbarian tribe (which
would really mean getting away with very little), but to a perverse vampiric
resurrection of the Middle Ages, effected through the reactivation of a
mythical past. This tendency can be broken down into three fundamental
metabolic processes: the rewriting of barbarian genealogies, a lycanthropic
proliferation, and an atmospheric metamorphosis. A triad that, in turn, can
be further subdivided into three twin dyads, in which the first element represents the incubation phase (the present situation), the second the result
21.
See A. Ireland, ‘The Poememenon: Form as Occult Technology’, Urbanomic Documents
(2017), <https://www.urbanomic.com/document/poememenon>. Ireland writes: ‘The future,
marked up by the immanent unfolding of the spiral, has already been determined diagrammatically,
while remaining, from the inside, a harbinger of the unknown’.
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of a global process: fragmentation and autonomy; mixing and hybridisation;
107
indetermination and impersonality. Drawn by the spiral’s double clockwise-an-
G ot h i c I n s u r r e ct i o n
ti-clockwise vortex, we are broken down, decomposed, and put back together
again in new, bizarre configurations—how astonishing to discover oneself a
human-animal-plant-language-archive-machine-bacterial-colony!
The Gothic Insurrection takes the demonic saying ‘I am Legion’ literally,
propagating and accelerating in every direction this vector of the spatiotemporal, psychic, bodily and conceptual molecularisation of the modern world.
This event seems to have already been recorded by one of the most notorious
and infamous Western political theorists. In Leviathan, in the chapter ‘Of
Spirituall Darknesse’, Thomas Hobbes analyses through the Holy Scriptures
the arrival of the ‘Kingdome of Darknesse’:
Besides these sovereign powers, Divine, and Humane [...] there is mention
in Scripture of another power, namely that of the rulers of the Darknesse of
this world, the Kingdome of Satan, and the Principality of Beelzebub over
Daemons, that is to say, over Phantasmes [...]. [T]he Kingdome of Darknesse,
as it is set forth in these, and other places of the Scripture, is nothing else
but a Confederacy of Deceivers […].22
In other words, a multitude of prophets, poets, visionary oracles, sorcerers,
witches and shamans who, in opposition to the one Truth of God and the
State, profess enigmatic, often contradictory or even incompatible doctrines,
contaminating the body politic and causing its fragmentation (in the form
of civil war).23
In his book In the Dust of this Planet, Eugene Thacker (following in the
footsteps of Carl Schmitt) shows how the paradigm that sustains and
22. T. Hobbes, Leviathan, ed. C. Macpherson (London: Penguin, 1980), 627.
23.
See V. Garton, ‘Leviathan Rots’ Urbanomic Documents (2017), <https://www.urbanomic.
com/document/leviathan-rots>.
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nurtures political orders, establishing Truth each time, is analogy, i.e. the
G ot h i c I n s u r r e ct i o n
assumption that there is or should be some degree of similarity between
the cosmic order and the political order. This is the Image of the World, an
imaginary representation of reality through which human beings attempt to
circumscribe the forces of chaos, in order to establish order; in essence, as
Thacker himself asserts, the cosmo-political order assured by Truth would
have the same practical status as a protective circle in a magic ritual. For
Thacker, however, the analogy comes up against some obvious limitations:
The analogical model assumes a few key factors: first, that ‘out there’ there is
an accessible, revealed and ordered world that can serve as a model or guide
in the development of a political system ‘in here’ [...]. Second, this analogical
relation is assumed to be a one-way street, that is, that the discernible order
of the world flows directly into the constitution of politics, whereas, of course,
there are a large number of ways in which this direction is reversed [...].
Finally, Schmitt’s analogical paradigm is decidedly anthropocentric, since it
takes it for granted that politics—like theology—has first and foremost to
do with the human (and, in this sense, the Hobbesian analogy of the body
politic is the most explicit example of this anthropomorphic property of the
political).24
It is precisely the supernatural horror propagated by the heralds of the
Kingdom of Darkness that spreads doubt as to whether the world order is
false, and it is for this reason that for Hobbes, as for every defender of the
established order, it is necessary that they be unmasked as ‘deceivers’ and
corrupters of the Truth. The cosmo-political model, however, reveals its
fragility from the moment when the proliferation of false prophets is compounded by the unexpected destruction caused by natural catastrophes: in
addition to the ‘Children of Darknesse’, Hobbes counts divine will, i.e. chance
and indeterminacy, among the main threats to the safety of the state unit. It
24. Thacker, In the Dust of This Planet, 96.
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is precisely because politics does not solely have to do with humans that the
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ecological catastrophe of the Anthropocene appears as the most concrete
G ot h i c I n s u r r e ct i o n
manifestation of an enigmatic and malevolent will or, even worse, of the icy
indifference of an empty heavens; the cosmos will remain silent while the
earth collapses under our feet, along with all the certainties and beliefs to
which we have so far clung.
As will be evident by now, the Kingdom of Darkness (Babylon?) is not
a place but a time: the time of danger and dissolution. It is the time of the
Gothic Insurrection, in which the multitude of the dead, situated beyond time,
is unleashed upon the world, tearing it to pieces, channelled and propagated
by the voices of possessed oracles. It is the time when the world, or rather
the Image of the World, shatters—without any hope of return—and the
most ‘deviant’ world views proliferate indefinitely. Unity dissolves into an
ocean of singularities, the universal into the particular. To paraphrase Marx:
‘From each according to his insurrection, to each according to his desire’.
Satisfied with its work, the black metal crow, perched on the edge of
time, sees what we can only anticipate: it watches the planet plunge into
chaos, burnt alive by the new barbarians.
But who are the new barbarians?
CK
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EXTINCTION
E x t i n ct i o n
The enemy is no longer ecstasy, but redemption.
Stephen Metcalf1
Among the most heartbreaking and unbearable works of art of recent years,
the music video ‘Cry Alone’, the first single from Gustav Elijah Åhr/Lil Peep’s
posthumous album Come Over When You’re Sober pt. 2, has earned a place
in my heart, remaining, as far as I’m concerned, undefeated in morbidity to
this day. The reason for my personal preference is easy to state: behind the
mall goth aesthetics, the ugliness of the video, the nauseating repetitiveness
of the song and the grunge revival in trap sauce that no one asked for, there
is a narrative as simple and effective as it is unconscious and involuntary,
as poignant and monstrous as it is kitsch and in bad taste. ‘Cry Alone’ is
comparable to a particularly obscene and detestable yet clumsily trashy
Halloween decoration. A human skull used as a Jack O’Lantern.
The video for the song is an ungainly pastiche of images that depict Peep
walking through his old high school as if he were a ghost, Peep sitting in a
hotel room, and fragments of his school yearbook. The images are extremely
lo-fi, in keeping with the grunge sample that underpins the whole song.
The nigredo that makes this digital artefact essentially cursed is, as in any
self-respecting ritual, repeated cyclically before each refrain, and is activated
by a simple magic formula: ‘Tell the rich kids to look at me now’. The ritual
formula achieves its effect by secreting a kind of impalpable black substance
and subverting the trap topos to which Peep was most likely referring: for
1.
S. Metcalf, ‘Introduction: “Even When the Heart Bleeds”’, in F. Nietzsche, Hammer of the
Gods: Apocalyptic Texts for the Criminally Insane, tr. ed. S. Metcalf (Sun Vision Press, 2012), 12.
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if these phantom rich kids who haunt the trapper’s memories were to take
E x t i n ct i o n
the trouble to go and see where Gustav has ended up, rather than finding
him a success story climbing the music charts, they would find photos of his
corpse, spread online on the day of his death, 15 November 2017.
This sentence, then, takes on a revolting character that turns it into a
funeral lament repeated—at the time of writing—more than 24 million times
on YouTube, going from being a moment of social revenge to being a most
classic and didactic example of tragic irony. We, the omniscient spectators,
already know that our hero is going to die, but we are forced to helplessly
watch his words resonate within an ultra-Calvinistic universe, a cosmos
where everything is monstrously linear and predetermined. Lil Peep, unaware
of what is about to happen, unknowingly records a macabre ‘reach out and
touch faith’ for the total depression generation, a groan that invites us to
access his martyrdom. Like the voice of the flutes in Greek tragedies, the
catatonic repetition of ‘Tell the rich kids to look at me now’ combines singing
and wailing to form an inhuman chimera. As described by Eugene Thacker
in Infinite Resignation: ‘The mourning voice [the flute] of Greek tragedy
constantly threatens to dissolve song into wailing, music into moaning, and
voice into a primordial, disarticulate anti-music.’2
Why dig up and celebrate this particular image, one of the many fragmentary testimonies that make up the digital martyrology that Peep left us
after his death? This atheological saint and this godless martyrdom harbour
an extremely detailed metaphorical description of the temporality in which
we are immersed, which mediates and informs our psychic, collective, and
individual lives. In other words, it is a trash parable that narrates, again
unintentionally, the way we perceive time on both subjective and social levels.
Before explaining what I mean by this, however, I must necessarily take a step
back and turn to my main interlocutor: CK, author of ‘Gothic Insurrection’.
CK’s text also begins with a metaphorical description of the temporality
in which we live—a present haunted by a remote past that does not want to
2.
E. Thacker, Infinite Resignation (London: Repeater, 2018), 16.
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remain in its grave. According to CK, following VM’s analysis,3 the present is
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currently in the grips of a temporal paradox that has essentially resurrected
E x t i n ct i o n
the Middle Ages. Rather than looking toward the future which, as Mark
Fisher argues in Ghosts of My Life,4 is slowly being erased, our present rots
with the corpses of a past that is returning to the present, plunging us into a
hellish version of Nietzsche’s much-vaunted Eternal Return. The temporality
that characterises us, both as individual prisons of flesh and as a society,
is a closed circle in which the future is replaced by an endless repetition of
the ghosts of our past.
In order to support this reflection, CK calls into question one of the most
influential schools of thought in the contemporary philosophical debate on
chronopolitics: Mark Fisher’s aforementioned reinterpretation of Jacques
Derrida’s hauntology. This theory is, at first glance, completely acceptable.
After all, every sphere of our social life seems to be suffocated by a total
retromania, by the revivals of the revival of the revival. We live in an open-air
Overlook Hotel, we ride a snake that keeps eating its own tail, and we inhabit
a world in which the present only ever regurgitates before us faded copies
of a time we feel we have already lived. The future is dead.
As natural and self-evident as this theory may seem, I believe that the
situation is far worse and far more suffocating than CK suggests. I believe,
in fact, that at the basis of this circular temporality that characterises our
New Middle Ages there lies an apocalyptic, neo-Millennialist and tragic
linearity, marked by the firm conviction that our destiny is already totally
and irretrievably written. The endless repetition of the past is merely the
symptom of a deeper temporality, marked by a future which, far from being
cancelled, is all too present, but already decided in advance. This future,
which makes every attempt at action futile and doomed to failure—and
3.
V. Mattioli, ‘Il medioevo digitale’, Il Tascabile (2018), <http://www.iltascabile.com/linguaggi
/il-medioevo-digitale>.
4.
M. Fisher, Ghosts of My Life: Writings on Depression, Hauntology and Lost Futures
(Winchester: Zero, 2014).
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which in turn generates the time of hauntology—can be summed up in a
E x t i n ct i o n
single term: extinction.
Indeed, our present is obsessed with the idea that we are about to be
annihilated, that the world as we know it will be obliterated, that our time is
a straight line to total destruction—which is why we cling to a past marked
by the absence of this awareness. From learned discourses on existential
risk,5 and in their wake the whole bandwagon of educated secularised ecomillennialism that Alexander Galloway has called ‘warm pride’,6 via the litany
of class malaise7 to the general inarticulate feeling that there is essentially
nothing left to do (defined by Fisher as ‘capitalist realism’)8 what we might
term the Zeitgeist (a decidedly stale word), as Ray Brassier rightly observed
in his masterpiece Nihil Unbound,9 is devoted in its profound essence to the
countenance of our disappearance from the face of the earth. Our temporality, then, is not hauntological, but tragic, in the harshest sense of the term.
Like Christ in Gethsemane, we already intimately know our future passion
and accept this determinism as if it were a historical necessity, clinging to
the fetish of times past. As Emil Cioran says, modern humanity has ‘opted
for tragedy’.
This brings us back to our martyr, Lil Peep. If our chronopolitical hypothesis works, then Peep becomes the embodiment of this intimate sense of
predestination which is widespread throughout the social body. Peep is the
manifestation of our destiny: an inglorious, unredeemable end, anticipated
by a parade of premonitions of what lies ahead, confirming the necessity of
this extinction. I swear I mean well, I’m still going to hell.
5.
For example, N. Bostrom, ‘Existential Risk Prevention as Global Priority’, Global Policy 4:1
(2013).
6.
A.R.
Galloway,
‘Warm
Pride’,
Culture
and
Communication
(2014),
<http://
cultureandcommunication.org/galloway/warm-pride>.
7.
R.A. Ventura, Teoria della classe disagiata (Rome: Minimum Fax, 2018).
8.
M. Fisher, Capitalist Realism: Is There No Alternative? (Winchester: Zero, 2009).
9.
R. Brassier, Nihil Unbound: Enlightenment and Extinction (Basingstoke: Palgrave, 2007).
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Clearly, this revision of hauntological chronopolitics needs to be put to the
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test by other case studies. In other words, it’s not enough for Lil Peep to
E x t i n ct i o n
demonstrate how widespread the tragic temporal structure is within the
social body for us to affirm that the vision of the world according to which
we are destined to vanish into oblivion—what we will call passive extinctionism—has become our mother tongue.
Fortunately, material that can be used as an example of our passive
extinctionism is, in my view, plentiful: from Roko’s Basilisk making its way
into pop culture to the far-fetched success of neo-Millenarian conspiracy
theories, which in a very short period have become one of the most consumed
products on the most ‘family-friendly’ platform on the web, YouTube.10 For
this reason, I will restrict the sample of cultural material under analysis and,
in imitation of Eugene Thacker’s In the Dust of this Planet,11 will focus on
horror, convinced that horror, taken to the right degree of abstraction, can
release a conceptual power that no other genre can hope to rival. In particular,
I will consider Halloween (dir. Green, 2018) and Hereditary (dir. Aster, also
2018), two shining examples of tragic temporality.
BLOOD RITES
Forty years after the Haddonfield massacres in Illinois, Laurie Strode—
the girl who survived the first Halloween, released in 1978—is still in hell.
Michael Myers, her tormentor, has been locked up in prison for decades,
perpetually engrossed in his luciferous hexichasm, but she continues to
prepare for his return. She lives in a house littered with weapons and traps,
with rooms transformed into mazes of manacles, armoured doors and a
basement/crypt concealed by a complicated automatic mechanism.
10.
Shane Dawson, currently one of the most popular figures on the platform, is a prime
example of this ‘family-friendly apocalypticism’. Dawson is now a maker of documentaries
which celebrate the gothic and barbaric splendour of the new platform capitalism, but he owes
his success largely to his viral videos covering, in incredibly millenarian fashion, the various
conspiracy theories born of the hive mind in which we are all immersed.
11.
(London: Zero, 2011).
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This meticulous preparation for the resurrection of her very own prince of
E x t i n ct i o n
darkness has, however, taken its toll: Laurie has become estranged from
her niece, ostracised by the rest of the family, and lives far from everyone,
afflicted by a long list of addictions, phobias, and psychophysical disorders.
In other words, this is a woman with no future and no present, devoured
by absolute evil as embodied in the silent masked visage of Michael Myers,
and by her past.
Even limiting ourselves to this brief summary, it seems clear that the
latest chapter in the horror saga created by John Carpenter explicitly works
against my revision of hauntological temporality, and gives credence to
that proposed by CK. Leaving aside the fact that the new Halloween is an
objectively hauntological product to the core—being the umpteenth sequel
in a saga that survives thanks to our attachment to characters and narrative
formats from over forty years ago—the story it tells seems clearly to be
obsessed with a past that paralyses the present and banishes what remains
of the future. Laurie, the protagonist of the story and the character we are
supposed to identify with, is a walking corpse with no existential horizons or
possible futures, anxiously awaiting the return of her past. Laurie Strode is
the very incarnation of the hauntological subject, trapped in the putrescence
of the past.
But the ending of the film destroys this interpretation. Predictably,
Michael Myers has escaped from his imprisonment and has done everything
possible to reach Laurie. After a long struggle, Laurie manages to lock him
in the basement, leaving Michael with no way out. She then burns down the
house, throwing her own past into the fire. Burn me down till I’m nothing
but memories, I get it girl….
However, the film ends with a decidedly predictable ‘twist’: the camera
swiftly frames all the rooms in the house one by one, clearly showing that
Michael Myers is not in there—he is still on the loose. For those who know
the saga we are referring to, it is an ending that is not surprising at all. In fact,
the 1978 film already ended in exactly the same way: Michael Myers falls out
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of a window, ‘the good guys’ (outside and inside the film) are convinced that
117
he is dead and that the nightmare is over, but he actually escaped. Halloween
E x t i n ct i o n
repeats Halloween, nothing has changed.
The really disturbing thing about this ending—and, above all, about the
profound sense of déjà vu that it provokes in the viewer—is that it clearly
shows how, underneath the hauntological theme that dominates the story,
there is another, hidden temporal paradox: behind the hauntology lies the
horrifying idea that the script, not only of the film but of the whole saga, was
already written all along, that it comes from a future already established from
the very start. The film and the saga in general were destined to end like this,
it is a sentence without appeal. Moreover, what testifies to this paradoxical
temporality as the true horror of this film is that we viewers already knew
all along how it was going to end. There is no surprise or astonishment, and
the ghosts of the past are little more than epiphenomena of a temporal
noumenon that smiles out at us at the end of the film, showing its fangs.
Halloween concludes by showing us its true face: the whole saga is
underpinned by a predestination with no escape route, made of the same
substance as the attitude I have called passive extinctionism. The problem,
then, is not the slow erasure of the future, but the peremptory and merciless assertion of a future that is necessary and already written. In other
words, the problem is not hauntology but tragedy, understood as a temporal
structure in which the future is given as an unavoidable fact underlying the
continuous return of the past. The story goes like this: silent death, embodied
by Michael Myers, comes from the future and condemns us to extinction.
Everything has already been written, so all we can do is lock ourselves in
and prepare our bunker.
If this temporal anarchitecture in which time runs in reverse and the
future imposes a rigid and deadly structure upon the present and the past
weren’t depressing enough, the situation becomes even more chilling when
we examine the second example of tragic temporality, also released in 2018:
Hereditary.
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Hereditary is essentially the story of a ruthless and luciferous matriarchy.
E x t i n ct i o n
The film opens with the funeral of Ellen Graham, the matriarchal figure of
the protagonist family, and all the events that take place in the film revolve
around her occult will which, from beyond the grave, directs a sacrificial
rite consisting of decapitations and Lovecraftian madness, inflicted upon
her family with the aim of invoking Paimon, one of the central demons of
The Lesser Key of Solomon.12 Hereditary is, in a nutshell and without going
into too much detail, the representation of a ritual that comes true thanks
to the dark forces that vow every single action represented to a precise
future result. Every detail of this film, from the title to the exotic symbolism
that punctuates the scenes, is a concentration of absolute predestination, in
which every gesture is destined to fulfil a future already ordered by forces
that come from places where the human mind cannot venture.
Clearly, the tragic temporal structure in this case is blatant and explicit.
In Hereditary, time flows backwards, and everything that happens is simply
the result of the activation of a hidden predestination. What is interesting,
however, is that neither the spectators nor the protagonists of the film fully
understand the predestination that informs the whole film. The tragedy
just happens and that’s it—at the end of the film, no one knows precisely
what it was that caused such pandemonium, we just know that it happened.
Hereditary is pure fatality without cause: we understand the mechanism and
the general logic of the story, but we never really understand why. Ellen never
explains her intentions, Paimon never directly reveals himself, the reasons
behind all of this remain a mystery.
This pure fact, this impenetrability of the motivations that guide the
ritual staged by Hereditary, in my opinion exemplifies the final element that
completes the implicit philosophy of passive extinctionism. This form of tragic
temporality that holds us captive is also generated by the fact that the world
we live in seems to have become cognitively ungraspable. The cosmos in
12.
S.L. MacGregor Mathers and A. Crowley, The Lesser Key of Solomon (Bristol: Mockingbird
Press, 2016).
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which we are immersed (and we must indeed speak of a cosmos, given that
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the order of things seems immutable, as if it has always been perfectly given)
E x t i n ct i o n
seems clearly destined for self-destruction, but it is too complex and too
absurd for mortal and intellectually limited beings like us to understand. Our
temporality is marked by an unknowing that is involuntary and absolute, light
years away from that proposed by the mystics and by Georges Bataille, the
most disturbing and most fundamental philosopher of the twentieth century,
an unknowing that destroys all possibility of intervention in the tragedy in
which we are protagonists. As Eugene Thacker writes in the first pages of
In the Dust of this Planet:
The world is increasingly unthinkable—a world of planetary disasters, emerging pandemics, tectonic shifts, strange weather, oil-drenched seascapes, and
the furtive, always-looming threat of extinction. In spite of our daily concerns,
wants, and desires, it is increasingly difficult to comprehend the world in
which we live and of which we are a part. To confront this idea is to confront
an absolute limit to our ability to adequately understand the world at all—an
idea that has been a central motif of the horror genre for some time.13
In short, Hereditary allows us not only to analyse, once again, the time of
tragedy, but also to complete the conceptual structure that justifies and
reproduces passive extinction, the philosophical and temporal horror that
we have tried to expose.
Passive extinctionism is thus essentially composed of three fundamental
characteristics: (1) time flows in reverse, going from a future that has always
been present toward a past that becomes, a posteriori, the activation of this
same future; (2) time has only one direction and only one possible point of
departure: extinction; (3) this tragic temporality is sustained by a complete
inability to grasp its motives, and the world generated by it.
13.
Thacker, In the Dust of This Planet, 1.
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BARBARISM
E x t i n ct i o n
Fortunately, horror is not only destructive but also generative.
Not only has horror produced an extremely accurate description of our
temporal prison, it has also outlined a possible way out of this pernicious
situation. More precisely, one film has shown more than anyone else what
it means to break free from the time of tragedy: Mandy.
Mandy, director Panos Cosmatos’s latest psychedelic folly (also from
2018), is the tale of a couple, Mandy and Red, who unwittingly end up practising two deadly magical rites. The first ritual is markedly tragic and very
reminiscent of the dark forces described by Hereditary: through the invocation of chthonic warriors, Mandy conjures up biker demons of a markedly
Lynchian type, and a sort of gang/cult of ‘freaks’ who subsequently decide
to capture her and Red and sacrifice them. In a nutshell, the pair unwittingly
destine themselves for death.
The second ritual, however, breaks the spell and subverts the tragic
temporality. It is a totally paradoxical rite: Mandy has been captured and is
about to be raped and killed by the leader of this mysterious redneck cult, a
certain Jeremiah Sand. Jeremiah undresses in front of her, ready to embody
the mania of the lord of tragedy. Mandy, however, laughs in the face of her
tormentor. Mandy shows joy in the face of death, the same joy so celebrated
by Acéphale’s sacred conspiracy,14 and Jeremiah goes mad. Mandy will be
killed, but her jubilant death will trigger an implacable vengeance at the
hands of Red, completely subverting what seemed to be the film’s destiny.
As Nicola Masciandaro has quite rightly observed,15 this laughter, so
mystical and alien, splits the film in two. The image distorts under the pressure
of the sound of Mandy’s unconditional joy, every authority and every idol
disintegrates, and Mandy becomes the vector of an Outside that breaks the
14.
G. Bataille, The Sacred Conspiracy: The Internal Papers of the Secret Society of Acephale
and Lecturers to the College of Sociology (London: Atlas Press, 2018).
15.
N. Masciandaro, ‘Laughing In(side) the Face of Evil: Notes on Mandy’, The Whim (2018),
<http://thewhim.blogspot.com/2018/09/laughing-inside-face-of-evil-notes-on.html>.
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prison bars of tragic temporality. Mandy embodies a mystical sovereignty
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that dismisses all sovereignty and generates the possibility of a totally
E x t i n ct i o n
unknown future, open to radical novelty. Mandy’s martyrdom is a barbaric
immolation, in which the world is obliterated by an excess-sensation-redemption that frees the cosmos from the time-trap of tragedy. Mandy is a
wild abandonment, in which the victim takes possession of her own tragedy,
affirming, as the philosopher and occultist Hakim Bey did: ‘Ours is no art of
mutilation but of excess, superabundance, amazement.’16
Moreover, while not understanding what is happening, this jubilant
martyrdom transforms ignorance into non-knowledge, a direct emanation
of an inhuman darkness. Mandy is, to quote Max Stirner, an Unmensch,17 a
monster who no longer has any relation to the human, who takes possession
of himself without waste, turning tragedy into Dionysian power and into
chaos and excess. ‘I pray we could come to this darkness so far above light!
If only we lacked sight and knowledge so as to see, so as to know, unseeing
and unknowing, that which lies beyond all vision and knowledge’,18 says
Pseudo-Dionysius the Areopagite. Mandy is pure active extinctionism.
This brings us directly back to CK’s thesis. In fact, CK too, by way of a
very dense analysis of Bathory’s poetics and a rigorous exposition of various
monstrosities, comes to affirm that the non-subject that will shatter the
asphyxiated temporal paradox in which we are trapped is the barbarian, the
monster that comes from outside, the protagonist of a multitudinous Gothic
insurrection against the world.
The Gothic Insurrection takes the demonic saying ‘I am Legion’ literally, propagating and accelerating in every direction this vector of the spatiotemporal,
16.
H. Bey, T.A.Z.: The Temporary Autonomous Zone, Ontological Anarchy, Poetic Terrorism
(Brooklyn, NY: Autonomedia, 1985), 37.
17.
M. Stirner, The Ego and Its Own, tr. S. Byington (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
1995).
18.
Pseudo-Dionysus, ‘The Mystical Theology’, in The Complete Works, tr. C. Luibheid (New
York and Mahwah, NJ: Paulist Press, 1987), 138.
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122
psychic, bodily and conceptual molecularisation of the modern world. […] To
E x t i n ct i o n
paraphrase Marx: ‘From each according to his insurrection, to each according
to his desire’.
Satisfied with its work, the black metal crow, perched on the edge of
time, sees what we can only anticipate: it watches the planet plunge into
chaos, burnt alive by the new barbarians.
However, CK concludes ‘Gothic Insurrection’ by asking, paraphrasing
Nietzsche, who these new barbarians will be. But does it make sense, having razed the entire world, to conclude by wondering how to identify these
multitudes who will displace the existing regime and launch themselves
against the hegemonic temporality, whatever it may be? Without wishing
to be excessively polemical, I believe that the question is inessential: Mandy
allows us to bypass it completely. What is evident in Mandy’s laughter is that
identification and Proper Names are obsolete structures in this kind of total
insurrection, destined to dismantle the tragic temporal mobilisation in which
we are immersed. What really matters, what unites and qualifies destruction
liberated from barbarian mysticism, is what the insurrection does, not who
or what it is. While the identity of the new barbarians remains mysterious,
their actions are crystal clear.
The new barbarians as embodied in Mandy, in fact, do only one thing:
transform tragedy and decadence into sources of power and subversion.
Where biofascism19 and the Dogma of the Right Hand see chaos and perceive the need for order, insurrection sees the blossoming of a thousand
new worlds and the virulent tragedy of this world surpassing itself. In the
words of Edmund Berger, the decadence in which the new barbarians arise
‘is not decadence understood first and foremost as a moral stagnation or
reactionary theory of civilizational decay, nor as any sort of absolute law;
instead, decadence is a kind of aberrant moment in which the development
19.
T. Guariento, ‘Dalla Parte Del Caos, Per Distruggere Il Biofascismo’, Not (2018), <http://not.
neroeditions.com/caos-vs-biofascism>.
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of productive forces is tossed out of joint from the creative turbulence that
123
typifies the long-range evolution of industrial systems’.20 Like Donna Hara-
E x t i n ct i o n
way’s cyborgs, the new barbarians are the bastard children of modernity and,
through a state of permanent destitution, help it toward its obsolescence.
This is no tragedy: it is the monstrous aura of the real movement that
abolishes the present state of affairs. When we die, bury us with all our ice on.
EM
20. E. Berger, ‘Waveforms: Art and the Revolutionary Transformation in the Age of Blockchain’,
ŠUM 10:2 (2018), <http://sumrevija.si/en/eng-sum10-2-edmund-berger-waveforms-art-andthe-revolutionary-transformation-in-the-age-of-blockchain/>.
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the two writings entitled ‘Gothic Insurrection’ and ‘Extinction’, of which EM
and I are the authors and which, prior to this publication, have already found
their way onto the web.1
Despite the obvious differences (some attributable to aesthetic preferences, some to genuine theological disagreements), both writings attempt
to rework and reimagine a common legacy: that of Unconditional Accelerationism (U/Acc), a countercultural current clearly distinct from both Left
Accelerationism (L/Acc) and Right Accelerationism (R/Acc)—all of which
are widely debated online, especially in the obscure digital crevasse known
as #cavetwitter. The Gothic Insurrection—henceforth abbreviated as Goth/
Ins—is the theoretical entity that has emerged from this remodelling; it is
a new paradigm, deeply rooted in the traditions of cosmic pessimism and
Lovecraftian cosmicism, fuelled by a radical distrust of modernity and a
calling into question of technological singularity. As far as I am concerned, I
think that the main difference between U/Acc and Goth/Ins lies in the fact
that, although Goth/Ins attempts to bring certain naturalist and neo-fascist perspectives to the boiling point, at the same time it borrows certain
1.
I would like to thank EM for having prompted this reflection, for the contents of which,
however, I take full (ir)responsibility. I would also like to thank Edmund Berger, Vincent Garton,
and S.C. Hickman for their valuable comments.
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G ot h i c ( A) T h e o lo g y
In what follows, I would like to attempt to outline some brief reflections on
125
GOTHIC (A)THEOLOGY:
SOME NOTES ON GOTHIC
INSURRECTION AND ACTIVE
EXTINCTIONISM
126
characteristics from neoreaction (NRx) that could be correctly defined as
G ot h i c ( A) T h e o lo g y
‘reactionary’ or ‘realist’, as opposed to the optimism that still permeates all
currents of accelerationism, even the catastrophic U/Acc.
FOR A CHAOTIC VISION OF TIME
A fundamental aspect of Goth/Ins is the attention it pays to the theme of
temporal multiplicities, that swarm of virtualities that constitute the heart
of temporal dynamics and which, far from being mere passive elements, are
susceptible to a whole series of activations, perversions, and re-activations
that culminate in the production of ‘mutant’ or ‘undead’ doppelgängers. The
history of the world, as natural history, is nothing more than a stratification
of events and processes that are never definitively ‘dead and buried’, but
which continue to flow and exert an active force from a lower, or even subterranean, dimension than the present—events and processes that can also
reappear in an altered form, upsetting our temporal perception. This characteristic pluriversality amounts to the preeminence of reality over imagination, i.e. the hierarchical superiority of natural processes over thought.
This shift gives rise to a hypercomplex situation, of a natural-cultural kind,
in which areas such as economics, or philosophy itself, are liable to return
to a reflection on the various dimensions that make up the unity of reality
(what are the limits of scientific thought, or those of artistic perception, for
example?). This kind of philosophical analysis, therefore, would not only
require a ‘scientific vision’, unattainable by phenomenological intentionality,
but also a ‘chaotic vision’ based on the transience and unpredictability of
both structures and natural laws.
By going beyond the classic distinction between past, present, and
future—as well as the far more deeply rooted distinction between natural
laws and possible worlds—the dual articulation of the virtual and the actual
shatters every theoretical-practical concreteness, bringing it down to a level
beyond our diagrammatic perspectives, our heuristics, and our planning, thus
thwarting (directly from the transcendental plane) any kind of theoretical
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and ideological hegemony, totality or supremacy. From these simple axioms
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some important consequences may be drawn:
G ot h i c ( A) T h e o lo g y
I. Principle of finite adaptability: no structure can ‘live’ forever or aspire
to immortality, since such a goal would require that this structure
should be able to implement de facto, from time to time and according
to need, an infinity of virtual adaptations—a potentiality harboured
only by nature itself.
II. Principle of absolute immanence: none of the parts is able to
perceive or think of the whole to which it belongs, except at the cost
of its own faculty of observation and contemplation; nature remains
radically inscrutable, assuming characteristics that are supernatural
to our eyes.
III. Principle of economy: No structure can arise, proliferate, or be
generated where there are cheaper, or more immediately effective
alternatives to the features and traits presented by environmental
pressures; each part is subsumed within the whole, being powerless
in relation to its dynamic developments.
IV. Principle of operational constraint: Even if cheaper and more
efficient alternatives to the existing ones were to appear afterwards,
the variations and developments of the structures would have been
subject to path dependency lock-ins which, turning into operational
constraints, would prevent the structure from retracing its steps.
Both point III and point IV relate to the very concept of extinction.
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MUTANT DEGENERATION
G ot h i c ( A) T h e o lo g y
I would now like to focus on EM’s response to some of the questions and
problems posed by Goth/Ins. ‘Extinction’ in particular seems to me to
exemplify and summarise, with great precision, the critical aspects of the
argument. EM writes:
After all, every area of our social life seems to be suffocated by total retromania, by revivals of revivals of revivals. We live in an open-air Overlook Hotel,
we ride a snake that keeps eating its own tail, and we inhabit a world in which
the present always regurgitates before it only faded copies of a time that we
feel we have already lived through.
The future is dead. [...] I believe that the situation is far worse and
far more suffocating than CK suggests. I believe, in fact, that at the basis
of this circular temporality that characterises our New Middle Ages there
lies an apocalyptic, neo-Millennialist and tragic linearity, marked by the firm
conviction that our destiny is already totally and irretrievably written. The
endless repetition of the past is merely the symptom of a deeper temporality,
marked by a future which, far from being cancelled, is all too present, but
already decided in advance. This future, which makes every attempt at
action futile and doomed to failure—and which in turn generates the time
of hauntology—can be summed up in a single term: extinction.
I strongly agree with EM that chronological linearity, based on the paradigm
of the ‘fixed attractor’ and thermodynamic annihilation, in turn produces
numerous sub-oscillations linked to different sub-actors, thus superimposing
upon the straight line the circularity of eternal return. I also agree that the
extinction of our species, our people, the planet, and the universe itself is
actually necessary—indeed, it would be terribly naive of me not to accept
such an obvious and important point. I do not, however, agree that the
impersonal process, or the multiplicity of impersonal processes, that lead
out of the labyrinth and into death, is so prominent that what is, or what has
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remained, in a state of virtuality is overshadowed: the past, ‘the hauntologi-
129
cal never-born’ and all those obscure processes that unfold outside possible
G ot h i c ( A) T h e o lo g y
access by our consciousness. We must not, therefore, confuse future-time,
mobilised by the attractor, with the attractor in-itself, i.e. with the final state
of each process. To paraphrase Isabelle Stengers, any attractor, however
powerful, would only pose a whole series of problems, to which bodies and
assemblages of bodies would have to respond by mobilising all the resources
at their disposal.
What I consider relevant, however, is the idea that ‘passive extinctionism’
has become drastically insufficient. In fact, as EM himself states later on,
apocalyptic linearity would lead to new forms of ‘active extinctionism’, i.e. the
affirmative desire of some ‘free spirits’ (in Nietzsche’s words) to actualize
a certain virtuality, with the full awareness that the culmination and source
of this life-filled virtuality is none other than death itself—understood as a
negating becoming, but also as the negation of annihilation itself. The double
spectral-vampiric spiral posited by Goth/Ins already entails—by virtue of
its vampiric side—a drive toward annihilation and a desire to return to the
inorganic (what we have termed the ‘major attractor’). As in Nietzsche’s
eternal return, however, it is power that returns, power as that which actively
eliminates passive and reactive forces, drawing them into a vortex of pure
destructive activity.2 By admitting the passive/active dyad, we are forced
to assume, at the same time, this theoretical approach—which certainly
includes within itself the ‘end of all things’ but does not necessarily take it
as its metaphysical cornerstone. This end, apocalypse as absorption or reabsorption into nothingness, is not a problematic aspect, but rather the event
that marks the disappearance of all problems; it is therefore an ‘irrelevant’
time that we know will come sooner or later, but whose temporal location
and modalities we remain unaware of. Nevertheless, this final blaze that will
consume the universe is an allegory of the ultra-nihilist creative destruction
offered by Goth/Ins—as well as a kind of founding myth for all nihilism.
2.
See G. Deleuze, Nietzsche and Philosophy (New York: Columbia University Press, 2006).
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If the future is full of death, the past (in its threefold form: monumental,
G ot h i c ( A) T h e o lo g y
critical, and antiquarian) is the only alternative source of inspiration to the
traditions and memories of a zombified world. Any predestined timeline
is swept away by the reactivation, in mutant or undead form, of past or
never-born elements, flanked by the disintegrating action of death and
becoming: time, from this perspective, is in a process of ceaseless stratification and destratification. What is at stake here is the capacity of thought
to create, i.e. to produce ex novo, as well as that of ordering along a straight
line not only its chimerical lucubrations, but reality itself. As we can see from
the analysis carried out by U/Acc, anti-praxis and anti-politics are not just
one choice among others, but real alternatives—paradoxically practical and
political—to the trivial wasting of time and energy. Whether we like it or not,
there is no other choice but barbarism, the dissolution of the ways in which
modernity was born and developed in the West. There is no other way out
than the return of the past in an aberrant form, precisely because this past
has already become actualised. Conversely, what is not at all certain is that
modernity is capable of overcoming, destroying, or consuming itself without
any ‘external’ intervention. This is exactly why, setting out from the idea of
a hypothetical New Middle Ages, one would already be able to theoretically
delineate this novel time as a mutant degeneration, and not as a return or
revival of the Middle Ages themselves. It is precisely by virtue of barbarism,
fragmentation, the reemergence of despotism, the ineffectiveness of politics,
and social aberration that we can say that modernity has already died a
crushing death and that anti-praxis is the only option left.
This brings me to the second point, and the final part of EM’s text:
[…] CK concludes the text by asking, paraphrasing Nietzsche, who these new
barbarians will be. But does it make sense, having razed the entire world, to
conclude by wondering how to identify these multitudes who will displace the
existing regime and launch themselves against the hegemonic temporality,
whatever it may be? Without wishing to be excessively polemical, I believe
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that the question is inessential […] [I]identification and Proper Names are
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obsolete structures in this kind of total insurrection, destined to dismantle the
G ot h i c ( A) T h e o lo g y
tragic temporal mobilisation in which we are immersed. What really matters,
what unites and qualifies destruction liberated from barbarian mysticism, is
what the insurgency does, not who or what it is. […] The new barbarians […],
in fact, do only one thing: transform tragedy and decadence into sources of
power and subversion.
In the face of these words, I would like to repudiate the unfortunate
expression with which I concluded my paper. In my defence, however, I
would like to point out that the use of the interrogative form should not be
understood as a request for identification or subjectification (a ‘freezing’
interpellation capable of operating as an apparatus of capture). Instead, it
could well function in the form of an oracular evocation. In essence it is
a call to arms, but also an omen, an invitation to a barbaric proliferation
and an anti-practical convergence—or, more precisely, to a convergence
into absolute divergence. What is questioned by this call is the idea of the
multitude in the singular.
The world has already burned yet, at the same time, has not yet burned
enough: our principal opponents are still standing. Neoreaction, revivals of all
sorts, optimistic statism, classical conservatism and police authoritarianism
are getting louder and louder. Following EM, one could also suggest that the
main enemy is our own need for identification, which is intensified by the
terror of the invisible and undecidable. There is still much to be thrown into
the flames, and there is still much to be said and done.
Having reached this point, however, I feel it would be useful to continue
my reflections on EM’s notes in order to examine a perspective on the gothic
slightly different from the previous one, developed by two young authors,
Vincent Garton and Miroslav Griško. A real anomaly, which has taken on the
appearance of a bizarre ‘post-accelerationism’ of Christian provenance. I will
try to summarise what I consider to be the most interesting elements of this
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current, attempting to identify the main points of contact and divergence
G ot h i c ( A) T h e o lo g y
with the theses set out in ‘Gothic Insurrection’.
HORROR
Let us begin with two texts by Garton, an author better known than Griško
and with whom many will be more familiar thanks to his important piece,
‘Leviathan Rots’.3 In the first essay that we will examine, ‘Catholicism and
the Gravity of Horror’,4 we find one of Garton’s most brilliant insights: the
highlighting of the profound affinities between the Outside of the accelerationist tradition—the inhuman, the alien or the catastrophe5—and the
Divine as radical otherness, the absolute ‘Other’ of human and of creaturely
space-time.6 This is not, however, a purely eschatological or apocalyptic
operation—centred on a temporal apex capable of bringing about a reversal
of the Inside into the Outside—but a reactivation of historical projects
that were prematurely interrupted. Garton invites the reader to a recovery
of the origins of Catholicism, whose roots were corrupted by the advent
of modernity, its evolution inscribed and subsumed within modern time,
linear and irreversible. On the contrary, according to Garton, the mythical
temporality that pervades Christianity is founded on a Time outside of time:
a sovereign eternity, capable of delegitimising and displacing any element in
the locally-bound transient series. Let us take a closer look at some of the
passages in this text:
3.
Garton, ‘Leviathan Rots’.
4.
V. Garton, ‘Catholicism and the Gravity of Horror’, Jacobite (2018), <http://jacobitemag.
com/2018/07/05/catholicism-and-the-gravity-of-horror>.
5.
See N. Land, ‘Machinic Desire’, Fanged Noumena, 319–44, but also the following passage
from ‘Non-Standard Numeracies’: ‘For anything that can arrive when it wants, the best place to
hide is non-existence.’ Ibid., 534.
6.
See in particular the tradition of Rhenish speculative theology, specifically, Meister
Eckhart’s German Sermons: The Complete Mystical Works of Meister Eckhart, tr. ed. M. O’C.
Walshe (Chestnut Ridge, NY: Crossroad, 2009).
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An introduction to Catholicism can very well begin with horror. [...] To
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consider God is, primordially, to be struck by fear. The fear of God is the
G ot h i c ( A) T h e o lo g y
foundation of all wisdom […].
The Christian cosmos is caught from the start in the torsion of an
entanglement of historical time with infinity, in the operation of God’s hand in
material history. [...] [A]ll things are made subject to a judgment pronounced
from a throne beyond time itself. To follow this unfolding of history is to
be drawn […] by an inescapable gravity of difference—the impulsive sense,
familiar in the aesthetic of horror, of shadowy movements that overflow
human comprehension […] a radical freedom not of this world […]. […] [T]o
be aware of an alien exterior to our perception is itself to sense God.
And again:
Under the compressive impulse of recent modernity, [...] the distinctively
open future of the Enlightenment seems to be coming to a close. What is
characteristic of this ‘cyberpunk’ age is the collapse of the boundaries not
just between the future and the present—a ‘future so close it connects’—
but also the past: for progressives as much as conservatives, the future
comes to be constituted by the recovery of historical projects prematurely
foreclosed. The liberal understanding of Catholicism is ill-suited to this new
context, in which ‘progress’ is no longer linear and consensus reality itself
seems to be disintegrating. [...] [T]he postmodern metropolis with its Gothic
darkness and its neon lights, its complex and unbearably persistent ethical
disparities, points towards a potential rediscovery of the profundity of the
human soul […].
In the slightly later text ‘The Limit of Modernity at the Horizon of Myth’,
Garton returns to the theme of recovering the past, clarifying and expanding
the theoretical-political foundations of his project. In this case too, allow me
to extrapolate a few passages:
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The question is this: How does one conceive the future? For enlightened
G ot h i c ( A) T h e o lo g y
man, the future was to be constructed, a supposition embodied in an endless
proliferation of utopian schemes. A quite different answer, however, was
provided at the start of the twentieth century by Georges Sorel. The future,
Sorel saw, is the product of myth [and] to ‘construct the future’ is therefore
to elaborate a myth. The significance of myth is not, in this sense, in its truth
or falsehood, but in its social effects […].
Garton notes however that ‘myth cannot be merely engineered’. In his words:
The fantasy of the speculative philosophe […] was always just a fantasy, in
its full pathological sense. […] [F]ully enlightened man, in fact, even when he
imagines he has mastered his mythic ground, sprawls beneath the symbols
of a greater myth, which he can barely perceive: the ‘illusion of progress’. […]
What is more, the illusion of progress is a myth that runs up far too easily
against the limits of material production. 7
Setting out from the speculative construction of an alternative Catholic
Church to the existing one, Garton shows how mythological multiplicity is
not totalised within this movement of historical re-institution. The ‘disintegration’ of time cannot, in fact, prevent other myths from tracing their own
independent paths through the ruins of modernity. At the same time, we are
reminded that modernity itself, exemplified by the Enlightenment, rests upon
a mythical development: that of a self-intensifying historical progression,
distributed along a univocal timeline. Modernity is unconsciously possessed
by a myth, transformed into a blind spot, whose illusory and megalomaniac
characteristics are explicitly defined by Garton as ‘pathological’, since they
are part of the symbolic delirium of a paranoid temporality that aims to
annihilate any alternative to itself.
7.
V. Garton, ‘The Limit of Modernity at the Horizon of Myth’, Cyclonograph II, 2018, <https://
vincentgarton.com/2018/07/23/the-limit-of-modernity-at-the-horizon-of-myth/>.
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The current process of the dissolution of this tendential vector can be
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deduced from the proliferation of numerous mythical images of the world,
G ot h i c ( A) T h e o lo g y
the fading of utopian thinking, and the recursive nature of the crises that
capitalism periodically undergoes (and which produce a further increase in
political, symbolic and social fragmentation).8 As it fades, the future hoped
for by Western modernity leaves room for new ways of recovering the past—
or rather, pasts plural. And yet, although such recovery is possible—and
indeed, quite within reach—to believe that myths can be merely fabricated
or engineered would still amount to a profession of naivety. Reality always
has the last word, and the only effective distinction between myths is their
descriptive, prescriptive, and diagrammatic efficacy.
Garton’s goth Catholicism fits perfectly into the recent horror revival
(an exquisitely ‘speculative’ and ‘folk’ revival) while resonating with the
powerful return of cosmic pessimism (see the works of two very different
authors, Thomas Ligotti and Eugene Thacker). In this sense, the return of
fundamentalism and irrationalism, which accompanies geopolitical and social
fragmentation, is an important sign of a corresponding return of the sacred.
This ‘rediscovery of the depths of the human soul’—that abyssal and
inviolable interiority which places each and every one of us, individually,
before Horror and the Absurd—sets the worldly and immanent action of the
subject upon the basis of an ulterior, transcendent gesture, radically foreign
to the performative subject. Drawn into the crucible of the sacred, fear and
bewilderment are converted into glory, and the Deus Absconditus, who was
thought to be hidden at the end of time—outside of time—turns out to
have been all along hidden in plain sight, within the folds of creation itself.
And he loves you more intensely than ever, because he remembers the obedience of you all, and how you received him with fear and trembling.
St Paul, Corinthians 7:15
8.
On the topic of the repression of alternative designs to the Western-modern one, see
also M. Tomba, Insurgent Universality: An Alternative Legacy of Modernity (Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 2019).
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HORROR OR TERROR
G ot h i c ( A) T h e o lo g y
In ‘Operation Eukaryotic Cell’, Miroslav Griško takes the category of horror
as his starting point, while drawing a clear line between it and a second
concept, that of terror.9 As Griško himself shows, this distinction can already
be found in the critical work of Ann Radcliffe, who, in On the Supernatural
in Poetry (1826), defines horror, on the one hand, as a feeling of annihilation
and paralysis before an absolutely clear and distinct atrocity, and terror, on
the other, as a dark veil of indeterminacy, positioned before a horror that
is only foreshadowed. For Radcliffe, it is terror and not horror that has the
greatest point of contact with the sublime,10 since the anguished anticipation
of terror ‘expands the soul, and awakens the faculties to a high degree of
life’11 (on the contrary, the upheaval occasioned by horror can hardly be
reconciled with aesthetic experience). Terror, moreover, is intimately related
to the supernatural and to the enigmatic, ambiguous presence of obscure
entities.
For Griško, this distinction is of theological status: horror, in fact, concerns the infinite metabolic cycle of the natural world (cosmic horror), while
terror indicates a transcendent dimension, located beyond space-time (an
‘otherwordly cosmic terror’). While Garton uses the tools of critical philosophy
to identify the mythical roots of modern naturalism, Griško turns directly to
theology and mystagogy: physics—based on the necessity of bodily death,
the gratuitousness of history and individual existence, and the non-sense
of thermodynamic apocalypse—must yield to the mysterious teleology of
metaphysical eschatology. If the extermination of creation (Hobbes and
Darwin’s famous ‘war of all against all’) led to the appearance of intelligence,
if, through natural selection, it can even be said to be the active cause of the
9.
M. Griško, ‘Operation Eukaryotic Cell’ (2018), <https://www.academia.edu/35500410/
Operation_Eukaryotic_Cell_>.
10.
This is very similar to Edmund Burke’s hypothesis in his A Philosophical Enquiry into
the Origin of Our Ideas of the Sublime and the Beautiful and then Kant’s in the Critique of
Judgment.
11.
A. Radcliffe, ‘On the Supernatural in Poetry’, The New Monthly Magazine 7 (1826), 145–52.
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appearance of intelligence, it is because God himself is infinite intelligence
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and supreme ruthlessness. The God of the Christian is the God of murder
G ot h i c ( A) T h e o lo g y
and war, hidden at the end of time, awaiting the annihilation of the world.
For Griško, the end of natural war corresponds to the gradual unveiling
of a ‘secret war’ of which one may become conscious only through religious
or sublime experience. Perhaps the aims of this war will sooner or later be
revealed in a final, destructive jubilation; but while awaiting this supreme
moment, the war can only get worse, becoming more and more insane and
horrifying—until the arrival of the Exterminating Angel.
Let’s take a look at a couple of passages from ‘Operation Eukaryotic Cell’:
Horror and terror name two forces of extinction, distinguished by the former’s immediacy and the latter’s remoteness […] Horror describes outer war
in its transparent brutalism, whereas terror names the hidden extinction at
the heart of inner war. [...]
For Radcliffe, horror names a visceral, entirely corporeal violence, according
to which ‘cruel agents’ enact a program of incessant slaughter. As a mechanism of perpetual liquidation, the predation dynamics of horror are consistent
with knowable accretions of force that register themselves as translatable
and relatable in the vivid description of physical injury: from the smashing
of limbs to the slashing of throats. A discreteness of violence is found in the
uniqueness of a local death; horror as such denotes the inexhaustibility of
these local deaths in an interminable cycle of extinction. As a superior form
of extinction, terror, in contrast, is a ‘supernatural’ threat occasioned by the
‘obscurity’ of something that is not yet realized. The predation dynamic of
terror is conditioned by its remoteness; in terror the force of extinction is
immanently inaccessible and therefore untranslatable. Above the immanent
purposeless extinction of horror, terror in its remoteness implies ‘the progress
of (a) conspiracy’, a holocaustic eradication that is enacted according to the
intelligence of an objective which is not of this earth.
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While Garton attempts to curb the eschatological aspects of the religious
G ot h i c ( A) T h e o lo g y
gothic—focusing on the disturbing manifestation of an infinite God silently
penetrating a finite world—Griško, on the other hand, creates a dizzyingly
transcendent, apocalyptic, and linear eschatology in which it is the world
itself that unknowingly overflows into the infinity of God. In both cases,
however, we find ourselves faced with a strong form of dualism: between
immanence and transcendence, between the natural and the supernatural,
between creature and divinity. In this sense, despite the obvious differences,
Griško’s orthodoxy is the key to understanding the fundamental assumptions
of Garton’s mythical theology. Deciding on which side of the fence to place
oneself—on the side of immanence or on the side of transcendence—
means, in fact, projecting oneself into an inner experience, carrying out an
act of faith in the Absurd or, on the contrary, issuing an icy refusal of all
transcendence.12
Both Garton and Griško make a (mystical-eschatological) wager on
the Real: What is the ultimate foundation of creation, Nature or the Godof-Nature? A question which, in Nick Land’s work, takes the form of a pure
hypostatisation of indeterminacy: ‘Gnon’ (God-of-Nature-Or-Nature). Either
the world has a purpose (and an end), or chance and meaninglessness reign.
An impossible choice to make, a question whose answer will merely become
spontaneously evident in time—‘with’ time. The Truth about the Real remains
suspended at the boundaries of Time, in a lacerating instant.
Thou sayest that I am a king. To this end was I born, and for this cause came
I into the world, that I should bear witness unto the truth. Every one that is
of the truth heareth my voice.
Pilate saith unto him, What is truth?
Gospel according to John 18:37–38
12.
True faith, in this sense, always corresponds to a blind leap into the unknown—and
immersion in a crazy shadow universe. See S. Kierkegaard, Fear and Trembling, tr. A. Hannay
(London: Penguin Classics, 1985).
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HORROR AND TERROR
139
The gothicism of ‘Catholicism and the Gravity of Horror’ and ‘Operation
G ot h i c ( A) T h e o lo g y
Eukaryotic Cell’ involves a subtle play of light and shade—something like
the obscure Catholicism that permeates novels such as The Monk by M.G.
Lewis, or Horace Walpole’s The Castle of Otranto. The mysterious presence
of the hand of God and the ethereal touch of the Devil—in turn concealed
by a thick blanket of absence—alternate, intertwine and collide, raising
toward the skies the forms of a dark speculative cathedral. In the Gothic
novel, however, the Manichean clash between Good and Evil is only part of
a far wider framework, which includes the icy power of the inorganic and
death, the afterlife and its earthly thresholds populated by ghosts, vampires
and the undead, desires (erotic and otherwise) that plunge protagonists into
madness and depravity, and the enigmas of fate and predestination.
In The Castle of Otranto, for example, the deceased Alfonso becomes
an increasingly (and literally) cumbersome presence—to the point where
he comes to coincide with the castle itself, and explodes with rage. As for
The Monk, its story is a mad race through the labyrinth of self-destruction,
with the Devil in the role of occult director of a tale already written from the
start (it is a work that may still be considered ‘extreme’). The essence of the
Gothic is a constant exploration of the secret life of the inorganic and the
meanderings of the virtual—of that same ‘presence of absence’ that can be
found among the mechanisms of memory, in melancholy, in the regularities
of nature and, indeed, in myth.
From a certain point of view, however, Garton’s work is still too ‘naturalistic’: How can one burn with faith and yet at the same time not bow down
before the pure act that is not of this world? Having reached the heart of the
Christian religion, it is still impossible to regard the Godhead—which goes
beyond the anthropomorphic and human-centred vision of a creator-God—as
a mere element of myth, or a sociological figure. Griško’s apocalyptic God,
on the other hand, has the distinction of being also the worst of demons:
a fully alien, Lovecraftian entity, interchangeable with countless cosmic or
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hyper-technological nightmares (such as Hans Moravec’s AI or de Hugo
G ot h i c ( A) T h e o lo g y
de Garis’s Artilect, for instance). This Gothic deity would immediately
appear ambiguous, perhaps even obsolete, in comparison to a hypothetical
metropolitan noir deity: an invisible hand that traces out paths and weaves
destinies, incarnating itself in dark alleys and revealing itself in fleeting
moments of illumination, vertigo, and redemption. In all probability, only
this gnostic proto-God, which imperceptibly combines a whole series of
non-signifiant signs, could be effectively counted as belonging to the order
of myth. Indeed, as Garton seems to sense, theology draws its strength
from the weakness of a feeble contrast, not from the self-evident triumph
of light over darkness. The triumph of glory and grace must always remain
speculative.
However, unlike myth, religion can only grow larger by the minute, coming
to occupy—like the avenging spectre in The Castle of Otranto—all of reality,
producing excesses of abstraction and uncontrollable teleological proliferations. In this vortex, every sign acquires a meaning, and every meaning
converges, pointing in the same direction. Hunted down by paranoia, the
Hidden God becomes more and more evident—and Griško’s God, the ‘Lord
of Extermination’ is but the last stage of a semiotic-religious delirium.
In spite of its undoubted theological fascination, the God of the Outside
is one of the most obvious symptoms of the excessive linearity assumed by
accelerationism (as well as a clear sign of a long-incubated monomania). In
fact, we are faced with a relationship of perfect continuity with previous
theoretical elaborations—rather than a kinship between L/Acc, R/Acc and
U/Acc or a critical thread running through them. The obsessive-compulsive
aspects, the monodirectionality and the extreme fluidity of the described
processes (widely ‘lubricated’ from a philosophical point of view), are the
product of the combining of a whole series of coarse concepts (bordering
on pure fantasy) with theoretical frameworks within which the conflict is
almost never empirically identified in its material singularity, but only in the
form of empty universals, vague generalisations and abstractions of an
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idealist type. Aspects which, in some cases, relate only partially to certain
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currents and authors, but which, in other cases, seem to be deeply rooted
G ot h i c ( A) T h e o lo g y
in the entire theoretical complex.13
Accelerationism and its various derivations may have inherited from
‘post-modern’ philosophy a series of concepts and speculative territories
characterised by great plasticity and fluidity, but it is always necessary to
take into account the material constraints imposed by reality: the breadth of
the operational margins does not allow for the creation of a new and more
complex set of concepts.
The only field that can legitimately be defined as absolute, i.e. free of
all constraints, is the real-material field, i.e. the space in which the world
autoconstructs itself,14 independently of any correlation (linguistic, mental,
social or perceptive) and any access (conscious or unconscious).
From this perspective, the anti-naturalism put forward by a certain
accelerationism and post-accelerationism has two contradictory yet symmetrical faces. The first, widespread in the neo-rationalist and xenophilic
spheres, is exemplified by the representationalist fallacy, which consists in
claiming that nature is somehow ‘unjust’, and that human beings are capable
of freely and voluntarily modifying their existential condition by acting on
nature itself. But what is ‘unjust’ is in fact a specific definition of the concept
of nature, which is purely modern and Western, i.e. historically and culturally
situated—and not nature itself.
On the other hand, we can think nature as something plastic and malleable. An open totality, or an infinite set of spatiotemporal localities and
micro-localities, performative processes, and concretions of memory. In this
13.
This is the case with the rigid determinism attributed by many to ‘hyperstition’, or the
ethnocentrism of most accelerationist currents. This future in which the techno-economy is
nothing more than an indistinct, uniform mass, isn’t it barely credible?
14.
Here I follow in the footsteps of the research conducted by Ilya Prigogine. See for example
D. Kondepudi and I. Prigogine, Modern Thermodynamics: From Heat Engines to Dissipative
Structures (Hoboken, NJ: Wiley, 2014); I. Prigogine and G. Nicolis, Self-Organization in NonEquilibrium Systems (Hoboken, NJ: Wiley, 1977).
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sense, this conception of nature is in line with the idea that there is ample
G ot h i c ( A) T h e o lo g y
room for intervention, both technoscientific and evolutionary. Certainly, what
humans cannot do, the self-initiated development of nature can, and vice
versa; however, this space can in no way be said to be absolute and without
objective material limits, since nothing partial and finite could claim to act
directly on the infinite. The second anti-naturalist face is precisely the theological-paranoid one we have examined above, exemplified by an assertion of
‘pure reason’ according to which the sense of the world is external to the world
itself; in this case, if nature is ‘unjust’ is because justice is not of this world.
It is evident that each of these two conceptions is marked by a certain
degree of instrumental or ideological violence—a violence that cannot but
be either speciesist or anthropocentric (bordering on the so-called ‘strong
anthropic principle’). Both, moreover, are based on a twofold metaphysical
claim: on the one hand, ‘something’ could be capable of ‘everything’ (the
finite is capable of implementing the infinite); on the other hand, things are
not ontologically sufficient unto themselves (requiring an external entity, a
superior rational principle, or an intrinsic end that certifies their existential or
moral value). These two apparently contradictory positions demonstrate their
paradoxical synthetic unity at the very moment when all objections based
on a defence of organic finitude and partiality are branded as reactionary by
militant anti-naturalists, and as nihilistic by theologians and metaphysicians.
What cannot be endured in any way, after all, is the finitude, the marginality—and the vast burden of powerlessness—of the human being.
Moreover, the representational fallacy, the ‘infinity fallacy’ (which follows
from it), and the eschatological paranoia seem to exemplify ad absurdum the
secret idealism at the heart of accelerationism: the Singularity is inevitable,
the universe itself has conspired to this end, and every single process since
the beginning of time would have been nothing but an omen of the overcoming of matter by the omnipotence of a supreme AI. To remain steadfast
in lucidity at this point is to keep in mind that not everything is already
decided and not everything is inevitable, but also that, on the other hand,
not everything is possible.
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By locating the absolute—that which is totally free—in nature-matter, the
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Outside is positioned as immanent to every structure and as constitutively
G ot h i c ( A) T h e o lo g y
undecidable in its own virtuality. An atheological complex in which the
horrors of death, conflict and degeneration are inextricably intertwined with
the dark terrors of an impersonal, chaotic, disorganised, atmospheric and
inscrutable field. That which is formless is opposed to that which has form
and organisation. At the same time, this formless chaos is at the very basis
of the production of form, it is transcendental with respect to it, because it
constitutes the condition of its existence in time (something springs from
nothingness). The Gothic, here, indicates precisely this coexistence of light
and darkness, of manifestation and annihilation, of rise and fall. Forms do
not preexist, they must be created or produced, starting from the absence
of form—thanks to and in spite of its disintegrating action. The fluidity and
plasticity of formless matter means that what is infinitely actual (the active
production of forms, or natura naturans) can neither logically nor materially
exhaust its own infinite virtuality (i.e. the different combinations and infinitesimal variations on the theme of actualised nature). The actual, therefore,
is never definitively actualised, nor does it ever fully become itself, since
the virtual is this very tension toward perpetual actualisation: becoming.
The future, in this sense, is the chronotope in which the simultaneity of
decadence and generation leads to the constitution of the past, while the
present, as a threshold, presses for its own self-surpassing in the future.
The play of becoming stands precisely on this threshold, where nothing is
necessity, regularity or law—until its effective actualisation.
If there is any acceleration in Goth/Ins, it is precisely an acceleration of
the virtual: accelerating the passing of knowledge, as Nietzsche invites us
to do in The Anti-Christ.15 In this sense, as a consequence of partiality and
finitude, the unknown plays a fundamental role in the elaboration of a complex
15.
‘[T]o guide the blade here—this is for us to do.’ F. Nietzsche, ‘The Anti-Christ’, The Anti-
Christ, Ecce Homo, Twilight of the Idols and Other Writings, tr. J. Norman, ed. A. Ridley, J.
Norman (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005), 7 [§7].
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capable of leaving behind the accelerationist hangover. Non-knowing and the
G ot h i c ( A) T h e o lo g y
unknown, in fact, anticipate the formation of knowledge at the same time
that the latter believes it is moving toward them in order to conquer them.
The unknown is never external to the world, but is situated in its very roots:
How could knowledge be obtained without prior ignorance?
Everything we think we know at the moment is constantly thwarted by
the virtual, and knowledge is nothing more than this continuous dynamic
adaptation between the finite and the infinite. As in the gothic, the unknown
bursts into the everyday, assailing all that is good, just and true—and, in
essence, everything that is form and measure. By speeding up the thawing
of structures, one proceeds toward the unknown, blurring the boundaries
between the ‘natural’ and the ‘unnatural’, but also those between ‘nature’
and ‘culture’, or between ‘possible’ and ‘impossible’. Gothic terror, in its
purest form, does not correspond to the irruption of a series of transcendent
entities into the plane of immanence, but to the disruption of the plane of
immanence by itself, its laceration by the transcendental forces of chaos.
Terror and anguish always dwell in the heart of death, and therein lies the
root of all the horrors that befall us every day.
If, when reflecting on the power of the negative, we constantly look
toward annihilation and death, it is because everything, sooner or later,
fortunately, has its end—and it is this end that must be accelerated in
every direction. The plurality of directions and possibilities is a wave that
presses for the overcoming of any preconstructed future, and this is the real
difference (the constitutive difference) between myth and religion. Myths
and narratives are nothing but skeins of sense which segment and cross
every plane of reality and every timeline: a whole series of paths that collide,
intersect, alternate, and overlap, referring to possibilities that are entirely
‘of this world’. A world that stands on its own shadow and on its own excess,
rising, as if by magic, out of an ocean of darkness—in which the formless
terror of nature lurks.
CK
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and mines and undermines. [...] Does it not seem as though some faith were
leading him on, some consolation offering him compensation? As though he
perhaps desires this prolonged obscurity, desires to be incomprehensible,
concealed, enigmatic, because he knows what he will thereby also acquire:
his own morning, his own redemption, his own daybreak?1
Nietzsche2
Pankration (from pan, ‘all’, and kratos, ‘strength’) is an ancient fighting
style somewhat akin to boxing, wrestling, or vale tudo, but totally lacking
any time limits or demarcations such as rounds or weight categories. This
brutal martial art first made its appearance among the Olympian disciplines
in 648 BC and remained, at least until the fall of the Roman Empire, one of
the most popular sports among the inhabitants of the Mediterranean. In
pankration, to all intents and purposes an extreme sport, the only way to get
out of a fight was to surrender, to lose consciousness, or to die—although,
1.
This text is taken from the collection of writings by the pseudonymous ‘Bronze Age Collapse’
entitled The Search for Absolute Fitness: Plato as a Bodybuilder (Agharta, 1991). Even though
the identity of Bronze Age Collapse remains unknown, and despite the unreliability of the original
text, The Search for Absolute Fitness is one of those writings that, circulating from hand to hand,
has contributed significantly to the concept of the ‘Gothic Insurrection’. The idea—developed
by Bronze Age Collapse at the dawn of the 1990s in a crude and deliberately muscular way—
that the present is to be overcome through joyous destruction and irresponsible immersion in
a horrifically distant past, the neo-pagan atmosphere and autobiographical references that the
author has disseminated in the essays that make up the work, are echoed in the writings of the
Gruppo di Nun. We have therefore decided to offer readers a glimpse of this interesting piece of
writing, in the hope that it will inspire others as it has inspired us.
2.
F. Nietzsche, Daybreak: Thoughts on the Prejudices of Morality, tr. R.J. Hollingdale
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1997), 1.
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L i f t i n g t h e A b s o lu t e
In this book you will find a ‘subterranean man’ at work, one who tunnels
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LIFTING THE ABSOLUTE1
146
according to historians, it would seem that there were also athletes who
L i f t i n g t h e A b s o lu t e
won even though they lost their lives.
Between 364 and 356 BC, pankration was dominated by the terrifying
presence of Sostratus Sicionio, known as Acrochersite (‘Mr Fingers’) because
of his obsession with finger-breaking and his vast catalogue of holds. Three
times over, this ruthless fighter prevailed over the strongest men in the Mediterranean, beating all comers at the Olympics and also winning the Isthmian
Games, the Nemean Games, and many other important titles. Around about
the same time, during Sostratus’s last years of glory, the young Aristocles
of Athens—son of Ariston and Perictione; brother of Adimanto, Potone and
Glaucon; descendant of Solon and, perhaps, of Apollo himself—participated
in the Olympics, winning two titles in pankration. I like to think that it was
Aristocles, the ancient philosopher who became as famous as Plato (from the
Greek for ‘big shoulders’), who gave Sostratus a taste of defeat, opposing
the brutality of the Sicyonian with total bodily strength and harmony.
Imagine the mighty Aristocles grasping and crushing the hands of
Sostratus, giving him a taste of his own medicine. After all, only a perfect
alignment of muscular strength, instinct, intelligence, technical expertise,
and experience—or at least the mere possibility that such an alignment
could occur in the human body—could justify the existence of the discipline
of pankration. Total strength, resulting from the conquest of the individual
parts, from their subjection to the harmony of the whole: the founding myth
of the philosophy of mind…and of wrestling.
As Yukio Mishima intuited in Sun and Steel, psychophysical harmony is first
and foremost an Idea, in the full Platonic sense. It is a slow and arduous
process of adapting one’s body to a paradigm, a techné which in turn refers
back to the model of classical education, through which one submits oneself
to gradually more intense labours and more voluminous loads, to ever more
refined exertions and to ever subtler dangers. Mishima cautiously maintained
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that ‘beauty is always retreating from one’s grasp’.3 However, in the course
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of this process of adaptation, the body is not directed toward beauty, but
L i f t i n g t h e A b s o lu t e
returned to it.
Pay close attention, for I have dared to assert that harmony and beauty
are things that preexist discord, ugliness, and dissimilarity—an extremely
anti-modern, incredibly ancient (at least as ancient as the Way, Being, and
non-duality), and yet universal assertion. That the human body is not by
nature weak, passive, and sedentary, but powerful, active and dynamic—
open to becoming and receptive to both confrontation and escape—is
only the latest of the great truths to which modern science has assented.
In bodybuilding, in wrestling, in running, in weight training and in survival,
the body follows the same tendency toward the absolute before which the
mind prostrates itself when it dwells on philosophical thoughts, the same
tendency toward enhancement, recombination, speed and efficiency before
which the whole universe bows.
It is for these reasons that the intellectual body, the wage-earning
body—and, more generally, the battered body of the modern human being—
discover in weightlifting one of the most basic facts of organismic experience: namely, that to exist means to insist, that life consists primarily of a
series of efforts, of a perpetual effort, a conatus, a play of accumulations
of tension and sudden discharges. The encounter with the cold steel of the
dumbbells is the encounter with material concretion in its most inert and
repulsive form; indeed, I would go so far as to say that there is a profound
affinity between the body ‘fallen’ from its state of primordial dynamism and
weightlifting equipment: both, in fact, seem to be of the same icy, crepuscular
nature—just as, conversely, the dynamic body participates in the becoming of
matter, recognising itself as part of its flaming flux. It is as if, by confronting
and lifting matter, the human being lifts itself at the same time, becoming
something like its own guardian angel or, better, daimon.
3.
Y. Mishima, Sun and Steel (New York: Kodansha America, 1970), 23.
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148
It was Schopenhauer himself, in The World as Will and Representation, who
L i f t i n g t h e A b s o lu t e
proposed the body as the privileged vehicle of metaphysics: on the one
hand, in fact, the body offers itself (in the words of Mishima) as ‘depths
of the surface’, i.e. as the visible expression of individual interiority; on the
other, as the seat of perceptions and of an ‘instinctive’ principle of causality—inherent in all living beings—it is the point of origin of all matter, i.e. of
all activity in the universe, since perceptions and causality logically precede
all objective activity.4 From here one could go much further—as Nietzsche
did—and assume that it is the activity of each individual body or corporeal
collectivity, its closeness to the idea and its thirst for the absolute, that
determines the cosmologies it inhabits. This should render entirely clear the
meaning of the epithet kalos kagathos (‘beautiful and good’), attributed in
ancient times to those individuals who were psychophysically harmonious,
resolute in battle, in action, and in speech, and endowed with an innate
sense of rhythm and melody5 (and how can we not think here of the feats
of Herodotus’s impertinent Hippocleanes, so distant from our stale Christian
morality?). When the nature of a body is reactive, the universe around it
becomes reactive, linear, and static; conversely, when the nature of a body
is dynamic and enterprising, the cosmos turns into a cyclonic vortex—such
is the origin of Nietzsche’s Will to Power, a heroic and combative version of
Schopenhauer’s blind Will.
What a bizarre turn of events for philosophy, for the body to become the
voice of the spirit and the source of all wisdom!
The industrial city and industrial society, with their noise, their annihilating
rhythms and their junk food, are the products of a great upheaval. History
did not end in them but retracted, curling into a kind of backwash. History
4.
See A. Schopenhauer, The World as Will and Representation, tr. E.F.J. Payne (New York:
Dover, 2 vols., 1958), vol. 1, 5 [§2].
5.
See W. Jaeger, Paideia: The Ideals of Greek Culture, tr. G. Highet (New York and Oxford:
Oxford University Press, 1939).
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is not the history of human beings, nations, or tribes, but the living archive
149
of the trials and tribulations that matter must endure in order to rise above
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itself. The pull-up bar, the most imposing and vertiginous object in every
gymnasium, is the allegory of every vital impulse: by submitting ourselves
to its inflexible judgement, we measure ourselves against the cosmos itself,
raising ourselves above mortals.
If God were a lobster, and if the lobster were the yardstick for every
human action and every rule of law, every true hero would prefer to be a
star, a supernova or a black hole—to be able to glow from a great distance,
or to devour the whole world with his soul.
If one were to set aside the dumbbells and barbells for a few minutes
and pause to reflect on the philosophical status of the nerd leaving the gym
every Friday night, one would at some point come across the modern myth
of temporal linearity.
All too often in bodybuilding, the trainer does not perceive the whole
process as a return to the body—to eidetic harmony or, better still, as a
return to oneself—but as the journey to an ‘other’ destination, as a sort of
pilgrimage or una tantum cleansing. A tendency marked by goals, deadlines
and seasonal (mostly summer) events, and which is sure to cast any rookie
determined to get to the beach as soon as possible into despair.
The pathetic efforts of modernity to refashion the moral, ontological,
and aesthetic dignity of the body and spirit constantly come up against the
impenetrable wall of corruption and impotence. A corruption and impotence
generated by the introduction of the teleological and economic mechanisms
introduced into the West by Christianity. Every sin and every ‘wrongdoing’
corresponds to a punishment and a new renunciation to settle the debt
incurred; likewise, every process of purification is accompanied by a reward,
according to the dictates of a pact and a promise made with a great creditor—in this case the future body, the centrefold body, beyond which there
would be nothing but the oblivion of eternal rest. Without the demon of the
eternal return, without the power of a Sisyphus or a Prometheus, assiduous
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150
bodybuilding is merely the worst form of nihilism, fully realised by the torment
L i f t i n g t h e A b s o lu t e
of steroids and the deadly, hyperreal atmosphere they bring with them. In
the words of Mishima, the steel of the dumbbells is, more correctly, the
means of ‘restor[ing] the classical balance that the body had begun to lose,
reinstating it in its natural form, the form that it should have had all along’.6
Somewhere between the hopeful heroism of natural bodybuilding and the
hypertrophic nightmares of the Western gym there lies Greek sculpture,
with a whole series of divine or semi-divine bodies distinguished by their
apparently supernatural harmony and stature.
In the face of modern incredulity, it has often been said (especially in
academic circles)7 that classical sculpture ‘idealised’ the body. A hypothesis
which, in the creature of spirit, cannot but provoke a scornful smile: how
could Greek artists have idealised entire muscle groups in the smallest detail,
without having had concrete models of flesh and blood at their disposal?
Our level of corruption is such that we have become deaf to the call of god!
Further evidence that messianic time is nothing more than a time of the
constant postponement of every goal, and the stubborn postponement
of eternal rest. It is not, therefore, a question of being part of a process of
gradual and progressive improvement, but of an injunction to invert the very
chronological course of history and biology: ‘You must change your life!’ The
statuesque body of the god-athlete (living or merely depicted) acts upon the
observer by means of its exemplarity, inspiring change and, at the same time,
indicating the model to move toward. It is from this convergence of gazes
that we can deduce how, in the Idea, being and being-exemplar may converge.
The inability of moderns to conceive of the antique body, then, resembles
the inability of the child to imagine the true extent of its father’s strength.
Before Mediterranean antiquity, we are like children. Indeed, we are children
in the face of all prehistory, the kingdom of the fearless hominids, and that
6.
Mishima, Sun and Steel, 23.
7.
And how could it be otherwise?
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of the mighty creatures who preceded us. The reaction I ask you to embrace,
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therefore, is deeper and more titanic than that invoked by the frogmen.
L i f t i n g t h e A b s o lu t e
What a palaeolithic—even geological—sadness to see a white collar
where a cave bear could once have been seen!
When the Olympian gods defeated the Titans (the embodiment of the
forces of wild nature), they banished their opponents to Tartarus, a dark
place dominated by frost. In Tartarus—this sort of black hole, this gigantic
hell—Kronos, time, the true father of the gods and the titans, became
king once more, crushing under his heel every other being and every other
principle. The strength of the Titans then waned, and they became docile
and submissive creatures.
Like the Titans, we have been exiled into the bowels of the hollow earth,
Agartha—into the darkness of our own bowels and our own pale desires.
Such is the true meaning of the ‘myth of the cave’ and of Dante’s journey.
One day, our imprisonment will end, we shall return to the surface, and a
new Golden Age will begin: the gods, spirits, and animals will speak once
again, and their voices will resound, crystal clear; every man and woman
will discover a god and a goddess within themselves, every fight will be
accompanied by sweat and joyful laughter, every body will smell of flowers,
honey, and oil, and the sun will shine on everyone equally. ‘And thence we
came forth to look again at the stars.’8
War is father of all things, king of all things.
8.
Heraclitus9
D. Alighieri, The Divine Comedy of Dante Alighieri: Inferno, tr. ed. R. M. Durling (Oxford:
Oxford University Press, 1996), Canto 34, l. 139, 541.
9.
Heraclitus, The Texts of Early Greek Philosophy: The Complete Fragments and Selected
Testimonies of the Major Presocratics, tr. ed. D.W. Graham (Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 2010), 157.
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152
Fools! Their reflections are not far-reaching, who expect what was not
L i f t i n g t h e A b s o lu t e
before to come to be, or that something will die out and perish utterly. For
from what in no way is, it is impossible to come to be, and for what is to
perish cannot be fulfilled or known, for it will always be there wherever one
puts it at any time.
Empedocles10
The ‘pseudonym’ with which I pen these words does not conceal the subject
of the athletic and philosophical endeavour; rather, it is the undertaking
itself that drags the subject down into the dust, disrupts it, and strips it of
all identity. Palaistra means, in fact, ‘to struggle’, or even better ‘to throw
down’, ‘to collapse’. And how could it be otherwise for Zeus?
Set upon set, lifting increasingly great masses of inert matter, the subject
of weight-training brings their body closer to an impersonal, universal and
anonymous form—the body of the god or goddess. This tension toward the
unsolved, this desire to achieve an absolute fitness of body and spirit, is the
motion that drives the universe, that structures its becoming and maintains
its architecture.
When one thinks of the gods of antiquity, one imagines a whole pantheon
of superior creatures, each of which embodies a principle, or the pure essence
of a force; but the gods themselves were born of chaos, and had to scale the
hierarchy of entities by their own strength until they reached the heights of
Olympus. It is precisely because of this origin—common to everything that
is—that they share with every other being the aspiration to embody a principle, a force, a certain atmosphere. The universe is ‘a machine for the making of
gods’,11 but the gods themselves (like the Homeric Ares) can bleed, subject as
they are to the vortex of chaos, the supreme soul that generates and destroys
10.
Empedocles, The Texts of Early Greek Philosophy: The Complete Fragments and Selected
Testimonies of the Major Presocratics, tr. ed. D.W. Graham (Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 2010), 349.
11.
H. Bergson, The Two Sources of Morality and Religion, tr. R. Ashley Audra, C. Bereton
(London: MacMillan, 1935), 275.
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without mercy. The anima mundi—the fire that pervades even the most
153
insignificant particle of this dimension—contains within it every possibility,
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every combination, every environment and every psychophysical adaptation.
Living beings are merely contractions of its infinite activity, embodiments
of its thought and manifestations of its power, because it alone harbours
the supreme fitness: immortality as perpetual metamorphosis and as total
effectiveness of action (which thus becomes ‘gesture’). At the heart of reality,
Phanes and Zagreo, Apollo and Dionysus, form and élan, face each other in a
violent assault, tearing apart the cosmos and shattering space-time. ‘The one
and the many’: not a philosophical problem, but the product of a coincidentia
oppositorum and the diairetic proliferation to which this disjunctive synthesis
gives rise. This is the real secret of the tension toward the absolute, as of
any mimicry of natural rhythms on the part of human beings.
It was probably during the Great Oxidation Event—one of the darkest and
most catastrophic moments in the history of the planet—that individual
organisms, overwhelmed by environmental pressures, were forced to form
the first cell federations in order to survive. In an attempt to return to harmony, the federation became the first form of organisation of living matter:
the assembly of the many into a functional pseudo-unity. The microorganisms that animated a peaceful, indistinct mass discovered form, differentiation and specialisation, flexibility and perseverance. With distinction came
toil and confrontation; with toil and confrontation came competition; with
competition came victory, and mutualism and egoism became two sides of
a single coin.
The sublime science of nutrition is the discipline upon which the delicate
economy of the organismic federation is based. Blinded as we are by the mists
of chaos, we perceive every attempt not to gobble up other living beings
and the trash food that infests the hollow earth as a ‘sacrifice’. The alchemy
of flavours, macronutrients, and micronutrients, which our ancestors were
repositories of, is now unknown to us; neither can we—except at the cost
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154
of unspeakable suffering—bid farewell to the panoply of sugar, salt, gluten,
L i f t i n g t h e A b s o lu t e
and added fats that infest packaged food.
Rejecting the food that our jailer feeds us is the first step toward a total
revolt—the first step toward a full-blown ‘great health’, based on generosity
and magnanimity toward oneself and others. Only an implacable resolution
will be able to tear time from its hinges, cleansing our blood-stained hands
and our soft underbellies. On the other hand, one might almost say that the
planet is experiencing a felicitous alignment: in fact, it is only from the perspective of illness that one is able to recognise the features of a healthy body.
All the names of history, gathered to shake up and de-stress your
slumbering spirits.
Writing while honouring and respecting the sacred competition is a burdensome task and a sacrifice. Every moment spent writing is a moment
stolen from living thought, training, play, and carnal love: it could almost
be said that writing is a symptom of the corruption that befell human
beings ten thousand years ago. However, being a sort of ‘original sin’ and
false consciousness, writing must be transvaluated and catastrophically
overturned—grasped and lifted by hand, like the Atlas globe; we shall aim,
therefore, at a majestic sincerity, at obtaining in speech the effectiveness
of gesture: an operation allowed by the deadly and static nature of writing
itself. We shall pay every attention and care not to become scribes, and will
imprint the character of becoming on the being of the text. If Nietzsche
advised us to think only while walking, we shall take care to make writing a
marginal activity, devoting all our efforts to the search for and exposition of
the truth, rooting our perspective in the impersonality of the absolute. Our
aim will be to radiate each word as the sun radiates its rays.
According to the myth, Alexander the Great, upon his arrival in Greece,
immediately received numerous visits, from intellectuals and philosophers,
politicians and men of science; only Diogenes, the Cynic teacher who lived
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in a barrel in the public square, did not go to pay him homage. When Alex-
155
ander finally met Diogenes ‘the Dog’, he found him lying in the middle of the
L i f t i n g t h e A b s o lu t e
street, sunbathing. Amazed and admiring the impudence of the philosopher,
Alexander offered to grant him any wish he might have.
Staring him in the eyes, not budging an inch, Diogenes asked him to get
out of the way, and return the sunlight to him.
This anecdote, already famous in ancient Greece, remains the essence
of a sovereign and unyielding spirit, radiating a sunny warmth and infusing
hilarity into every healthy and unashamed body. It is impossible not to dwell
on the unusual properties of sunlight. Sunlight weeds thought out from its
depths, forcing it to rise to the surface and quit every refuge, every classroom,
every hermitage. No less important are its benefits to the body: through
exposure to sunlight, the body instinctively becomes able to distinguish
accurately between day and night, aiding sleep and stabilising mood (all
too often conditioned in these dark times by enclosed spaces and irregular
hours); likewise, through the metabolic action of the sun, the synthesis of
vitamin D and calcium is made possible, substances in which much of the
population, confined to homes and offices, is deficient.
Moreover, by offering themselves unconditionally to the greatest gift of
heaven, the human being becomes part of a magmatic processuality that joins
together plants, animals, and microorganisms in one and the same shared
splendour. Just as it did billions of years ago, this cellular federation that is
our body rejoices in the solar flux, invigorating itself and drawing power from
it, relegating to the night-time hours rest, reproduction, and regeneration—in
other words, all those subtle techniques of repetition and replication of the
identical. In short, thanks to the warmth of the sun, the body becomes
healthy, strong and beautiful, and the mind acquires the precious virtues
of intuitiveness and spontaneity, while undergoing an apprenticeship in the
art of cosmic coexistence.
There is, however, another meaning, more secret and yet simpler and
more superficial. Diogenes, in fact, having renounced all material possessions
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156
and all hierarchy, possesses everything, including the sun—a possession
L i f t i n g t h e A b s o lu t e
that can be taken away from him and returned to him at any time, depending
only on the natural rhythms of the cosmos and the seasons. The truth and
intention of his words depend upon this superior form of self-sufficiency.
And if Diogenes himself was a pupil of Socrates, it is because the cynic, too,
dedicates his life to the search for a ‘primal scene’, an eternal and essential
substrate, capable of founding action in justice and harmony. In this titanic
undertaking, sun and steel, training and writing, converge, illuminating the
path of one who aspires to the absolute.
Bronze Age Collapse
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z
III
NIGREDO
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Augustine1
Although the world of darkness remains fundamentally alien in essence, the
human being is no stranger to its icy touch.
There are moments in life when one realises that one is immersed in a
dense darkness, so thick that it seems to preclude any return to the light.
These are moments of mourning, despair, or depression; moments suspended
over the chasm of madness, when the world falls apart and life seems to
have lost all meaning. From a philosophical point of view, this means that the
representation of the world that we have received from our loved ones, or
that we have constructed along with them—and which we have often shared
with an entire community—turns out to be false, limited, or too narrow. As it
falls apart, ‘our’ world, which had until then revolved like a planet around the
sun of an I or a We, shows itself to be no more than a collection of fragments
from which, like a collage, it had emerged.
If there were a lesson to be learned from such moments, it would consist
in the bitter discovery that there is always more than one world and that, even
from the same fragments, it is possible to construct totally different worlds.
Although there is undoubtedly a ‘shared world’ held in common with others
from time to time, it is not hard to see that this one world—a world for all
worlds—is always teetering on the edge. The world is like Humpty Dumpty,
1.
Saint Augustine, ‘The Teacher’, in Earlier Writings, tr., ed. J.H.S. Burleigh (Louisville, KY
and London: Westminster John Knox Press, 2006), II, 3–4, 71–72.
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C u lt i vat i n g Da r k n e s s
If ‘nothing’ should detain us, and yet we should suffer delay.
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160
the egg-man in the nursery rhyme and in Alice Through the Looking Glass.
C u lt i vat i n g Da r k n e s s
When Humpty Dumpty falls off the wall, his shell shatters, and even all the
King’s men cannot put the fragments back together again. We discover that
the stories we had been telling about ‘my’ life, ‘our’ life, or life in general,
have been irretrievably lost.
Having been born and brought up within the reassuring confines of a
world, we have at the same time managed to sew a suture between history
(that of our country, our era, or even the whole planet) and our own, far
smaller biography. Human life consists of a dense network of stories, some
of which have been told to us, some of which we have told ourselves; stories
from before the disaster in which were contained, like a kind of psychic black
box recorder, the direction in which the world, time, and life were headed.
‘Meaning’ was nothing more than this internal coherence between origin,
development, and destination. In moments of fear and trembling, one realises
that human existence is similar to that of the scale insect which mummifies
on the body of the plant while remaining imperceptibly alive: we live in
the age of technological acceleration, of the Anthropocene, of advanced
capitalism. By drawing these lines, which link the individual to the general,
we establish that history is advancing or, on the contrary, that it is standing
still and waiting to be set in motion again. But at the height of despair there
is neither movement nor standstill. The fragments veer off on their own,
each in a different direction. All that remains are indifferent speeds, a world
of things that continue to happen, without meaning or reason, without the
coherence we had attributed to them (work, study, human relationships,
everything seems to emerge from a dream). We have fallen out of time.
Two American psychologists, Lauren Alloy and Lyn Yvonne Abramson,
have developed an interesting theory, called ‘depressive realism’. While cognitive-behavioural therapy (currently the most widespread therapeutic model)
claims that depressed people are plagued by a negative bias (i.e. a chronic and
habitual pessimism) which makes them less objective than non-depressed
people, depressive realism argues that the depressed person has access to
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a more objective dimension than non-depressed people. A number of studies
161
show that this hypothesis should be reduced to something less than a theory,
C u lt i vat i n g Da r k n e s s
although it remains something more than a flatus vocis: the depressed are
indeed more objective in their perception of the world, evaluate their own
performance immediately after completing it, and tend to devalue it more
and more over time. Depressed people also seem to have higher expectations
for the future than non-depressed people. To some extent, the depressed
person is the author of their own defeats, falling from the heights of sincere
optimism to the abyss of the darkest despair. What depressive realism
has succeeded in showing, however, is that unlike the non-depressed, the
depressed person is able to attribute responsibility to themselves where they
actually have it, and conversely is able to identify situations that are beyond
their control, or anyone else’s. Thanks to this special access to a subterranean,
indifferent, and uncaring world, the depressive realist casts off the role of
the pathological subject, becoming a sort of pessimistic oracle. Unwittingly,
Alloy and Abramson have created a conceptual persona, something like
Plato’s Socrates or Descartes’s evil demon.
In Mark Fisher’s Capitalist Realism—the book of a generation that has
decided to patch up the pieces, building a new world and a new meaning—we
find the following adage: ‘It is easier to imagine the end of the world than it is
to imagine the end of capitalism.’2 As is now well known, for Fisher, capitalist
realism is founded precisely on the mantra ‘There is no alternative’: There
is no alternative…except the end of the world. The depressive realist would
agree wholeheartedly, and indeed, finding himself lost in the darkness of
panic and despair, would clearly see that the world has already ended or,
rather, that it never existed, or only for a fleeting moment. There is no where
and no time to go to or return to. The body of the depressed person is a
receptacle for entities beyond time, their voice a channel through which a
call is propagated that is both seductive and chilling:
2.
Fisher, Capitalist Realism, 2.
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No flow, no connectivity in the depressive’s nervous system […] His voice
C u lt i vat i n g Da r k n e s s
[…] sounds like the voice of a man who is already dead, or who has entered
an appalling state of suspended animation, death-within-life. It sounds
preternaturally ancient, a voice which cannot be sourced back to any living
being […].3
The falling apart, the disorientation, is absolute, in the sense that it does
not just affect me or other human beings who are my fellow sufferers (as
existentialism has taught us), but the whole universe. As we have seen, the
research of Alloy and Abramson shows how, following the crisis and the
destruction of the world, the depressed person tends to aggravate his or her
situation in the long term. This is exactly what happened to philosophical
pessimism and nihilism, which gradually turned into eliminativist positions
for which consciousness, language, the individual, morality, history, or reality
itself do not exist at all.
Compared to many of these new philosophical currents, good old-fashioned solipsism may well seem a moderate solution, somewhat less threatening than an extinctionist programme or a death cult. In exaggerating the
depressive position, one fails to realise that what appears during the crisis
is not the non-existence of all things but their inconsistency, the precarity,
fragility, and metastability of the world itself. When the term ‘metastability’
is used in physics and cosmology, it means that even a slight imbalance
would be capable of destroying or altering a system, or even the whole
universe. For empiricism (the philosophy of experience), this terrifying
inconsistency is owing to the fact that the ‘laws of nature’ are not real laws.
Rather than eternal commandments imposed on matter by the benevolent
hand of a creator, they are regularities hanging by a thread, governed by
chance—chains of only apparently necessary causes and effects. As the
English philosopher David Hume noted, to say that the sun will surely rise
tomorrow is fallacious: we are led to believe that it will happen only because
3.
Fisher, Ghosts of My Life, 62.
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we have seen it one morning after another, or because it has been marked
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out for us since childhood; but there is no logical necessity for this to happen.
C u lt i vat i n g Da r k n e s s
Although it may seem improbable (and here we are forced to employ a whole
probabilistic vocabulary!) that the universe will be annihilated at this very
moment, there is nothing to prevent it, least of all my expectations and hopes.
The world is suspended over an abyss. Everything is pervaded by nothingness, by a power that extends its tentacles from the heart of the night. A
‘hyperdepressive realism’ that challenges the very notion of reality. Embracing
darkness as a ruinous destiny, starvation, catatonia, and resignation turn
into a shapeless, elusive atmosphere with vague and indefinite contours, a
field of radical experimentation that may result in self-destruction or in the
discovery of unknown pleasures:
Any symbol is a limitation of belief, or energy, by its own particular form and
nature. In order to release the energy of belief, its form or symbol has to be
destroyed so that the quantity of belief which it enshrined becomes free to
merge with the belief-potential of the believer, which is—ultimately—infinite.
When this is achieved, belief becomes free and vast enough to contain
reality itself.4
Falling into the darkness, we realise that this very darkness is reality in its
purest and most uncontaminated state: a black primordial magma, the place
of the origin of every world and of all meaning—the grave of every world
and of all meaning.
This gloomy depressive world is equivalent to a world devoid of representations and thoughts, to the world before the appearance of the
human being or to the one that will follow the disappearance of humans.
Realism satisfies its own epistemic conditions through the complete absence
of any observers that would restrict and limit its possibilities—a little like what
4.
K. Grant, ‘Austin Osman Spare: An Introduction to His Psycho-Magical Philosophy’, Carfax
4: Austin Osman Spare (1960).
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happens with morality in the case of the promoters of voluntary extinction. If,
C u lt i vat i n g Da r k n e s s
as David Benatar argues,5 the lives of human beings are indeed dominated by
an optimistic ‘Pollyanna principle’ (an innate tendency to remember positive
experiences more frequently and more easily, and to maintain a fair degree of
confidence in the future), then the optimist would not only be immoral—as
optimism is designed to indefinitely postpone the good of all living beings,
from generation to generation—but would also be the victim of an innate
hallucinatory influence. The scientific, technological and social progress of
humankind (or rather, a small part of humankind) does not lead toward truth
but toward the dead end of extinction. Either we achieve self-consciousness
of the real as an absence of teleological representations and orientations
(i.e. as an absence of meaning and unity) or we will soon reach the point of
no return, at the moment when the tentacles of matter regain possession
of this brief moment of awareness that is organic life.
Neither can it be ruled out that these processes might go hand in hand,
furiously flushing out our lies and forcing us to abjure them.
Losing hope does not mean sinking into despair—although often there
is nothing left but despair. Pessimism and nihilism desert history, narratives,
and the future, without realising how the falling apart of the world and its
necessities may open up new horizons. Trying to metabolise the lesson of
nihilism, one could draw a parallel between this world, absolutely devoid of
observers, laws, and directions, and nothingness, that which for us is devoid
of all meaning, form, value, and consistency: a concept that is negative in
and of itself, escaping every partial perspective (something like the negative
God of apophatic mysticism). The world is the totality of things, of facts, of
narratives…nothingness is the abyss of the unknown, of the unspeakable, of
the unknowable, of absolute unknowing. If everything there is, including the
universe, has emerged from nothingness (regularity from chaos, meaning
from meaninglessness, comprehensibility from incomprehensibility, melody
from noise), and is composed of this same nothingness, then it follows that
5.
D. Benatar, Better Never to Have Been (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2006).
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nothingness is a plastic and malleable material from which it is possible to
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extract infinite worlds and infinite meanings. The trick is not to let oneself be
C u lt i vat i n g Da r k n e s s
captivated by these constructions, not to believe the lies that they whisper
in our ears.
In a note dated 8 September 1821, Giacomo Leopardi wrote:
My system introduces a Skepticism that is not only reasoned and proven,
but is such that human reason, according to my system, whatever possible
progress is made, will never succeed in ridding itself of this skepticism. On
the contrary, it contains the truth […] but that truth essentially consists in
doubt, and whoever doubts knows, and knows as much as one can know.6
If classical theory (e.g. philosophies of Socratic or Cartesian inspiration)
sees in the suspension of judgement a praxis or, better, a method of doubt,
Leopardi’s investigation propels thought, at insane speeds, right to the
threshold where knowledge crumbles and doubt manifests itself as the
absolute unknowability of reality. This limit, which gives onto the unlimited,
like a sudden drop into the ocean, is the tangible, material product of a
coherent path of rational research; an increasingly desperate, increasingly
melancholic progression set out in clear opposition to a hypocritical programmatic skepsis (where knowledge is set aside, only to be dogmatically
recovered immediately afterwards, perhaps with God as the guarantor of
truth). To quote Nick Land, ‘suspension is to be discovered, not performed’.7
It would not, therefore, be a mere question of human limitation or the finitude of knowledge, but of the discovery of an abyss upon which existence
itself is founded.
6.
G. Leopardi, Zibaldone, tr. K. Baldwin et al., ed. M. Caesar (Farrar, Strauss and Giroux,
2015), 760.
7.
N. Land, ‘Art as Insurrection’, Fanged Noumena, 177.
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In this sense, Leopardi’s work not only stands, as has often been noted, as
C u lt i vat i n g Da r k n e s s
a continuation of Enlightenment rationalism, but represents its very zenith.
Leopardi’s adherence to the materialism of his time, in fact, led him to some
very peculiar conclusions. Let us start from a datum: since the exercise
of reason is an analytical activity, i.e. the breaking down of the whole into
simple parts, the result of a rational analysis of the natural world will be to
‘resolve and undo nature’, in such a way that ‘[n]ature, thus analyzed, differs
not in the slightest from a corpse’.8
As we can see from the mere observation of the procedures of medical
and anatomical sciences, the absolute simplicity attainable by analysis
coincides with the rigidity of the dissected corpse, since the latter is the
prerequisite for objective knowledge of the body. Nature, dissected by the
scalpel of scientific rationality, passes from a state of dynamic vitality—a
constant succession of vegetable and animal subjectivities and sensations—
to a condition of inorganic objectivity: the living is manifested as an assembly
of limbs, components that in themselves are inanimate.
In fact, one of the most obvious results of the life sciences is that,
although they have stubbornly probed every nook and cranny of the body,
they have been unable to identify any trace of a soul, spirit, or subject governing somatic matter. With scientific modernity, words, previously understood
as an expression of the human soul, became a bridge between the ideas of
the mind and the things of the world: material objects (of a sonic-vibrational
type) capable of making comprehensible what would otherwise remain empty
and indistinct, sensations. It is under the banner of Enlightenment materialism
that Leopardi writes in the Zibaldone: ‘Everything in our mind and faculties is
material. The intellect could do nothing without speech, because the word is
almost the body of the most abstract idea’, and then adds, a few days later:
‘The heart may imagine that it loves the spirit, or feels something nonmaterial.
But it is utterly deceiving itself’.9
8.
Leopardi, Zibaldone, 1329–30.
9.
Ibid., 761.
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The illusory nature of the immaterial, i.e. of the ‘self’ and its chains of
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thought, is a recurring theme in Leopardi’s notes, and the reason why his
C u lt i vat i n g Da r k n e s s
philosophical research can be seen as representing the culmination and, at
the same time, the overcoming, of the Enlightenment project. Modern scientific knowledge is indeed based on the clarity of ideas and perceptions of a
given observer, as well as on the total self-possession of this same observer.
Doubting even the presence of a subject capable of doubt means depriving
the scientific method of any cardinal reference—and the paradoxical aspect
of the matter lies precisely in carrying out this subtraction according to a
rational procedure. Eliminativism is the footstep that precipitates us into the
abyss: if only sensory perceptions are considered real, then one must conclude that even the perception of the self, i.e. self-consciousness, is nothing
more than a second-level perception—a perception of perceptions—without this global perception necessarily corresponding to a real state of affairs.
In this sense, as Leopardi notes, ‘[a]ppearance not only suffices, it is the only
thing that suffices [...]. Because substance without appearance makes no
impression at all and achieves nothing and appearance with substance does
not do anything or achieve anything more than without it. So you see that
substance is pointless, and it all has to do with appearance’.10
This spectre of a formless, chaotic world, illusorily ordered by the mind,
goes by the name of ‘blind brain theory’. According to blind brain theory,
the real world is immensely richer and more multifaceted than the one
represented in our minds, which, in turn, are merely representations of
representations, pseudo-objects that do not exist in material terms. In the
words of the neurophilosopher Thomas Metzinger, the crux of the matter
is that ‘we do not experience the contents of our self-consciousness as the
contents of a representational process […] but simply as ourselves, living in
the world right now’.11 Thomas Ligotti approves this disturbing perspective:
10.
Ibid., 1754.
11.
T. Metzinger, Being No One: The Self-Model Theory of Subjectivity (Cambridge, MA: The
MIT Press, 2003), 331.
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In Metzinger’s schema, a human being is not a ‘person’ but a mechanistically
C u lt i vat i n g Da r k n e s s
functioning ‘phenomenal self-model’ that simulates a person [...]. [N]aïve
realism becomes a necessary prophylactic in order to ward off the terror
concomitant with the destruction of our intuitions regarding ourselves and
our status in the world. [H]e pulls no punches when he says, ‘[T]here are
aspects of the scientific world-view which may be damaging to our mental
well-being’.12
Plunging sensible knowledge—and reason itself—into a limbo of illusions,
the path of scientific optimism is obliterated, catapulting the real world into
timeless, meaningless, and purposeless darkness. One of the most frequent
themes in Giacomo Leopardi’s thought is precisely that of the damage done
to human life by truth and scientific objectivity; a problem that Leopardi
tackles in a way very similar to one of his most famous admirers, H.P. Lovecraft, who, in his The Call of Cthulhu, wrote that
the sciences, each straining in its own direction, have hitherto harmed us
little; but some day the piecing together of dissociated knowledge will open
up such terrifying vistas of reality, and of our frightful position therein, that
we shall either go mad from the revelation or flee from the deadly light into
the peace and safety of a new dark age.13
The senselessness of a cosmos stripped of human meanings, hopes, and
goals soon becomes claustrophobic. Ray Brassier states that—having
accepted the illusory nature of consciousness and the inevitable extinction
in time of all individuals and all species, including the human species—‘the
subject of philosophy [i.e. the philosopher] must also recognize that he or
12.
T. Ligotti, The Conspiracy Against the Human Race: A Contrivance of Horror (London:
Penguin, 2018), 95, 96, 98.
13.
H.P. Lovecraft, ‘The Call of Cthulhu’, The H.P. Lovecraft Omnibus 3, 61.
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she is already dead, and that philosophy is neither a medium of affirmation
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nor a source of justification but, rather the organon of extinction’.14
C u lt i vat i n g Da r k n e s s
Every philosophy, or rather, every idea of philosophy, is inaugurated by
a ‘decision’, by the isolation of one aspect of reality that will subsequently
become the foundation upon which thought is able to stand. For example,
one might extract becoming from reality, producing a metaphysics of constant transformation, within which it would be impossible to step into the
same river twice. Conversely, if we isolate the existence of something—the
presence of an object and the truth of this presence before the mind and
senses—we would obtain a metaphysical framework in which the change
and disappearance of an object would be illogical or unthinkable (nothing is
born from nothing, ergo nothing can return to nothing). Between the two
positions there is an abyss: the abyss of incommunicability and conflict, the
real abyss containing being and becoming, the mixture of these two principles
and their absence. Reality escapes and resists all of our decisions to isolate
a part of it, forcing us to become aware of the cuts and tears we make in
the living flesh of the world.
The senselessness, chaos and non-knowledge that dominate the world
of darkness can, however, furnish a practically unlimited supply of materials:
real wealth rather than total defeat.
If the sciences already possess a certain claim to objectivity, as expressed
in the identification of a whole series of states of affairs (such as the composition of molecules or genetic heredity), philosophy attempts to achieve an
even more profound objectivity, asking us to bracket out everything we know
about the world, opening us up to new configurations, each contained in turn
within this same world: in a way very similar to science fiction, which, in its
own way, also demonstrates the groundlessness of the world by exhibiting
possible worlds.
More than two thousand years ago, philosophy promised to cultivate
doubt and skepsis, vowing to destroy the shackles of the senses and of
14.
Brassier, Nihil Unbound, 239.
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illusion, going beyond what ‘appears’. This oath has often been interpreted
C u lt i vat i n g Da r k n e s s
as a tyrannical injunction to transcendence or a mystical delusion. What it
heralded, however, was the coming of an era: the epoch in which shadows
would be dissolved and reabsorbed into a blinding ocean of darkness.
But what about the ‘real’ end of the world? Catalysed by the thought
of total destruction, darkness rises to the surface, negating everything. A
horror that falls from the sky, like a thunderbolt, that operates on the cosmic
scale—from the explosion of the sun to the impact of an asteroid, from elemental catastrophes to invasions by divine or semi-divine creatures—or that
insinuates itself silently, flooding into our plane of reality from microscopic
or intangible dimensions: epidemics and outbreaks of madness, animal and
vegetable revolts, or the gradual accumulation of tiny electronic components
that go to make up the new face of God. Each of us knows in our heart the
time and destination: the decaying trajectories of a world that has become a
reality are already inscribed in its founding axioms. Humankind has narrated
its own end for thousands of years, discovering over time a mysterious and
yet evident alignment of coincidences, imagining cosmic plots and divine
conspiracies. The roads unravel, overlap and intertwine, producing enigmatic
labyrinths. Whether or not there are any human beings, outside this maze
there are only yet more labyrinths. The mirage dragging the carcass of the
world toward the light is a ghostly call echoing from the future.
Total destruction is the maximum limit toward which the thought of reality
tends. A proliferation of starry spaces, desolate wastelands, and unperturbed
deserts that feed a desire for breadth, openness and vastness. If the world
has fallen apart, if the end is already written somewhere between the lines,
then we are free: free to go where we want and build what we want, free of
the oppressive sense of responsibility with which modern philosophy has
burdened us.
‘Do what thou wilt’ shall be the whole of the law. Our fragile partiality
emanates from chaos—matter itself is this chaos and this hidden inscrutability—but multiplicity and lawlessness, hidden in the innermost core of things,
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also vibrate in the human soul. However frustrating, insubstantial, insane,
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or laughable all of this may be, there is only this fatality, this concordance
C u lt i vat i n g Da r k n e s s
between the unravelling of the real and the dissolution of the world. And if
there were any teleology, it would only be the passage from a vague foreboding of doom to a scream full of horror.
When one is lost and abandoned in the night, one must learn to cultivate
darkness.
CK
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MATER DOLOROSA
M AT E R D O LO R O SA
Thou hast entered the night; dost thou yet lust for day?
Sorrow is my name, and affliction. I am girt about with tribulation. Here still
hangs the Crucified One, and here the Mother weeps over the children that
she hath not borne. Sterility is my name, and desolation.
Intolerable is thine ache, and incurable thy wound.
Aleister Crowley1
I. WORMS
I see now that my terrestrial ur-mother was ravished by something fanged
and insane from the wilderness, and that I am a vampire veiled raggedly in
humanity, corrupted from birth by an unholy intimacy with death.
Nick Land2
In my old school there was what I remember as a large, beautiful garden. My
childhood friends and I used to spend long hours of freedom, hidden from
the gaze of adults, lost in more or less innocent games amidst the strange,
dirty, straggling plant life that often infests city gardens. The vegetation of
that garden, along with the small animals that inhabited it, was a source of
constant wonder for us: for week upon week we watched how the tender
flowers of the sour cherry tree withered only to sprout fruits, which we ate
religiously even though they were too tart and often already half-digested
1.
A. Crowley, with V.B. Neuburg and M. Desti, The Vision and The Voice with Commentary
and Other Papers (York, ME: Samuel Weiser, 1998), 140.
2.
Land, The Thirst for Annihilation, 206.
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by insect larvae. From the neighbouring garden we used to steal the sticky
M AT E R D O LO R O SA
and sweetish berries of the American vine, and dared each other to touch
the nettles that grew among its dark foliage. Sometimes, in the midst of
the uncultivated bushes and tall grass, someone would find the motionless
body of a sparrow or a hedgehog; then, as if in a magical rite to avert its
horror, or perhaps just to spend a little longer in the company of the corpse,
we would improvise a funeral, adorning the lifeless creature with garlands
of flowers and marking the burial place with crooked crosses made of sticks
tied up with grass.
In spring, hundreds of small blue Veronica persica, one of the most
common flowers in the meadows of Lombardy, appeared in the grass between
the dandelions and the daisies. Because of their light blue colour and the fine,
multi-coloured stripes on their petals, these flowers are known by everyone
as ‘eyes of the Madonna’ and are surrounded by various folk legends associating them with the Blessed Virgin. For me as a child, the idea of Our Lady’s
eyes took on an extraordinarily material character: I wondered incessantly
to what mysterious divine anatomy those innumerable, tiny, faceless irises
could belong. Sceptical, like all children, about the possibility of action at a
distance, I imagined intricate underground networks of nerves and ganglia
that might somehow connect those bizarre sensors to the heavenly abode
of the Mother of God. Because their petals are so incredibly delicate that a
mere touch is often enough to cause them to fall from their stems, plucking
one of those flowers was a crime comparable to the desecration of a sacred
relic, the punishment for which was far more terrible than the vengeance
of any cruel god. Witnessing helplessly her own horrendous mutilation, the
Virgin of Sorrows would burst into an inconsolable cry loud enough to deafen
the universe, flooding everything with the desperate pain of those who can
do nothing but love their executioner.
One spring afternoon, some of my classmates came to take me to an
obscure corner of the garden where they had made a strange discovery. They
had found, hidden in the grass, an earthworm with a body deformed by a
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strange bulge that moved beneath its slimy skin. After a quick consultation,
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we had no doubt as to the diagnosis of the condition afflicting the wretched
M AT E R D O LO R O SA
invertebrate. The earthworm, we decided, must be a female about to give
birth, tormented by a difficult and painful delivery; it was therefore our
duty to intervene surgically in order to ease the labour and relieve the pain
of the suffering mother. Armed only with a sharp stick, hesitant and full of
enthusiastic disgust, we began to pierce the dark, gelatinous flesh of the
animal, which twisted furiously around the instrument of its torment. I still
remember perfectly the slow, excruciating contortions of its body, and the
moment when a legion of innumerable microscopic white creatures swarmed
out of its lacerated belly, confused and blinded by the sun. I turned away in
revulsion, with the vague consciousness of having committed an ancient and
unforgivable crime. As the sacrificial mother continued to writhe desperately,
her still-living flesh now reduced to a pulp, fused indistinguishably with the
soil, the little parasites scattered haphazardly, ready to infest a new body.
The miracle of life was complete.
The spontaneous disgust often aroused by the sight of certain invertebrates seems to increase exponentially when we see them in pain. It will
surely be agreed that few sights are more frightening and repulsive than the
spasms of a dying insect. Which is strange, because our ancestral evolutionary divergence makes it difficult for us to feel any kind of genuine empathy
for these creatures, and even leads us to doubt, on the basis of more or
less well-founded speculations on the ‘simplicity’ of their nervous systems,
whether they are capable of any experience equivalent to human pain.
The disavowal of the fact that worms and insects fully belong to the realm
of the living is rooted in the ancient belief that they are nothing more than
a spontaneous, abiogenetic proliferation of the dirt in which they live. The
long-discredited notion of the spontaneous generation of some invertebrates
survives in our cultural substratum, fuelled by their extraordinary generative
capacity, which seems to entirely defy the reproductive economy of ordinary organisms. Think, for example, of the amazing ability of earthworms
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to regenerate entire segments of their bodies following amputation, which
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translates into the well-known legend according to which the body of an
earthworm, if divided into two parts, will grow back symmetrically from
both ends, producing two new identical individuals. Georges Bataille also
comments on abiogenesis:
The generative power of corruption is a naive belief responding to the
mingled horror and fascination aroused in us by decay. [...] That nauseous,
rank and heaving matter, frightful to look upon, a ferment of life, teeming
with worms, grubs and eggs, is at the bottom of the decisive reactions
we call nausea, disgust or repugnance. […] Hence I can anticipate and live
in expectation of that multiple putrescence that anticipates its sickening
triumph in my person.3
This potential for indefinite duplication, which seems to develop exponentially as the organic approaches the inorganic, escapes any principle of the
conservation of energy. Rather than a prodigious victory of the organism
over death, however, this indefinite reproducibility by splitting, in which the
original individual is constantly annulled, seems to bring bodies closer to a
perpetual condition of living death. Here is Bataille again on the proximity
of asexual reproduction to death: ‘There is a point at which the original one
becomes two. As soon as there are two, there is again discontinuity for each
of the beings. But the process entails one instant of continuity between
the two of them. The first one dies, but as it dies there is this moment of
continuity between the two new beings.’4
The mitotic proliferation that characterises the hybrid matter of those
organisms that inhabit the liminal zone between the organic and the inorganic
is thus a process that necessarily depends on ‘agony and dissolution’: an
indefinite multiplication of the potential to suffer, in which life is configured
3.
G. Bataille, Erotism, tr. M. Dalwood (San Francisco: City Lights, 1986), 56–57.
4.
Ibid., 13–14.
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as a necessary condemnation to be submitted to an automatic, parasitic vital
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process which proceeds inexorably. While it is not possible to attribute the
M AT E R D O LO R O SA
human experience of suffering across the board to the rest of the organic
world, it is nonetheless possible to find in the very nature of living matter a
more fundamental form of pain, which seems to be a kind of ancestral wound,
or a sort of original separation from a primitive condition of indistinction.5
As Leopardi reminds us in a famous page of the Zibaldone:
The spectacle of such abundance of life when you first go into this garden
lifts your spirits, and that is why you think it is a joyful place. But in truth
this life is wretched and unhappy, every garden is like a vast hospital (a place
much more deplorable than a cemetery), and if these beings feel, or rather,
were to feel, surely not being would be better for them than being.6
II. IMMACULATE HEART
Moreover, I will give you a new heart and put a new spirit within you; and I
will remove the heart of stone from your flesh and give you a heart of flesh.
Ezekiel 36:26
On the morning of 21 May 1972, Laszlo Toth, a geologist of Hungarian origin
naturalised as an Australian, attacked Michelangelo’s Pieta in St Peter’s
Basilica in the Vatican in one of the most infamous acts of vandalism in
history. Armed with a hammer, he repeatedly struck the face and left arm of
the marble image of the Madonna, scarring it beyond repair, shouting ‘Christ
is risen! I am the Christ.’ Although it may be pointless to look for any trace
5.
On the subject of pain in matter, see Nicola Masciandaro’s ‘Sorrow of Being: In Calignem’:
‘Suffering, far from being limited to the evolutionary environment of our terrestrial sphere, is more
properly understood as a strange kind of cosmic substance, composed of the rejection of the
whole being of itself, the intrinsic negation of its own event’. Masciandaro, On The Darkness Of
The Will, 73.
6.
Leopardi, Zibaldone, 1823.
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of planning in the absurd gesture of a mentally ill man, the brutality of the
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assault is representative of the violent materiality so often associated with
effigies of the Blessed Virgin. The cult of Our Lady of Sorrows, in particular,
revolves around the miraculous events said to have befallen its numerous
icons. In almost every Italian province it is possible to find the story of some
depiction of the Virgin which, often following a disfigurement inflicted by
an unbeliever, shed tears of blood as miraculous proof of her wounded love.
I find this ability to transmute blasphemy into triumph through the
alchemical action of suffering to be one of the most fascinating aspects of the
cult of the Virgin. Toth’s sacrilegious action performed the miracle of making
the beauty of the Madonna of the Pieta, already considered so sublime as
to be almost blasphemous, yet more numinous and dazzling.
In traditional iconography, Our Lady of Sorrows is depicted weeping, her
heart exposed and pierced by seven daggers, each of which corresponds to
one of the seven sorrows suffered by Our Lady in the Gospels. The number
7 recurs in religious symbolism, and its importance is widely discussed in the
Hermetic tradition, where it is almost always associated with the manifestation of divine perfection in matter. From the Christian perspective, though, 7
represents the conjunction of the trinity with the four corners of the Earth,
and thus describes the realisation of God’s kingdom within this world. In
traditional systems of ceremonial magic, the Kabbalistic meaning of 7 is
similarly interpreted as the sum of the soul and the four elements, and is thus
‘the power of magic in all its force; it is the spirit assisted by all the elemental
powers; it is the soul served by nature’.7 The number 7 has been central to the
classification of the natural world since the dawn of the Hermetic tradition
in the West, a tradition in which it constantly recurs as a mysterious and
pervasive harmonic function underlying the divine order hidden in matter: it
appears in the planets as observed by the ancients, in the metals of alchemy,
in the colours of the rainbow, and in the notes of the diatonic scale.
7.
Lévi, The Doctrine and Ritual of High Magic, 95.
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References to alternative interpretations of the number 7 are rare and
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fragmentary in theosophical and esoteric literature, and often shrouded in
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an impenetrable cloak of mystery. One notable case is the work of Aleister
Crowley, in which the number 7 frequently appears in association with the
sphere of the divine feminine. In Crowley’s work, 7 is unequivocally and
recurrently connected to the apocalyptic figure of Babalon, whose symbol
is the seven-pointed star that appears in the seal of the A∴A∴ (Astrum
Argenteum, the magical order founded by Crowley in 1907), and whose
name corresponds to the Kabbalistic sum 7+(7+7)/7+7 (reasonably enough,
it is precisely in order to manifest this numerological equivalence that the
Greek Bαβυλὼv was transliterated into Babalon).8 The number 7 is also
recurrent in the so-called Enochian system, a complex schema for angelic
evocation transmitted to the Elizabethan mathematician John Dee and his
assistant Edward Kelley at the end of the sixteenth century. The Enochian
system exhibits a structure that might be defined as heptomaniacal: it is
centred around complex matrices of letters organised according to multiples
of the number 7. Crowley, who was familiar with Dee’s angelology through
the magical order of the Golden Dawn, included many aspects of it in his
own magic, beginning with the word Babalon, which in the angelic language
corresponds to the English word wicked.
Babalon is the name given by the religion of Thelema to the Whore of
Babylon, the scarlet woman of the Book of Revelation, a necessarily complex
and multiform figure that has fascinated esoteric thinkers for generations.
It is not the intention of this text to propose an exhaustive exegesis of the
symbolism of the Whore of Babylon, upon which much has already been said
8.
‘In Her wine-cup are seven streams of the blood of the Seven Spirits of God.
Seven are the heads of THE BEAST whereon she rideth.
The head of an Angel: the head of a Saint: the head of Poet: the head of An Adulterous
Woman: the head of a Man of Valour: the head of a Satyr: and the head of a Lion-Serpent.
Seven letters hath Her holiest name; and it is BABALON.’ A. Crowley, Liber 333: The Book
of Lies, Falsely So-Called (Ilfracombe: Haydn Press, 1952), 104.
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and written (see the work of Jack Parsons, Peter Gray, and Amy Ireland).9
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There is no doubt that the Whore of Babylon, as presented to us in the biblical
text, embodies a sinister and voluptuous femininity, in symmetrical opposition
to the pious and sorrowful femininity of the heavenly woman who appears
in Revelation 12:1. The same symmetry is maintained, with an additional level
of political meaning, in the comparison between the perverse metropolis of
Babylon and Jerusalem, the city of God, in Revelation 21–22. The number 7
pervades the whole of the Bible, but, in light of our considerations here, we
are particularly interested in its association with the feminine, which recurs
on two—again, significantly symmetrical—occasions:
1 A great sign appeared in heaven: a woman clothed with the sun, with the
moon under her feet and a crown of twelve stars on her head. 2 She was
pregnant and cried out in pain as she was about to give birth. 3 Then another
sign appeared in heaven: an enormous red dragon with seven heads and ten
horns and seven crowns on its heads.10
3 Then the angel carried me away in the Spirit into a wilderness. There I
saw a woman sitting on a scarlet beast that was covered with blasphemous
names and had seven heads and ten horns. 4 The woman was dressed in
purple and scarlet, and was glittering with gold, precious stones and pearls.
She held a golden cup in her hand, filled with abominable things and the
filth of her adulteries. 5 The name written on her forehead was a mystery:
BABYLON THE GREAT, THE MOTHER OF PROSTITUTES AND OF THE
ABOMINATIONS OF THE EARTH.11
9.
Parsons, The Book of Babalon; A. Dimech and P. Grey, The Brazen Vessel (London: Scarlet
Imprint, 2019); Ireland ‘Black Circuit, Code for the Numbers to Come’.
10.
Revelation 12:1–3 NIV.
11.
Revelation 17:3–5 NIV.
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The vision of these two contrasting female figures is accompanied in both
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cases by a demonic creature with seven heads and ten horns, which in the
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first case plays a role that is antagonistic toward the celestial woman, seeking to devour her child and thus to remove it from the divine light, while in
the second case it seems to enter into a sort of mysterious alliance with the
scarlet woman. The traditional interpretation of the number 7 as a manifestation of the spiritual order in matter seems to me insufficient to explain the
catastrophic scope of these visions, just as it is hopelessly inadequate in the
face of the suffering eroticism of the heart of the Mater Dolorosa pierced by
seven daggers. This reflection, together with the fascination for the figure
of the Virgin of Sorrows, has been a stimulus to my research on aspects of
the divine feminine in esoteric and Kabbalistic material, trying to understand
how to approach it in all its fluidity and complexity, even beyond the strictly
numerological considerations that accompany such images.
Let me clarify one point here: in the face of the inadequacy of the
interpretations available to us, it is certainly legitimate to surrender to the
contingency of symbols. On the other hand, we cannot make any claim as to
the coherence of the hallucinations of John of Patmos, let alone the legacy
of a confused and bastardised tradition such as that upon which Aleister
Crowley’s work draws. Although our aim is therefore not (and cannot be)
to base an historically accurate and simultaneously religiously meaningful
exegesis of these ancient and modern revelations in the historical and existential context of those who delivered them to us, we still face the difficult
task of receiving and transcribing the voices of symbols that call to us from
the depths of the future. The more we succeed in doing this by setting aside
man—the prophet—the better we will have answered our call.
The typical Neoplatonic reading of the Kabbalistic material proposed by
the initiatic traditions, which flowed from Renaissance Hermeticism into
nineteenth-century Theosophy and contributed to the formation of a large
part of contemporary exoteric doctrines, presents a vision of the cosmic
order as a linear and unproblematic emanation from divine unity, overflowing
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from an original point and spilling over into the manifold aspects of creation,
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which are then classified according to a descending hierarchy based on their
distance from the source, the fount of being.12 The rigidity of this view has
been accompanied by an inadequate and inherently oppressive discussion of
the role of the feminine, understood simply as a passive and receptive aspect
of the process of emanating divine light.13 On the other hand, Western initiatory paths are profoundly flawed because they neglect the central position
occupied by pain and restraint in the original Kabbalistic material which their
tradition purports to draw upon. This is part of the larger and more complex
problem of confronting the inability of earlier esoteric traditions to deal with
the processual and dynamic aspects of Kabbalah, which—for reasons that
appear immediately obvious when approaching any mystical text—cannot
be contained in the immobility of the Tree of Life glyph on which the Right
Hand Path has so obsessively fixated.
The need to revolutionise this approach lies not so much in a claim
to historical accuracy with respect to the ancient sources of esoteric
12.
As an example of this limited view of the Kabbalah I quote a passage from Dion Fortune’s
Mystical Qabalah, still considered a good introduction to Kabbalistic doctrine by many
practitioners of different initiatic traditions: ‘Let us conceive of Kether, then, as a fountain which
fills its basin, and the overflow therefrom feeds another fountain, which in its turn fills its basin
and overflows. The Unmanifest for ever flows under pressure into Kether, and there comes a
time when evolution has gone as far as it can in the extreme simplicity of the form of existence
of the First Manifest. All possible combinations have been formed, and they have undergone all
possible permutations. Action and reaction are stereotyped, there can be no new development
save the combining of the combinations among themselves. Force has formed all possible units;
the next phase of development is for these units to combine into more complex structures. When
this occurs, a new and more highly organised phase of existence begins; all that has already been
evolved remains, but that which evolves now is more than the sum of the previously existing
parts, for new capacities come into being.’ D. Fortune, The Mystical Qabalah (York Beach, ME:
Samuel Weiser, 1999), 40–41.
13.
In this regard, I share the views of Alkistis Dimech and Peter Grey in their text ‘My Time is
Come: An Erotic Eschatology of Babalon’: ‘The emanationist God of Neoplatonism remains on his
throne. The adept of Thelema lives in a New Age in which the rules have supposedly changed in a
fundamental way, but the baggage train of Empire follows closely behind. The goddess does not
threaten to descend, as in Dee, but is safely removed into the aethyr whilst the bodies of actual
women serve naked on the altar as receptacles for sperm and with no creative potential in their
own right.’ The Brazen Vessel, 419.
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thought—a claim that neither we nor anyone else can make—but rather
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in an understanding of its necessary insufficiency in the face of the fluidity
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of the symbolic manifestations of the divine feminine. It is our task, as
contemporary esotericists, to give voice to the urgency of exploring those
conflicting and problematic aspects which the initiatic traditions, whether
through superficialism or revisionism, have sought to flatten, transforming
the dynamics of the Kabbalistic machinery into what is little more than a
convoluted system of lifts and escalators to gnosis.
In the Zohar,14 a fundamental text of the Kabbalistic tradition, there are
several moments of nonlinearity in the emanation, moments at which the
descent of the divine into matter—and in turn the ascent of matter into the
divine—is interrupted and complicated. These moments take the form of
contractions—tzimtzum—which the divine light imposes upon itself, and
which are at the same time indispensable to its manifestation. Any criticism
of the structure of the Hermetic Kabbalah as proposed by Western esoteric
thought must necessarily begin with a thorough reflection on its points of
nonlinearity, which were not included in the dogmas of the initiatory traditions,
or if they were, they were carefully concealed.
In particular, it is interesting to note that these processes of rupture
and separation are centred around aspects of the emanation mechanism
that are commonly associated with the feminine, and that they are focused
in particular on two of the ten sefirot or levels traditionally included in the
divine emanation process: the sefira Binah and the sefira Malkuth.
These two sefirot appear to be involved in an uninterrupted and symmetrical series of transmutations and movements, both descending and ascending,
which lead them to merge and separate from each other several times:
14.
In our research we have made extensive use of Michael Laitman’s edition of the Zohar and
its commentary by Rabbi Yehuda Ashlag. Despite our efforts to give credit to the complexity and
depth of the material upon which our research is based, we feel it is important to emphasise that
the present essay should not be interpreted as an exegesis or commentary on the texts of Jewish
mysticism, any more than it is a commentary on the Kabbalistic writings of Blavatsky, Crowley,
Mathers, or Fortune.
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‘Who is this coming up from the wasteland?’ (Shir HaShirim, 3:6). MI ZOT—
M AT E R D O LO R O SA
who is this—is the common ground of the two questions, the two worlds,
Bina and Malchut, which are bound together. COMING UP—coming up to
become the ‘Holy of Holies’. For MI is Bina, called the Holy of Holies. And
she joins with ZOT (Malchut), so that Malchut could come up FROM THE
WASTELAND.15
It is not our intention here to trace the precise course of these two sefirot in
the Kabbalistic ‘system’, assuming such a system exists. But it is clear that
there is a divine feminine aspect trapped within the walls of the architecture
of creation which, rather than identifying itself with one or more specific
entities, emerges in the form of a dynamic and multiform process. Perhaps
the greatest failing of contemporary esoteric reflection on femininity lies in
the necessarily unsuccessful attempt to contain it within the rigid schema of
divinity as an individual, petrifying the aspects of transition and movement
that are characteristic of it. From this perspective, any form of feminine
monotheism—including that of Babalon—is not an adequate response to
the problem of the marginalisation of femininity in esoteric traditions, neither
is the project of making explicit a divine feminine aspect that is complementary or symmetrical to the divine masculine.
Moreover, the greatest warning against these errors, which has too often
passed unnoticed by even the most devout believers, is contained in the very
name of the great Babylon, whose antiquated meaning—the door, passage,
or gate—leaves no doubt as to its profound nature: it is something that
must be passed through if one really wishes to understand it. In this sense,
we must move within the Kabbalistic machinery in light of its capacity for
the indefinite separation and duplication of feminine identities: not so much
by seeking to localise an original feminine principle to replace or oppose
the masculine source, but rather by seeking to liberate the feminine in the
processual, necessarily delocalised aspects of the divine organism.
15.
The Zohar, ed. M. Laitman (Toronto: Laitman Kabbalah Publishers, 2009), 347.
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Returning to the movements of tzimtzum, we can define them as those
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processes of separation within the divinity that are necessary for its man-
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ifestation. The process of correction, i.e. repairing the distance separating
Malkuth, the creation, from the light of its creator, can only be accomplished
through the division of Binah, the heavenly Mother, and the fall of her seven
lower sefirot into corruption and darkness.
The divine light that Binah makes descend in Malkuth to correct it in
its darkness is described by the Zohar using the image of tears falling into
the Great Sea:
He remembers her, He strikes 390 firmaments, and they all tremble with
terrible fear before Him. And the Creator sheds tears for the Shechina
(Divinity), Malchut that has fallen to the dust. And those tears simmer like
fire, and fall into the Great Sea.16
This painful process of separation of the original mother, who makes the
existence of the world possible, unmistakably recalls the myth of the dismemberment of the draconic Virgin-Mother Tiamat.17 The celestial symbolism associated with Binah is contrasted with the floral symbolism of Malkuth,
which is connected to the image of the rose among thorns, illuminated by
divine light but soiled with the red of the impure and demonic forces that
act upon it in its distance from divinity, represented by exile in the desert.
This feminine polarity, characterised by the tension between two aspects
that are mysteriously identified but at the same time radically distant, when
considered together with the symbolism that accompanies the two sefirot,
refers us unequivocally to the vision of the two women of the Book of Revelation. In the course of such processes of rupture and estrangement, the
decimal structure of the sefirot is decapitated, the chain of emanation is
interrupted, and the divine order is subject to the influence of impure forces
16.
Ibid., 200.
17.
See ‘Catastrophic Astrology’, in this volume.
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that fill the empty shells of the seven sefirot, once destined to contain the
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light in creation but which have now been shattered.
According to Gershom Scholem’s interpretation, the process of original
rupture refers to the root of a primordial suffering in the world, which arises
from the necessary distance, or exile, of creation from its creator: ‘Thus,
since that primordial act, all being has been a being in exile, in need of being
led back and redeemed. The breaking of the vessels continues into all the
further stages of emanation and Creation; everything is in some way broken,
everything has a flaw, everything is unfinished’;18 the three apocalyptic female
aspects of the Dragon, the Celestial Virgin and the great Babylon falling in
flames must be understood as processes belonging to the same cosmological mechanism of separation.19 In devising forms of ritual magic capable
of sustaining effective occult guerrilla warfare against hetero-patriarchal
dogma, it is essential to become aware of the internal mechanisms of the
divine architecture in which there occur those phenomena of disequilibrium
that secretly make it possible. These moments of disequilibrium are the
hidden engines of the process of divine emanation, in which the feminine
continually manifests itself as an inexhaustible generative force, a sacrificial
victim, and a receptacle for the corrupt dross expelled from the cosmic
order. Decoupling these processes from the architecture that produced
them yields a monstrous, headless machine which advances irreversibly by
mitotic duplication, suffocating the structure that generated it.
III. MIGRAINE
And then I saw a great star, splendid and beautiful, come forth […] and with
that star came a great multitude of shining sparks, which followed the star
18.
Scholem, On the Kabbalah and its Symbolism, 112–13.
19.
This tripartite structure is included in our ritual practice and manifested through the use
of the tri-triangular seal as a machine for the evocation of the Dismembered Mother Tiamat. On
this subject, see the text ‘Ritual: Every Worm Trampled is a Star’, in this volume.
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toward the South [...]. But […] they were all extinguished and were changed
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into black cinders [...] they were precipitated into the abyss and vanished
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from my sight.
Hildegard of Bingen20
Sometimes, as I drag myself through the insignificant misery of my life, your
beauty pierces me like a dart of tenderness. I see the pale young flesh of
your face, brave and desperate like a winter rose, marked by crystals of tears,
and your eyes appear to me liquid and frightening like lunar jellyfish luminescent in the abyss. Everything is superfluous and resplendent. The filthy
iridescent puddles of diesel, the wreckage plagued by rust, the desperate
vegetation crawling with parasites in the cracks of the concrete.
The city is a spiral of nausea. Everything is coming to pieces, falling
into a Babel of fragments, in a continuous production of ragged shreds of
stuttering, useless matter. In this crumbling and absurd edifice, everyone
carries their own stone. My stone is the supermarket receipt that fell out of
my pocket and the imprint of chewing gum stuck under the sole of my left
shoe. My stone is the fine coal dust that adheres to the train carriage and
the half-detached sign that says not to lean against the doors. The city is a
sarcophagus of forgotten hieroglyphs.
Pieces of decaying matter rest there, marked with occult ideograms faded
by the sun, the Word inexorably breaking down into the primitive alphabet
of dust. All things weep toward the ancient heat imprisoned in the heart of
the earth. The heart of the earth is a shining wound that bleeds, inconsolably,
your name. Migraine is a pain that overflows from the confines of myself,
percolating into every last particle of matter; it is a pain without a wound,
because it reveals the wound in the heart of the world.
Sometimes I walk through the city in a state of apnoea, as though submerged in amniotic fluid. Pain is a crawling insect that lurks behind the bulbs
20. Hildegard of Bingen, Scivias, tr. Mother C. Hart, J. Bishop (Mahwah, NJ and New York:
Paulist Press, 1990), 309.
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of my eyes, injecting them with a miraculous prophetic poison that reveals
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in everything its blinding aura and the dark spectre of its decomposition.
At first the attacks were brief and sporadic, of tolerable intensity, comparable to any common headache. But with the passing of the years, the crises
began to become strangely cyclical and terrifyingly intense, so that I lived, in
moments of particular discomfort, with an almost constant sense of anxiety.
I vaguely remember being locked in a hotel room for two days without
eating or drinking, wavering between consciousness and unconsciousness,
overcome by incessant gagging. My skin trembled, covered with a thick layer
of icy sweat. Sleep was a slimy, disgusting substance in which an unknown
spectral power constantly forced me to immerse myself, only to emerge
increasingly exhausted and drained. My medication is tryptamines, which
induce a strange numbness, like a small, localised paralysis around the jaw
and at the back of the throat, making me feel almost strangled. When I feel
the doses—a few tens of milligrams at a time—wear off and the numbness
fades without having relieved the pain, I start to feel afraid.
After twelve hours of vomiting and fasting, one’s stomach is empty and
all that comes up is bile. One’s mouth is so bitter that water tastes like sugar
syrup. In the course of these episodes one becomes so close to the floor
that its harsh coldness is almost strangely consoling. Some nights I spent
screaming. I remember lying in bed exhausted, and in the heart of my absurd
grief I was pierced by a vision of luminous nostalgia. The quiet, yearning
dream of a primitive motherhood deep in my spasming womb.
Migraine crises pass of their own accord, just as they arrived, without
a trace. All that remains is an alienating feeling of a suspicious wellbeing,
something for which one feels almost guilty—a little like the miraculous
survivors of a massacre must feel. Perhaps precisely because of the absence
of any easily identifiable source of pain, the impression is not so much that
of an evil that has passed, but rather of having achieved access, by occult
spiritual means, to a kind of parallel dimension of the world, which continues
to exist independently, hidden beneath the veil of ordinary reality. Because
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the pain of migraine is not located in a point inside one’s own body, but
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rather emanates like black light from the surrounding matter, emerging from
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a crisis is like leaving behind the shattered ruin of reality, abandoning it in
its secret misery.
In this sense I would say that the migraine attack, as absolutely hateful
and revolting as it is, has the character of a sinister unveiling—an experience
similar to that of certain dreams in which everyday reality is reproduced with
surprising accuracy except for a few misplaced objects, a slightly distorted
perspective, an unnatural light as of a black sun in the night; dreams from
which one emerges with the persistent suspicion of never having actually
awakened. If what manifests itself to the hallucinatory gaze of the migraine
sufferer is indeed an arcane substratum of the world, then the comfort
between crises is only a temporary deafness to the atrocious and obscene
cry that forever courses through creation.
On the subject of the prophetic character of migraine attacks—which
in some cases can take on an almost cosmological significance—the neurologist Oliver Sacks reports the following testimony of a patient describing
his experience:
There seems to be a sort of hole in my memory and mind and, so to speak,
a hole in the world; and yet I cannot imagine what might go in the hole. […]
I have the feeling that my body—that bodies are unstable, that they may
come apart and lose parts of themselves […]. There is still a certain residue
of dread, and a fear that the scotoma may go on forever….21
The idea of a mysterious and revelatory evil, at once physical and moral,
through which the suffering victim achieves the realisation of profound
spiritual truths, belongs squarely within the tradition of female mysticism.
To quote Sacks again, ‘the subject of migraine aura is touched with the
incomprehensible and the incommunicable: nay, this lies at its very center,
21.
O. Sacks, Migraine (London: Picador, 1995), 95.
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its heart’22—the heart of mystical experience. Sacks himself indicates the
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similarity of many ecstatic experiences to migraine auras, which ‘include not
only simple and complex sensory hallucinations, but intense affective states,
deficits and disturbances of speech and ideation, dislocations of space- and
time-perception, and a variety of dreamy, delirious, and trance-like states’.23
Many of the characteristics of the maladies described by the ecstatic
seem, in their sudden, devastating, and mysteriously transitory character, to
converge with those of migraine or epileptic attacks, two conditions that can
often be confused for one another, presenting surprisingly similar symptoms.
A case in point, of course, is Teresa of Ávila, who, on 15 August 1539, during
what she called her conversion, suffered a terrible paroxysm that plunged
her into a comatose state for days, and left her almost totally paralysed for
three years. In The Book of Her Life, Teresa describes the sickness as follows:
Such were these four days I spent in this paroxysm that only the Lord can
know the unbearable torments I suffered within myself: my tongue, bitten to
pieces; my throat unable to let even water pass down—from not having swallowed anything and from the great weakness that oppressed me; everything
seemed to be disjointed; the greatest confusion in my head; all shrivelled and
drawn together in a ball. The result of the torments of those four days was
that I was unable to stir, not an arm or a foot, neither hand nor head, unable
to move as though I were dead; only one finger on my right hand it seems I
was able to move.24
Continuing to read Teresa’s autobiography, one is struck by the similarity
between the description of this terrible illness, which brought her to the
brink of death, and the accounts of her transports or raptures, which are
22. Ibid., 52.
23.
Ibid., 53.
24. Teresa of Ávila, The Book of Her Life, tr. K. Kavanaugh, O. Rodriguez (Indianapolis: Hackett,
2008), 24.
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described with the same vocabulary and the same intensity of suffering;
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the difference is that agony is superimposed here with the joy of ecstasy,
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in what the saint calls ‘an arduous, delightful martyrdom’:25 in the course
of the ecstasy, in fact, Teresa reports that ‘when the body is in rapture it is
as though dead’,26 and that ‘even the next day I feel pain in the pulse and in
the body, as if the bones were disjoined’.27 Throughout the different levels of
mystical experience classified by Teresa, the idea recurs that the approach
to the divine that takes place in ecstasy is essentially an experience that
is independent of consciousness and will, and which afflicts the soul like a
disease, which it is hopeless to try and bring about intellectually and which
it is pointless to try to resist.
It is interesting to compare this kind of ecstatic experience with the meditative experiences commonly sought in initiatic traditions, which coincide
with states of absolute concentration that obliterate individual consciousness
and elevate it to a state of consciousness that we might call cosmic or universal. Here the word concentration is not to be understood only in its common
sense, that is, as referring to the ability of the intellect to exclude external
stimuli and invocatory thoughts in order to focus on a single object or image,
but must be understood as a condition that transcends the personal boundaries of the initiate and attains an essentially cosmological scope, indicating
a punctual state in which the maximum centripetal attraction is realised, and
in which the universe manifests itself as emanating from an absolute centre
with which the initiate’s consciousness comes to coincide. The attainment
of such a state of absolute concentration is commonly achieved through
the constant exercise of meditation practices, almost always borrowed from
some ‘oriental tradition’. As an example of this approach, it seems significant
to quote a passage from Liber Null by Peter J. Carroll, considered one of the
founders of Chaos Magic:
25. Ibid., 125.
26. Ibid., 127.
27.
Ibid., 125.
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The particular state of mind required has a name in every tradition: No-mind.
M AT E R D O LO R O SA
Stopping the internal dialogue, passing through the eye of the needle, ain
or nothing, sama-dhi, or onepointedness. In this book it will be known as
Gnosis. […] In the inhibitory mode, the mind is progressively silenced until
only a single object of concentration remains. In the excitatory mode, the
mind is raised to a very high pitch of excitement while concentration on the
objective is maintained. [...] Thus, strong inhibition and strong excitation end
up creating the same effect—the one-pointed consciousness, or gnosis. [...]
It is during these moments of single-pointed concentration, or gnosis, that
beliefs can be implanted for magic, and the life force induced to manifest.28
In the usual universalistic spirit of Chaos Magic, all mystical experiences
are thus grouped together under the single goal of achieving the absolute
concentration of gnosis that brings the initiate into coincidence with God.
In fact, what is generally regarded as the most innovative and postmodern
current of magic—and which many believe definitely obsolesces any other
attempts to build new self-sufficient and separatist systems of magic—is
once again manifested in its inherently reactionary intent to reduce all
magical and mystical experiences under the single banner of a manic cult
of the Centre.
The path traced by the ecstatic indicates an alternative route, radically
opposed to those of concentration of consciousness. In approaching this
painfully introspective and radically feminine material, it is necessary to
be aware that the centrality of suffering proposed by the ecstatic is to be
understood as a self-sufficient mystical goal, and not simply as another
path to the same state of gnosis to which the initiatic traditions aspire.
The ecstatic path traced by Teresa proposes suffering itself as the highest
form of gnosis,29 the only one in which consciousness can perceive its own
28.
P.J. Carroll, Liber Null (Newburyport, MA: Red Wheel Weiser, 1987), 29.
29.
See the ‘The Highest Form of Gnosis’, in this volume.
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necessary separation from the divine light: a prophetic state of ‘glorious
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foolishness, […] heavenly madness’30 in which ‘the soul [...] is as though
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crucified between heaven and earth’.31
IV. LUNA
The shadow of the Rock has grown darker and longer. They sit rooted to the
ground and cannot move. The dreadful shape is a living monster lumbering
towards them across the plain, scattering rocks and boulders. So near now,
they can see the cracks and hollows where the lost girls lie rotting in a filthy
cave.32
Joan Lindsay
I have always lived in cities, of varying sizes, in areas that are highly urbanised and all equally segregated from the wild. On the other hand, since
my puberty, I have been strongly susceptible to the idea of having something necessarily wild within me. Such a feeling of radical separation from
civilisation was the mark of a hyper-aware femininity, which I portrayed
to myself as a kind of untameable natural force. This story, which I kept
repeating to myself incessantly, concealed the acute and painful awareness
of my unbridgeable insufficiency. What had previously been only the vague
consciousness of a female identity (in which—by attitude or education—I
found it hard to recognise myself) had suddenly revealed itself as a bodily
reality: and while I admired my slender legs growing with vigorous beauty, I
realised that my dreams of enthusiastic participation in the world were set to
tragically crash against the harsh reality of my female function as a desired
object and almost never as a desiring subject.
30. Teresa of Ávila, The Book of Her Life, 96.
31.
Ibid., 125.
32. J. Lindsay, Picnic at Hanging Rock (London: Vintage, 2013), 136.
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Confronted with the impossibility of participating in the human community
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in the full and uncompromising way that is granted in its entirety only to men,
I withdrew into the comfort of thinking myself entirely other: an force alien
to civilisation, if not, in some way, its very nemesis. I dreamt of escaping
into the woods, where, amidst the soft moss and lichen-coloured tree bark,
to the sound of a clear stream twisting among the rocks, I imagined that
I would live forever as a swift and solitary Artemis. The woods and their
solitude, however, were always essentially closed to me. That romantic
encounter with sublime, unspoilt nature which I so desperately longed for,
has in practice always been an experience almost entirely reserved for men.
If the supposed weaknesses of my female body and the perpetual threat
of rape were not enough to keep me away from any remote, unspoilt place,
what oppressed me—even more than the bans and curfews—was a kind
of self-imposed responsibility to preserve my feminine nature intact in the
face of the wilderness. Any laceration, whether in body or mind, would be
a gateway for that wildness to creep up on me and possess me entirely,
erasing any remaining traces of my precarious humanity and dragging me
into a vortex of orgiastic and self-destructive hunger.
There are those who go into the woods because they wish to deliberately
enjoy the virile privilege of a dialectical confrontation with the uncontaminated purity of wild nature, which qualifies as an absolute outside from
which, through the struggle, a renewed humanity emerges victorious and
civilised. ‘I scent no compromise in the fragrance of the water-lily. It is not
a Nymphoea Douglasii. In it, the sweet, and pure, and innocent are wholly
sundered from the obscene and baleful.’33 But for me the depths of the
forest were as obscene and violent as my pubescent body. I found myself
so extraordinarily exiled in that same wild strangeness that was necessarily
closed to me: no place, human or inhuman, could belong to me.
33.
H.D. Thoreau, ‘Slavery in Massachusetts’, in The Writings of Henry David Thoreau, Journal,
Volume 8: 1854, ed. S. H. Petrulionis (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1981), 195.
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Virginity is a blood pact. It is born in the thick blood of the first menstruation
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and is extinguished in the slimy blood of the torn hymen. However much it
M AT E R D O LO R O SA
may be trampled upon and suffocated in fear, at the root of virginal integrity
vibrates a solemn feeling: the consciousness of a warrior power that can
sacrifice everything because it can never renounce itself.
Virginity is so intimately entwined with death because it is a brutal sacrament of war: it is the promise to remain true to oneself and the radical refusal
to participate in the reproductive order of civilisation, in full consciousness
of holding both the key to its maintenance and the key to its destruction.
In the eyes of young women there is a hazy Amazonian awareness of their
own self-sufficiency—an absolute self-monotheism capable of plunging the
universe into ruin.
In the face of the violence that creeps into every man’s gaze, the fragile
beauty of the virgin is transformed into the total, suicidal negation of life
itself. On the virginal integrity of the vestal priestesses depended the sacred
flame that maintained order in the city of Rome, just as the purity of the
holy warrior Joan of Arc, which burned with her in the flames of the stake,
kept the destiny of the kingdom of France intact. In the virgin’s absolute
vulnerability is hidden the unutterable secret of a destructive cosmic power:
a shining purity that passes through creation, prophetically flickering like
the fire of a meteor. By virtue of its profoundly paradoxical and necessarily
elusive nature, virginity is a sacred condition that belongs to the initiatory
mysteries of the feminine. In this respect, it is like the Gorgon’s gaze, which
cannot be described by any human being except by the groan that remains
forever choked between the petrified lips of the dying warrior.
Those who approach the bloody purity of Artemis do so with the full
knowledge that the price of outrage will be paid in flesh torn by the bites of
her dogs, and they offer themselves for food with joy. The intimately paradoxical aspect of virginity, at once guardian of the reproductive order and
its absolute negation, is well described by Pierre Klossowski, who in his The
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Bath of Diana comments on the myth of Artemis and Actaeon as narrated
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by Ovid in the Metamorphoses:
[Diana] formed healthy young girls in her own image and was nonetheless ‘a
lioness for women’; she loosed ravaging monsters across the countrysides
of kingdoms hostile or indifferent to her altars, as the hunt became more and
more a game than an economic necessity, as if to remind men that, being
a sign of both the dark and serene aspects of the universe, she presided
over her wholeness. Now in what respect did this wholeness coincide with
her virginal nature, correspond to her chastity? Why did she renounce the
emotions that animate the universe? Was she hiding, from the gods as well as
the mortals, her other face eternally? Acteon did not rightly understand that
the wholeness of the universe could rest on a single deity, nor that a feminine
deity, exclusive of any male deity, might express herself in the singleness of
a closed nature, sufficient unto herself, finding in chastity the fullness of her
essence. Goddess beyond destiny, with whom no mortal, even at destiny’s
behest, could presume to join in union.34
This paradoxical aspect of Diana—at once shining and dark, chaste and
perverse, protector and destroyer—is reflected in the lunar symbolism
associated with the iconography of Artemis, which highlights ‘her double
nature: murderous and luminous, or rather, luminous because murderous’,35
and which reveals her ‘as the principle of life at the core of death or as the
principle of death at the core of being’.36 The moon is a multiform object
whose associations are innumerable and often contradictory; the problem can be summed up in the enigma of a star that is both celestial and
chthonic, necessarily double, in a reverberation of perpetual self-reflection
34. P. Klossowski, ‘Diana at Her Bath’, tr. S. Sartarelli, Diana at Her Bath and The Women of
Rome (New York: Marsilio, 1998), 11–12.
35. Ibid., 17.
36. Ibid.
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and subversion.37 In seeking in the moon any familiar and reassuring principle,
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we find only the disturbing reflection of its perversion, which responds to us
M AT E R D O LO R O SA
with a pale and bleeding smile. The light emitted by the moon is a reflected
and diverted light, like a degenerate and impure double of the light of the
sun, and emits a spectral radiance tainted by contact with the ancient dust
of its craters.
From a Kabbalistic perspective, the moon is associated with the sefira
Malkuth, the impure aspect of the divine feminine, because of its property
of reflecting light, which is imposed on it by the creator as a primordial
constraint. To quote Scholem, ‘this “lessening of the moon” was interpreted
by the Kabbalists as a symbol of the Shekhinah’s exile. The Shekhinah itself
is the “holy moon”, which has fallen from its high rank, been robbed of its
light and sent into cosmic exile’.38 More than any other aspect, however, it
is the cyclicality of the moon’s phases that is ineffable and deeply sinister; it
combines the moon’s astral and abyssal natures, linking it to the movement
of the tides, the reproductive cycles of countless marine animals, and the
female menstrual cycle. The cycle evokes the horror of the Flood, incessantly
replicated in the sanitary purification of menstruation (the unborn child),
which restores the reproductive order while signalling the indifference of
the cosmos in the face of its failure. In this respect the moon is a symbol
of virginal purity and death, or rather, of cyclical purification through death,
and contains all the most deeply disturbing aspects of the divine feminine.
37.
On this point it seems significant to cite the poem ‘I Have Two Moons’ by Mahmoud
Darwish, quoted by Jason Bahbak Mohaghegh in Omnicide (Falmouth and New York: Urbanomic/
Sequence, 2019), 107–108: ‘We cleanse the moonlight. Your road is long, so dream of / seven
women to bear this long journey on your shoulders. / I walk on the lip of the well: I have two
moons, / one in the sky, the other swimming in the water. / I have two moons.’ As Mohaghegh
comments: ‘These two, usually conflicting principles of divinity are made to reinforce each other
in the fractal mindscape of this author, as the moon is split into two lifeblood counterparts, one
flung upwards into a remote unsullied sky, the other parachuted downward onto the moving
surface of the water, one forever unreachable and the other immediately touchable […].’
38.
Scholem, On the Kabbalah and its Symbolism, 151.
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If we wish to understand the moon, we must reserve for it both a maniacal
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love and a sacred terror. The moon, like the Virgin, like every other aspect
of the sacred feminine, embodies a process. It comprises in its very nature
everything that human civilisation has ever done to it. It secretes, in the
poison that springs from its symbols, all the ancient violence that has been
directed at its flesh. The moment we try to strip her of her monstrous mask,
telling ourselves that behind her perversion lies an ancient lost harmony,
we perform, like the unfortunate Actaeon, a blasphemous and desperately
foolish act, presuming to domesticate the divine feminine within our miserable humanity.
Can we be so sure that the face of the unmasked Goddess is more reassuring than the mask we have built for her? In the swollen, bruised surface
of the full moon there shines eternally the suicidal laughter of the vestal
virgins, buried alive in the viscera of the city, forever suffocated in darkness.
V. MEDUSA
And while I arouse
in secret
those adorned dreams…
in that corpse
is discovered a foetus
thirty days old.39
Arrigo Boito
A few steps away from the departments of Mathematical, Physical, and
Natural Sciences at the University of Milan where I spent my years of study,
there is a square named after Paolo Gorini. The white marble plaques affixed
to the corners of the square bear his name, accompanied by a single word:
scientist. Arriving at the square from the university buildings, one notices
39.
A. Boito, ‘Lezione d’anatomia’, Opere (Rome: Garzanti, 1979).
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a little further on an anonymous green gate with a rusty iron sign bearing
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the word ‘OBITORIUM’. I remember lingering several times in front of that
M AT E R D O LO R O SA
gate on my way back from exams, perhaps in the secret hope of satisfying
my morbid curiosity of glimpsing, between its bars, some piece of a corpse.
The fact that the mortuary is located in that very square is no coincidence.
Gorini, a scientist from Lombardy and self-proclaimed founder of a bizarre
discipline he called ‘experimental geology’, is known to all as the petrifier,
because of his astonishing experiments in mummification and the preservation of corpses.
As is well documented in Alberto Carli’s monograph Paolo Gorini, La
fiaba del mago di Lodi [Paolo Gorini, The Fairytale of the Magician of
Lodi], the problem of the treatment of corpses, in the context of the Italian
Risorgimento, represented an entanglement of various implications ranging
from the necessity of preserving human bodies for anatomical and scientific
studies to the political and religious issues at stake in the debates of the
period. Moreover, Gorini’s strong advocacy of the idea of bringing the practice of cremating corpses back into common use was a virulent challenge to
the political and moral authority of the Catholic Church at a time of radical
political and institutional renewal. Far from simply representing the curious
case of an eclectic scientist marginalised by the academic authorities of
the time, Gorini’s story—the story of the crematorium he designed and
the mysterious preparation he used to perform the scientific miracle of
petrifying corpses—provides an illuminating insight into the cultural and
political ferment of mid-nineteenth-century Italy. The latter was marked by
the combined coexistence of the positivist rationalism of the new natural
sciences, used as a weapon of rebellion against religious obscurantism, and
the underground proliferation of initiatic secret societies, hidden from the
control of the Austrian empire and aiming to engineer a more enlightened
future for the Italian homeland. In northern Italy, this occult struggle—curiously fought over the putrid flesh of corpses—has left more traces in the
necropolises than in the metropolises. Walking along the marble avenues
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of Monumental Cemetery of Milan, one may see the surnames of the same
M AT E R D O LO R O SA
Milanese notables who appear in Gorini’s biography, often as enthusiastic
supporters of his scientific endeavours, engraved among the sphinxes,
pyramids, squares, and compasses.
Gorini argued that his interest in the question of the preservation and
destruction of human bodies stemmed from his horror at the process of their
decomposition after burial:
What happens in burial is incomparably sadder and more repulsive than what
would have happened to the corpse if simply left on the ground; and the
torment of that wretched flesh, as has been pointed out, lasts for a very long
time [...]. It is a horrible thing to realise what happens to the corpse when it
is confined in its underground prison. If we could but catch a glimpse through
a crack, any other way of treating corpses would be deemed less cruel, and
the use of burial would be condemned without appeal.40
To respond to this sense of profound horror and indignation, he identifies
two possible strategies, drawing, in doing so, upon the great civilisations of
the past:
The ancient Egyptians raised the banner of rebellion and tried to rescue their
corpses from the dissolving forces of nature. The Greeks and Romans […]
adopted the ancient oriental custom of consigning corpses to the flames,
thus hastening their decay.41
Either way, the only salvation from decomposition is to be had through the
mineralisation of the body, be it through petrification or the transformation of living matter into air and ash by means of combustion. Moreover,
Gorini, as an experimental geologist, had developed the idea of cremation
40.
A. Carli, Paolo Gorini. La fiaba del mago di Lodi (Rome: Interlinea, 2009), 209.
41.
Ibid., 131.
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precisely from his research into the plutonic liquid, a mysterious incandes-
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cent chthonic fluid from whose primordial solidification, according to his
M AT E R D O LO R O SA
theory, mountain ranges and volcanoes originated. This process of mineralisation, capable of restoring to the dead body its lost dignity and, at the same
time, raising a Promethean challenge to the natural disintegration of living
matter, is of a profoundly alchemical nature. In the words of Elémire Zolla:
Why should man’s passage from life to death be any different from that
linking fermenting matter to the ingot, or the plant to its seed, or even to
its ash, containing salts charged with the most intrinsic medicinal virtue?
[…] The treatment of corpses is alchemical. Embalming, more than any
other method, provided the spirit of the deceased with the means to the
fulfil the destiny of its body, in a way that was similar to the transmutation
of a metal into gold [...]. A corpse that was not treated alchemically and left
unsanctified, unpacified, was a dangerous vampire, a wandering poison, fuel
for worshippers of black magic.42
Whether Paolo Gorini was actually a magician, and what his occult affiliations were, is a question destined to remain unresolved, the answer burned
together with his body in the flames of the crematorium. His maniacal
dedication to the mission of restoring the bodies of the dead to their original
plutonic condition nevertheless seems to be an action of great Hermetic
significance. Faced with the failure of his attempt to stop time by halting
the processes of decomposition altogether, his choice to follow the volcanic path of returning to dust is the most desperate and radical attempt
to reverse the course of time, returning matter to its original condition of
total disarray. In the bright flame of this last sacrifice, time is definitively
decapitated, leaving only the petrifying gaze of eternity in the eyes of a
severed head.
42.
E. Zolla, Le Meraviglie della Natura. Introduzione all’alchimia (Rome: Marsilio, 1997), 419.
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VI. STILLA MARIS
M AT E R D O LO R O SA
Ave, maris stella,
Dei Mater alma,
atque semper virgo,
felix cœli porta.43
One of the most curious names of the Blessed Virgin Mary is Stella Maris—
literally, ‘star of the sea’. This name associates her with the North Star,
whose inexhaustible rays guide lost sailors through the stormy seas. The
origin of the name, however, can be traced back to a transcription error of
the more mysterious expression stilla maris—‘drop of the sea’—used in St
Jerome’s Latin translation of the Onomasticon, a work of biblical geography
by Eusebius of Caesarea dating from the fourth century, but which has
since been lost. This appellation is in turn a translation of the Hebrew form
of Mary’s name, Myriam, whose controversial etymology has engendered
various hypotheses; among them the hypothesis adopted by St. Jerome was
most probably the one that traced the name Myriam back to the combination of the Hebrew words mar, ‘drop’, and yam, ‘sea’.44
As in all such stories of the propagation of errors, it is not known whether
there was any form of intentionality in the choice to transfer one piece of
information to future memory rather than another. Certainly, today we are
more inclined to associate the image of the Virgin Mary with the bright vault
of heaven than with the unexplored depths of the ocean. Like a code irreversibly encrypted in its ancient names, the Immaculata silently reproduces
the secret of its abyssal nature, overflowing like a poisonous sea from the
openings of its beautiful weeping eyes.
43.
‘Hail, star of the sea / Nurturing Mother of God / And ever Virgin / Happy gate of Heaven.’
Mediaeval hymn.
44.
See A. Maas, ‘The Name of Mary’, The Catholic Encyclopedia (New York: Robert Appleton
Company, 1912).
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and the ocean. To this end, he elaborates a theory of thalassal regression, i.e.
‘the idea of a […] striving towards the aquatic mode of existence abandoned
in primeval times’ and its ‘continued operation in the sphere of genitality’.45
For Ferenczi, it is not so much that the ocean is a symbol of the womb, but
rather that the womb is an ancient reminder of the ancestral ocean from
which mammals were torn so as to adapt to life on land. According to his
Lamarckian perspective, human beings bear upon their bodies, like bizarre
living fossils, the traces of all the ancient catastrophes that life on earth had
to go through in order to reach its present stage of development. Among
these ancient geological traumas, the most important for understanding
the sexual and reproductive development of the human being would be the
drying up of the primordial sea in which our aquatic ancestors lived. If the
trauma of birth is merely a repetition of the more ancient trauma of the
emergence of life from the sea, the primary objective of human genitality
would therefore be to return, through the penetrative sexual act, to the
original waters, in a true regression to the ocean.
The sexual differentiation of human beings would thus have emerged
from the struggle for the possibility of immersing their gametes in the other,
for which the woman, defeated, acts as a receptacle, carrying within herself
the traces of that ancient lost ocean. To quote Ferenczi:
Individual observations of the symbolism of dreams and neuroses reveal a
fundamental symbolic identification of the mother’s body with the waters of
the sea [...]. Now such symbolism might be expressive of the fact not only
that the individual lives on the mother before birth as a water-inhabiting
endoparasite [...] but also that sea and earth were actually the precursors
of the mother in the development of the species, and at this stage took the
45.
S. Ferenczi, Thalassa: A Theory of Genitality, tr. H.A. Bunker (New York: Norton, 1968), 52.
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M AT E R D O LO R O SA
scientific a foundation as possible for the age-old link between motherhood
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In his book Thalassa, psychoanalyst Sándor Ferenczi sets out to provide as
204
place, in that they protected and nourished these animal ancestors, of the
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maternal protective adaptations which were acquired later.46
Ferenczi’s idea, in its bizarre originality, contains some interesting insights.
After all, the notion that ontogeny—the development of animal individuals—
is a recapitulation of phylogeny—the development of the species through
geological eras—fascinated biologists from the late nineteenth to the early
twentieth century. At that time, it was not entirely absurd to think that such
an idea could also be extended to human psychological development.
What is most interesting in Ferenczi’s thesis is precisely the theory that
absolutely inhuman, even geological, forces of a necessarily catastrophic
nature are at work in the development of subjectivity. Beyond its semblance
of scientific rigour, Thalassa is a catastrophic cosmogony of separation, in
which the human individual emerges not so much as the apex of a developmental process, but rather as the ultimate receptacle for universal suffering,
accumulated over millions of years of phylogenetic trauma. Pain pervades the
development of human subjectivity in its entirety—from mating, understood
as a spasmodic search for the moisture of the other, to pregnancy, in which
the embryo becomes a parasite and is tragically transformed from a beloved
object into a source of horror:
It is also possible, however, that the greater part of the arrangements for
the protection of the embryo do not represent precautions on the part of
the maternal organism simply, but are rather, perhaps, at least in part, the
product of the vital force inherent in the germ cells themselves—much in
the manner of certain animal parasites which can make use of the originally
purely defensive reactions in the body of the host […] to create for themselves a protected place of abode, usually a vesicle or pustule filled with
fluid.47
46.
Ibid., 47.
47.
Ibid., 64.
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therefore not a creative urge, but always a catastrophic urge for separation
and estrangement. Evolution, rather than a drive to rise to the top of the
natural order, is the result of a continuous propagation of traumas, to which
life responds with an ever-increasing regressive drive: plunging into the
future with its gaze always turned back toward the ancient ocean from
which it continues inexorably to move away.
VII. MY SON, DO NOT ABANDON ME
At other times I cry inconsolably. And afterwards, sometimes I become so
angry that I can hardly keep from tearing myself to pieces; at other times,
the anger is so intense, I can’t stop beating myself horribly until my head and
other parts of my body become swollen. And when my soul begins to see all
its virtues falling and withdrawing, I am overcome with fear and grief; and
I cry out to God shouting to Him over and over again almost continuously:
‘My son, my son, do not abandon me, my son!’
Angela of Foligno48
Do not abandon me.
Everything plunges into darkness. All is lost, forever faded away into
the chasm of your absence. As the sun is swallowed up in a black light, the
sky reveals itself as a desperate vertigo. The stars are hideous worlds, lost
forever in the empty depths of the universe that stretches out until it tears
itself to pieces. The moon is pallid and weeps over us the vermilion sea of
your massacre.
In the west, dawn rises with a desperate, indefinable colour. In the fading
cosmos I understand that behind the blinding rays of day there has never
48.
Angela of Foligno, Angela of Foligno’s Memorial, tr. J. Cirgnano, ed. C. Mazzoni (Cambridge:
D.S. Brewer, 1999), 65.
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M AT E R D O LO R O SA
dial oceanic abyss and as the condition of primitive inorganic indistinction, is
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Humanity’s drive to emerge from the abyss, understood both as the primor-
206
been anything but ocean. Dreadful speeds force us apart in an inexorable
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light; everything rotates madly in a vortex with no centre.
The impaled sun sinks into the whirlpool of the sky. The naked earth is
a dismembered animal vibrating with silent screams. My hands are red with
blood. It seems to me that I blaspheme.49
The shreds of your disembowelled body continue to writhe in despair
on the cross of creation, repeatedly pulsating in their dance of death as the
eggs of countless parasites hatch, burrowing into the swellings of your belly.
Ecce vermis: the dust has become flesh.
LT
49.
Ibid., 69.
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SOLARISATION
S o l a r i sat i o n
So the Ancients feared visions at noon no differently than they feared them
at night. [...] At noon, even the shadows of the dead were reputed to appear
and go wandering, as we can see in the cited verses of both Statius and
Philostratus, who tells that the shepherds did not dare to approach Pallene
at noon, or Phlegra, where lay the bones of giants, for fear of the ghosts that
appeared in that place making a frightening noise.
Giacomo Leopardi1
BLACK SUN
Three silos stand out in grey against the earth, ashen as if covered by a
layer of radioactive dust. Threatening undergrowth punctuates the rough
surface, while the dark silhouette of a cabin watches silently from the
distance. High above, against the backdrop of a milky sky that looks as if it
has the consistency of semen, looms a dark sphere, austere and terrifying.
A circular shadow that seems to hail from some remote and hostile galaxy, a
sun that declares itself to be what it should not be, a star that neither shines,
illuminates, nor radiates heat—Black Sun.
Minor White chose this title for one of his most iconic photographs, taken
in 1955 in an anonymous corner of the American provinces. If we didn’t know
that the photo was taken in a remote part of the Pacific Northwest (Oregon,
according to the sources), upon studying the landscape we would say that it
was a typical Southern Gothic scene: the kind of desolate, derelict rural hell
described by Flannery O’Connor and William Faulkner in their novels set in
1.
G. Leopardi, Saggio sopra gli errori popolari degli antichi (Firenze: Le Monnier, 1846), 94.
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208
the South. For once, however, it is neither geography nor place names that
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convey the feeling of the shot. What does it matter where the image comes
from? The ash-coated undergrowth and the black sun towering above it, if
anything, tell of another world, at once familiar and alien: a world equal and
opposite to the one we know, totally indifferent to stable comprehensible
coordinates and known latitudes, as if the darkness that dwells in the light
of things had been brought to the surface.
If we then want to investigate how this world managed to imprint itself
on the medium that is conventionally considered the most neutral, reliable
and realistic of those available for presenting what exists—photographic
film—we would have to resort to a technical explanation: the process
employed by White is called ‘solarisation’ and has been known since the
dawn of photography. To achieve it, nineteenth-century daguerreotypists
simply overexposed sensitive materials to sunlight, thus producing what
is known as ‘tonal inversion’: black becomes white, white becomes black,
the negative becomes positive and vice versa. Starting in 1929, the same
technique was famously employed by Man Ray and Lee Miller to produce
those typical snapshots of the subconscious that constitute one of the most
famous examples of Surrealist art.
The appearance of photography is the moment in which techné is established not only as a human artefact and, where necessary, as an instrument
of investigation, but also as a representational and cognitive filter between
the human being and the reality around them. It is therefore curious that,
despite the fact that the camera was presented as the first device capable
of finally providing a faithful mirror of the world around us, it was almost
immediately used to immortalise ghosts, spectres, and ectoplasmic presences
intent on inhabiting the interstices between the visible and the invisible.2
2.
Our purpose here is not to investigate the relationship between the birth of photography,
spiritualism, and the first attempts to capture spectres and mysterious presences on film. The
bibliography on the subject is vast, but for a first brief examination of the link between the two,
the Wikipedia entry ‘Spirit photography’ provides a good summary.
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principles upon which the empirical experience of human beings is based. An
instrument that was the child of the great ultra-rational epoch that would
see the nineteenth century described as the ‘age of wonder’, photography
was nonetheless (as Man Ray would understand) the apotheosis of the
purely irrational, in the sense that its particular kind of rationality did not
coincide with that inscribed in the synapses of the human brain—at least
in its waking state.
From this point of view, solarisation is an initial moment of vertigo on
the edge of the precipice that separates the quest for knowledge from an
excess of awareness. Both in the pioneering experiments of Ray and Miller
and in the black sun of Minor White, there is proof of a paradox which, in
the midst of the rational and mechanised twentieth century, announces
itself as mysterious precisely because of its technical nature, reaffirming
that technology is first and foremost the realm of the phantasmal and the
unfathomable: because, logically speaking, if it is the sun that illuminates
the reality around us, then more sunlight should automatically translate into
more reality—for only sunlight makes it possible to focus on the most infinitesimal details of a world that finally finds its incontrovertible representation
in photography. But instead, excessive exposure to the sun unexpectedly
reveals a counterintuitive, disorienting, ‘incorrect’ truth: solar disk turned
black, skies milky, positives and negatives changing places, the nemesis of
the world as we know it. With solarisation, what remains fixed on the film
is an occulted repression, hitherto trapped in some unmentionable recess
of the lens-eye: more sun does not mean more reality—more sun means an
inversion of visible reality.
In the alchemical tradition, the black sun is one of the symbols of nigredo,
the process of putrefaction in which matter disintegrates and is reduced
back to primordial chaos. This is the initial stage of the Great Work, the one
in which the alchemist’s conscious self is called upon to abdicate itself until
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S o l a r i sat i o n
this filter, if properly activated, was potentially capable of overturning the
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Machine civilisation opened up its portals and immediately announced that
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it disappears into the deepest of inner chasms—a sort of indistinct and
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horizontal degree zero, seething with pustules that erupt like poisonous lava.
From an alchemical point of view, solarisation should therefore be read as a
sort of mechanical nigredo capable of making the cosmic power of the sun
explode to such an extent as to translate it into its apparent opposite: the
non-visible, the unnameable, the unknowable emerge from the shadow zone
in which the veil of phenomenal reality had confined them. And the primordial
chaos finally appears in the guise of an uninhabitable planet, indifferent to
the human gaze. The fact that this unveiling takes place through the filter of
a machine (in this case a photographic camera) seems entirely logical: the
dimension revealed by solarisation is an extra- (anti-?) human dimension, and
it is therefore perfectly natural that the human eye cannot grasp it.
The darkness of the black sun is not the darkness of those who have
seen too much and know too much. The darkness of the black sun is at most
the reflection, the approximate and imperfect representation, of a world so
far beyond human gaze that only recourse to occult witchcraft (in this case
technology) allows us to grasp its vague contours. The same sun that saves
the world by warming it with the sacred fire of reason and knowledge, is a
sun that rises from the underworld where everything falls into a cold spiral
of alien fury.
MERIDIAN DEMONS
In ancient Mediterranean civilisations, it was at midday that the demons
of the underworld materialised in the world above. When the sun is at its
highest, when the scorching disc is at its zenith and the shadows dwindle
until they disappear, the world of the living and the world of the dead
come into mutual contact, that ‘sacred and terrible noontide’ of which
Leopardi speaks.3 In turn, Roger Caillois described midday as the ‘hour of
transition’ when the sun ‘divides the day into equal parts, each governed
3.
G. Leopardi, Saggio sopra gli errori popolari degli antichi (Firenze: Le Monnier, 1846), 94.
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by the opposing signs of rise and decline’. It is here, in this by definition
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liminal moment burdened by the overwhelming power of the sun at its peak,
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that according to Caillois ‘the dead make their appearance: they who cast
no shadow’.4
The deadly qualities of the sun at its brightest are confirmed by the
link between midday and states of melancholy and depression, as summed
up in ancient times in the by no means coincidental formula daemonium
meridian.5 Is it not surprising, then, that the adjective ‘sunny’ is commonly
used to describe a person with an optimistic and jovial manner? Or that the
Mediterranean peoples, constantly kissed by the sun at these latitudes, are
by convention associated with moods such as good humour, cheerfulness,
and expansiveness?
That the sun, is, on the contrary, in the words of Artaud, a powerful
messenger of the ‘principles radiating from the depths of the Breath of Chaos’
was perhaps intuited by those authors who originated the forms and stylistic
features of so-called Gothic fiction.6 Prior to its now traditional association
with the misty atmospheres of its native Northern Europe, the Gothic novel
was in fact baptised in the waters of a Mediterranean which, to these authors,
who grew up in a cold and not particularly sunny eighteenth-century England,
must have appeared to be an indecent repository of irrational superstitions
and malignant ravings. The novel to which the birth of the genre is usually
attributed, The Castle of Otranto by Horace Walpole, is set in a depressed
Puglia marked by intrigue and guilt. The rapes, incest, demons, and torture
that punctuate The Monk by Matthew Gregory Lewis unfold in an equally
sunny Spain. A corrupt and sexually morbid Venice is the backdrop for
4.
R. Caillois, ‘The Noon Complex’, in The Edge of Surrealism: A Roger Caillois Reader, tr. C.
Frank, C. Naish, ed. C. Frank, (Durham, NC and London: Duke University Press, 2003), 125.
5.
The relationship between depression and midday (or more generally the summer season)
deserves far more in-depth study. A classic on the subject is A. Solomon, The Noonday Demon:
An Anatomy of Depression (New York: Scribner, 2001).
6.
A. Artaud, Heliogabalus or, The Crowned Anarchist, tr. A. Lykiard (London: Creation Books,
2003), 15.
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Charlotte Dacre’s Zofloya. In William Beckford’s bizarre Vathek, the action
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shifts to an unspecified Middle Eastern location oppressed by the stifling
heat of the desert. And as for an author like Ann Radcliffe, the mere titles
of works such as The Italian and Sicilian Novel say it all.
At the height of the Age of Enlightenment and at the dawn of the Age of
Reason, the noonday demons spawned by the incessant solarisation infesting
the Mediterranean took shape in the fantasies of a handful of writers who
projected Horror into a sultry and blinding Elsewhere. Their works were a mixture of exoticism and an attraction-repulsion for the regimented, antiquated,
and very Catholic Southern Europe, which in turn overlooked the equally
premodern southern edge of a former Mare Nostrum now dominated by a
mysterious and bloody Islam. But it would take some time for those demons
to be actually awakened. And for this to happen, it would be necessary to
wait for the intervention of yet another visitor from the south, from the
outside, since those who used to frequent these demons would never, ever
have dreamed of declaring them to a world where the sun does not shine.
ITALIAN SOUTHERN GOTHIC
It was in 1954 that Alan Lomax arrived in Italy for what would prove to be
one of the most important stages in his research career. Accompanied by
his colleague Diego Carpitella, a thirty-year-old fellow ethnomusicologist of
Calabrian origin, Lomax, the greatest scholar of American folk music, spent
nine months exploring the music, sounds, and traditions of the most remote
corners of the peninsula, from the fishing villages of Liguria to the marble
quarries of Carrara. Almost immediately, however, his attention was drawn to
what lay buried beneath the ruins of the devastated and still remote South—
that outcrop of rocky land planted in the centre of the Mediterranean that
goes by the name of Mezzogiorno.
Lomax knew that, in 1954, Italy was about to take the final leap that would
transform it from a backward and still essentially peasant nation into a great
industrial power finally at ease in its longed-for modernity. The small old
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world of rural villages lost amidst a countryside dotted with olive trees was
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destined to succumb under the weight of the new, winding motorways and
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the consumerist race that would soon be dubbed Italy’s ‘economic miracle’.
In short, there was no time to lose: this already archaic world had to be
documented before it vanished into a confused pool of memories.
What Lomax could not have suspected was the power of solarisation. If,
in the photographic medium, this took the form of an inversion that revealed
the occult reality hidden in the shadows of things, the presences imprinted
on the magnetic tape carried on the researcher’s back were quite inhuman,
their phantasmal qualities amplified by the spectral properties of recorded,
dematerialised and disembodied sound—once again, by the interaction with
technology.
Beastly noises, guttural sounds, shrill voices, aberrant lamentations: far
removed from the festive atmospheres that had always been associated with
the folk culture of Southern Italy, the music and voices captured on tape by
Lomax were immoral, sounding as if they had been worn away by dust and
carried off by the nagging breath of an implacable sirocco. They told of a
socially and sexually manic world, inhabited by irrational feelings, demonic
fantasies, inexplicable fears, and guilt so excruciating that it overflowed into
insanity. What emerged was a piece of the Mediterranean that no longer
had anything in common with the typical postcards that made southern
Italy look like a folkloric succession of beaches and typical dishes, full of
‘bella vita’ and ‘dolce far niente’. Rather, the Mezzogiorno acquired the
threatening characteristics—in the words of the documentary La Taranta
which followed shortly afterward—of a land ‘cracked by sun and solitude’,
where ‘man walks on mastic bushes and clay’.7
During his mission to the countryside of regions such as Lucania, Salento,
and Campania, Lomax had uncovered the black soul of Southern Italy, bringing
to the surface a tangle of archaic traditions, pagan Christianity, and ritual
practices that seemed to go back centuries. The recordings collected in the
7.
La Taranta, dir. Gian Franco Mingozzi, 1962.
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field shocked him so much that he formulated a ‘New Hypothesis’ according
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to which the music of Southern Italy should be analysed not in conformity
with classical notation systems, but as an immaterial clash between the
human body, the social context, and memory. This latter was, however, a
memory capable of regressing infinitely into the past, so much so as to
suggest a spiral temporal trajectory in which the category of the present
collapsed under the weight of ghosts hailing from an unstable chronology;
Lomax would never have admitted it, but his endless collection of tapes was
host to exactly that music of the spheres innervated with alchemical elements
that was being hypothesised during the same period by Harry Smith and his
Anthology of American Folk Music. Only, instead of reflecting the cosmic
harmony that regulates the proportions of the universe, it was a music of
repugnant spheres whose motion was capable of freeing the nefarious forms
at the centre of the universe itself.
When confronted with Lomax’s discoveries, Italian cultural circles initially
reacted with horror: instead of the bucolic snapshot of some pleasant, still
uncontaminated countryside just outside the city, they outlined a portrait
of a South suspended in a limbo that seemed to refer to an ancestral, cruel,
and malignant world rather than to a pre-modern one. The anthropologist
Ernesto De Martino deciphered the complicated occult geographies of that
world in studies with explanatory titles such as Sud e magia [The South and
Magic] and La terra del rimorso [The Land of Remorse]: true examples of
Gothic essays in which chilling stories of abuse and abomination come one
after the other, in between magical formulas and sinister rites that would
have delighted the ancient mad emperor Heliogabalus. The ‘scientific’ veneer
and materialist approach employed by De Martino—a Gramscian intellectual
who, for his research on tarantism in Salento, also drew on funding from the
Parapsychology Foundation in New York—give way before a narrative which
perfectly reflects a solarisation raging through the folds of a society dominated by blind divinities that blaspheme and bubble at the centre of infinity.
In the choked screams, in the ranting glossolalia of the magical rites of the
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South, there lay the extreme warning of the noonday demons who had come
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to announce a perpetual apocalypse without eschaton—a theme that De
S o l a r i sat i o n
Martino would explore in his last, testamentary work The End of the World.
Like the horrifying music of the spheres taped by Lomax, the end of
the world that De Martino sensed in Southern Italy arose from the conflict
between the aberrant eternity of a present without telos and the forced
linearity of a machine civilisation crashing down from the future, trapped in
the spirals of an essentially achronic past. Once subjected to the power of
solarisation, the delirious results of such a conflict were translated into an
unprecedented form of Italian Southern Gothic: the crude and hyperrealist
heir to the fantasies that had troubled the dreams of English writers at
the end of the eighteenth century, and the dark negative of the romantic
hagiographies of which the Mezzogiorno had been the subject since the
age of the Grand Tour. Once a placid symbol of a relaxed ‘endless summer’,
the sun was now confirmed as a tyrannical presence capable of confusing
reality and transforming every single shadow into a violent hallucination. The
languor of warm days by the sea was replaced by an oppressive heatwave.
The endless silences of the countryside, populated by nothing but drystone
walls and dessicated olive trees, became an omen of generalised madness.
The religiosity in which millenarian cults and invasive visions commingled
acquired heavily occult, esoteric, if not outright luciferous overtones. Even
Punchinello’s indolent and farcical mask ultimately betrayed all the signs of
an intimately diabolical presence. In his empty, idiotic gaze lay the darkest
underworld of the Mediterranean psyche.
ACID (NEO)REALISM
At the end of the 1950s, the pioneering investigations of the Mezzogiorno by
Lomax and De Martino inspired a small group of directors—principal among
them Luigi Di Gianni, Gianfranco Mingozzi, Vittorio De Seta, and Cecilia
Mangini—to initiate the brief season of so-called ‘Italian ethnographic
documentary’. In a desolate black and white that seemed corroded by the
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216
heat, titles such as Magia lucana [Magic from Lucania] (1958), La Taranta
S o l a r i sat i o n
[Tarantula] (1962), I dimenticati [The Forgotten Ones] (1959) and Stendalì
(1960) brought to the cinema the oppressive atmospheres of a nascent
Italian Southern Gothic; but instead of being accepted for what they really
were—sulphurous examples of the prevailing solarisation—they were automatically catalogued under the heading of ‘documentary denunciation’. This
was only to be expected: since they portrayed conditions of extreme hardship and had no qualms about bearing witness to a social reality exhausted
by poverty, the ethnographic documentaries quite naturally ended up being
ascribed to the generalised engagé climate prevailing in the ‘neorealist’ Italy
of the period. And in some ways the two were indeed linked. We just need
to understand which ‘reality’ lies at the heart of the realism that follows
the prefix neo.
Born directly out of the rubble left by the Second World War, neorealism
was the founding act of modern Italian cinema; according to the Enciclopedia
Treccani, its distinctive feature was ‘the need to know and to modify reality’.
Hence the choice of events and characters from humble contemporary
everyday life; the preference [...] for non-professional actors; the rejection
of the studio and the prevalent choice of natural settings and natural speech.
As with all forms of artistic and literary realism, the declared mission of
neorealism was to provide a portrayal of the existing world with as little
artifice as possible, and directors of proven moral rigour such as Roberto
Rossellini, Luchino Visconti, and Vittorio De Sica applied themselves fully to
the task; no oneiric flourishes, no cryptic metaphors, no obscure symbolism:
neorealism made it a point of honour to show the viewer reality as it is, even
in its most unpleasant aspects—poverty, indigence, abuses of all kinds,
political and social backwardness.
Once again, however, solarisation leaves no room for doubt. The first
indication of how impossible it was to separate the self-styled ‘reality’ from
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the noonday demons stirring within it already came from the novels that antic-
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ipated and expanded the new realism to which post-war cinema would refer.
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In Conversations in Sicily, Elio Vittorini subtly allows the documentary intentions of his travel literature on the Mezzogiorno precipitate onto the sloping
plane of a feverish oneiricism, in which everything appears in the light of day
and yet nothing is as it seems. And the witches, cemeteries, drunken priests
and invisible brigands that populate Carlo Levi’s memoir Christ Stopped at
Eboli are, in the words of the author, nothing more than the still image of a
land in which ‘time has come to a stop’, a world where ‘there is no room for
reason […] and history’, announced in the novel by one of the most classic
representations of the Black Sun: the solar eclipse.8
In turn, neorealist cinema, devoted to shooting in the open air and
traditionally filmed (in black and white) on long summer days, seemed to
capitulate before the same inescapable atmospheric conditions that were
soon to be condensed into Italian Southern Gothic. After all, in many cases
the tales told by neorealism were nothing more or less than horror stories.
In Appunti su un fatto di cronaca [Notes on a News Story] (1951), Luchino
Visconti focuses on the Roman suburbs which, as in the worst nightmares,
‘besiege the gold of the city with their inertia and starvation’.9 In the ‘sunlit
squalor’ of one of these suburbs, twelve-year-old Annarella Bracci was kidnapped, raped, and murdered on 18 February 1950. In the short film Visconti
devoted to the story, the outskirts of Rome become a sun-drenched desert
where human and non-human rubbish is dumped, and in the final shot a road
lost in the middle of nowhere seems to connect the humble blocks of flats
in the Primavalle district to a sky which, rather than smelling of salvation,
seems to be an omen of eternal damnation. Hell lies in the celestial vaults:
what better representation could there be of solar inversion?
With its slow rhythms, its rarefied aesthetics, and its narratives plagued
by the cosmic fatigue of living, neorealism ended up dilating even the driest
8.
C. Levi, Christ Stopped at Eboli, tr. F. Frenaye (New York: Time, 1947), 70, 117.
9.
Appunti su un fatto di cronaca, dir. L. Visconti, 1951.
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narration of the crudest news story into an alienating metaphysical-psyche-
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delic dimension, immediately confirming that, even if it does not sink into the
ultimate abyss of solar chaos, an excess of sunlight can lead to visions and
hallucinations. When Italian cinematography switched to the use of colour
and more commercially profitable tendencies took over, the intrinsically
acid properties of neorealism were transmitted, not to the so-called auteur
cinema, but to the two main ‘B-movie’ schools of the sixties and seventies:
the spaghetti western and the giallo. The former, by transferring the action
to an imaginary America dominated by stylised violence and the long silences
of its protagonists, would find its greatest fulfilment in clearly lysergic films
such as Giulio Questi’s Se sei vivo spara [Django Kill... If You Live, Shoot!]
(1967) and Cesare Canevari’s Matalo! [Kill Him] (1970). As for the giallo,
whose very name (literally, ‘yellow’) already evokes the blinding tyranny
of the Mediterranean sun—it drowned Northern European horror in a riot
of erotic deviance, black esotericism, and insanity, direct heir to the furor
solis documented twenty years earlier by Lomax and De Martino, and reconnecting with its unconfessed ethnographic roots already as Brunello Rondi’s
pioneering Il demonio [The Demon] (1963), to finally arrive at classics such
as Lucio Fulci’s Non si sevizia un paperino [Don’t Torture a Duckling] (1972).
Among the various strands of post-neorealist Italian cinema, the giallo is
the one which, from a visual point of view, most blatantly embraced the pop
and psychedelic culture of the period. It is also a consistently ‘acid’ genre,
in the sense that it was born of the perfect combination of parasatanic
esotericism, extreme sex, and LSD. Yet not even its bright colours manage
to emancipate themselves from a gloom, from an underlying opacity, that
always seems to want to lead back to the depressed nigredo that broods at
the centre of the Mediterranean. Solarisation does not merely burn colours.
Solarisation turns colours off, alters their flows, inverts their wavelengths to
the point of transforming every chromaticism, every sensation of brilliance
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and vivacity, into the dull exhaustion of a life that once was and that perhaps
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somewhere still intones its curses.
S o l a r i sat i o n
WHITEOUT
The filmic-initiatory work that will most of all succeed in fully activating the
inversion mechanisms produced by solarisation is that of Pier Paolo Pasolini.
His 1961 film Accattone is in some ways the defining neorealist film, the one
that not only closes a season of Italian cinema, but also definitively lays out
its intentions. On the one hand, if—to return to Enciclopedia Treccani’s
definition—the distinctive trait of directors such as Roberto Rossellini and
Luchino Visconti lay in ‘the need to know and to modify reality’, then ‘knowing and modifying reality’ should be understood as an essentially magical
gesture, according to the classic Crowleyian description of magic as ‘the
Science and Art of causing changes in conformity with the Will’.10 On the
other hand, the hallucinatory bath suggested by the first neorealist films is
to be taken to its extreme consequences, revealing the power of solarisation
without any ‘natural’ filter and indeed amplifying its occult characteristics.
From the point of view of both content and style, Accattone seems
to start out once again from Visconti’s Appunti su un fatto di cronaca: a
desperate portrait of the Roman suburbs which, in its representation, opens
up to a parallel dimension inhabited by the nothingness of the inhuman and
the end of the world. But while it is true that much neorealist cinema had
investigated the hallucinatory qualities of the sun, inadvertently inaugurating
a primitive form of black-and-white psychedelia, it is only with Pasolini that
the dazzling voids of acid neorealism become a complete form of abdication
of the Euclidean logic of space, so much so as to produce what we shall call
here ‘Mediterranean whiteout’.
Whiteout, reports the Cambridge Dictionary, is the ‘meteorological
condition in which snow and clouds alter the way sunlight is reflected, to
the point that only extremely dark objects are visible’; in short, it is a winter
10.
A. Crowley, Magick Without Tears, ed. I. Regardie (St. Paul, Minnesota: Llewellyn, 1973), 27.
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phenomenon, typical of high altitudes, northern regions or polar areas where
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blizzards rage. Conversely, the Mediterranean whiteout is a phenomenon
whereby the sun at its brightest causes the power of its light to become so
excessive that it turns the field of vision into a single expanse of dazzling
white—a condition of blindness born of the liquefaction of existence rather
than its blurring.
In Accattone, the use of whiteout is so insistent that it is almost difficult
to keep one’s eyes open: everything is played out in the starkest possible
contrast between whites and blacks (‘only extremely dark objects are visible’),
with these latter floating phantasmagorically in an endless and heavy sea
of light. A grim reflection of the Eternal City that once was, the outskirts of
Rome become, for the protagonist of the film, a R’lyeh melted by the sun,
with geometries ‘too great to belong to any thing right or proper for this
earth’, declaring itself to be a city ‘built in measureless aeons behind history
by the vast, loathsome shapes that seeped down from the dark stars’—in
a word, from the Black Sun.11
THE EXTERMINATING ANUS
The Italian Southern Gothic, variously announced by Lomax’s songs, De
Martino’s essays, and Carlo Levi’s novels, with Pasolini detonates into a
sunlit nightmare in which the Noontime Demons are openly evoked, infecting
a reality reduced to a death rattle, devoid of moisture and fresh air. Their
presence betrayed by nothing more than the scrubland from which rises
the simultaneously fragile and penitential threat of the ‘whip of Christ’—the
fields of broom that Giacomo Leopardi described as surrounding the ‘empty
places’ of a troubled Rome, and which he met again a little further south, on
the ‘arid slope’ of Vesuvius, ‘formidable mountain, the destroyer’.12
This brings us back to Visconti’s La terra trema [The Earth Trembles]
(1948) and, with it, Rossellini’s Stromboli terra di Dio [Stromboli, Land of
11.
Lovecraft, ‘The Call of Cthulhu’, 93, 92.
12.
G. Leopardi, ‘Wild Broom (XXXIV)’ in The Canti, tr. A.S. Kline <poetryintranslation.com>.
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God] (1950)—both films which have volcanoes as their backdrop, in which the
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protagonists succumb almost by inertia to the geotraumatic forces brooding
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beneath layer upon layer of craters, calderas, and lava. Etna, Stromboli,
Vesuvius, and the Campi Flegrei remind us that Southern Italy is not only a
land of the sun but also a land of volcanoes. Georges Bataille sensed that
there was a direct relationship between the two elements, to the point of
coining the neologism Jesuve—a cross between je, ‘I’, and Vesuve, ‘Vesuvius’—as a ‘filthy parody of the blindingly hot sun’. For Bataille, both the sun
and the volcano are elements linked to the anus, site of unproductive coitus,
of the sterile expenditure of energy: on the one hand, ‘the solar annulus is
the intact anus of her body at eighteen years to which nothing sufficiently
blinding can be compared except the sun’, a source of energy that cannot be
penetrated by a human’s binocular gaze without blinding them forever; on
the other hand, volcanoes ‘serve as [the] anus’ to a globe that ‘eats nothing’
but which nevertheless ‘violently ejects the contents of its entrails’, their
essential function being to spread ‘death and terror everywhere’.13
‘Death and terror’ is the final outcome of Pasolini’s solarisation, which
began with the whiteouts of Accatone and ended with the coprophagous
ramblings of Salò or the 120 Days of Sodom (1975), the film that encapsulates Pasolini’s entire initiatory journey, presenting itself as the summa
of the Bataillean equivalence between sun and asshole, and consequently
between the disk of the sun and its inversion. Just as it is impossible to rest
one’s eyes on the noonday sun, Salò is conceived as a work that is clearly
unbearable to the eye, so brutal, so atrocious, so unwatchable are its visions.
The anus-oracle is shown everywhere in its capacity to receive streams
of infertile sperm and at the same time to return nothing but shit, waste,
the lifeless detritus of a sacrificial abortion. The inversion of the biological
function to which male coitus responds in nature (the sowing of life) merges
with the inversion of the mandate given by the earth to the sun (the illumination of the world). Sodomy, anal intercourse, the unnatural qualities of
13.
Bataille, ‘The Solar Anus’, Visions of Excess, 9, 8.
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anal penetration, become instruments for reconciling oneself to that reality
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which is equal and contrary to the world above, that reality revealed by the
blinding shadows of the Black Sun.
In this sense Pasolini’s method is identical to that which the English
occultist Austin Osman Spare introduced with his concept of the ‘new
sexuality’: the obsessive practice of any form of ‘unnatural’ sexual act in
order to penetrate the innermost layers of the psyche and thus trigger what
he called ‘Atavistic Resurgence’, i.e. the awakening of the ‘ancestral states
of the subconscious mind’. Atavistic Resurgence blurs temporal planes
and connects the individual with what Spare called ‘spaces beyond space’.
Biographer Kenneth Grant recalls how, through such practices, Spare was
able to visit ‘fantastic cities constructed of lines and angles that bore no
semblance to anything earthly’, a description that seems to echo the exact
words Lovecraft used for his R’lyeh and which fit perfectly with the lunar
Roman suburbs portrayed in Accattone.14
After all, Spare and Pasolini were two priests who, on different fronts,
presided over an identical initiatory ordeal—as was understood by Coil, the
British post-industrial music duo, direct heirs to the chaos-occult tradition
inaugurated by Spare himself. And if their first album Scatology (1984)
already bore on its cover a reference to the binomial ass and shit over which
towered unmistakably the silhouette of the Black Sun, it is in the following
Horse Rotorvator (1986) that the overlap becomes total. Because it is on
that album, set between death disco anthems such as ‘Penetralia’ and ‘The
Anal Staircase’ (further essays on the alchemical properties of anal inversion),
that there appears a sorrowful ballad dedicated to Pasolini and to the place
upon whose beaches the director of Accattone and Salò was killed: ‘Ostia’.
14.
K. Grant, ‘Austin Osman Spare’, Encyclopedia of the Unexplained: Magic, Occultism and
Parapsychology, ed. R. Cavendish (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1974), 224.
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RETURN TO REMORIA
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The sacrificial aspect of Pasolini’s death and its connection to the abject
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forms of the Black Sun cult become clearer if we consider the place
where his body was found in November 1975, just a few weeks before the
announced release of Salò. The outermost of the Roman suburbs, perpetually beaten by the waves of a Mediterranean Sea reduced to a filthy dump,
crushed to the ground by the sun that transforms Rome into a flat expanse
of rough, horizontal roofs, Ostia bears in its name a direct reference to the
circular—and therefore solar—wafer of the Catholic liturgy; the term retains
within it an undeclared yet unredeemable blasphemy. On the one hand, in
Latin hostia means ‘victim’; on the other, its root is the same as that of hostis—‘enemy’, ‘adversary’, or in other words ‘Satan’. Within the consecrated
wafer of the Christian religion there lies the ghost, vainly exorcised, of the
ancient cult of Mithras and of the double nature, salvific and terrifying, of
the first solar mysteries.
The true origin of the name Ostia, however, is to be found elsewhere:
the district, which lies nearby to where the Tiber flows into the sea, takes
its name from the Latin Ostium—‘mouth’, ‘river mouth’. It is a place where
foul effluvia from the city’s digestive tract spill out: literally the asshole of
the metropolis. That this asshole carries the same name as the Mithraic
disc trapped in the Christian host is perhaps no casual irony; it refers once
again to the processes typical of inversion triggered by solarisation—which
confuses and overturns everything. The ultra-periphery, with its urban waste
and its dejection, gnaws at the edges of the metropolis. It becomes the place
where the city’s hierarchies themselves are upended: the outside engulfs the
inside, the edgelands swallow the centre. The Mediterranean R’lyeh shown
in Accattone divests itself of the metaphysical filter of the Mediterranean
whiteout to reveal itself not as a hypothetical alien city ‘out of space’, but
as equal and opposite of the everyday city.
From this point of view, the suburbs of Rome portrayed in Accattone,
and in which the director of Accattone himself died, are the perfect spectral
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substantiation of Remoria: the city that would have been born if, in the
S o l a r i sat i o n
ancient fratricidal legend about the origins of Rome, Remus had won instead
of Romulus.15 The myth of Remoria dates back to the birth of what was to
become the city symbolic of the entire Western world, and is indicative of
how the very foundation of Rome took place through a sacrifice under the
auspices of the Black Sun. According to Plutarch, the ritual murder of Remus
by the first king, Romulus, coincided with a solar eclipse—an event which
we can interpret as full of omens and which invites us to look behind the sun,
temporarily obscured by the moon, for another sun capable of illuminating
a different reality, an alternative to the one we know.16
We know that Romulus’s gesture is responsible for the birth of the Urbe
par excellence, the city that, in the West, sanctioned the dominance of the
vertical ideology based on hierarchy, order, and discipline—a traditionally
‘square’ city in which the continuous conquest and production of what exists
betrays a quintessentially phallic movement, and in which no waste of energy
is tolerated or even contemplated. What the city of Remus would have been,
on the other hand, we can deduce from the myth and the legendary associations that have accompanied Remoria since ancient times. We know very
little about Remus: in legend he is described as an unstable and irrational
personality, quite the opposite of the calculating Romulus, founder of the
long tradition that would lead to the Rome of the rex—the Caesars and the
emperors. Remus’s Remoria can therefore be imagined as a sort of twin
city with inverted features compared to the one that actually rose on the
banks of the Tiber, and at the same time as a latent spectre of a city born
already dead, whose poisonous breath blows over the world of the living as
a perpetual reminder of the what if.
15.
I have written on the myth of Remoria and its link with the modern Roman periphery in
Remoria. La città invertita (Rome: minimum fax, 2019). Many passages in this chapter (as well
as the following one on the dark continuum) are dealt with more fully in that work.
16.
On the relationship between the Black Sun and Nemesis, the second sun, responsible for
cataclysmic events and mass extinctions, see ‘Catastrophic Astrology’, in this volume.
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incarnation of the beyond-threshold and of the inversion of above and below.
This spectral nature also means that, if the Rome of Romulus is the city in
which energy is put to good use so as to continually fertilise and reproduce
what already is, Remus’s Remoria must be the city of expenditure, of
dépense and the sterile sacrifice of what will never be because it never really
was. Finally, if the Rome of Romulus is a ‘square’ city whose ditch clearly
delimits what is inside from what remains outside, the Remoria of Remus
must be, on the contrary, a round, circular city, tracing out once again the
features of the sun-anus couplet which, rather than establishing certain
boundaries and impassable lines, welcomes the effluvia of the world of the
living, returning nothing but scraps and deformed copies.
It is (also) from this point of view that Remoria finds its full representation
in the endless suburbs that, with their chaotic and senseless sprawl, have
made modern Rome one of the largest and at the same time least densely
populated cities in the West. The only identifiable form in the interminable
alternation of full and empty spaces that connects neighbourhoods like Ostia
to the monumental Rome of the ancient city centre (the city of Romulus) is,
not by chance, a circle: the ring road called the Grande Raccordo Anulare,
which for seventy kilometres winds its way through the neighbourhoods that
make up the ragged edge of the metropolis. There is much speculation in
local folklore on the Grande Raccordo Anulare as a magic seal which, in the
acronym GRA, bears the name of its creator, the engineer-magus Eugenio
Gra. But what is of interest here is the GRA as a circle that replicates the
features of the solar disk on the ground, that mimics the circumference of
a volcano crater, and that declares its anal nature in being an engineering
work incapable of connecting anything because its beginning does not exist
and its end is nowhere to be found.
Symbol, fetish, magnet, and principal (horizontal) monument of the
outskirts of Rome, the GRA brings us back to the original meaning of the
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S o l a r i sat i o n
lemures, ‘ghost’. From the outset, the city of Remus is identified as the
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Already, according to Ovid, the name Remoria is at the origin of the term
226
name Remo: ‘flowing’. The blood of the brother killed by the first king of
S o l a r i sat i o n
Rome flows, and so does the blood of the poet whose sacrifice spills across
the already filthy beaches of Remus’s suburbs. The sperm that spurts into the
rectum, so refractory to any breath of life, and the desire that, for Deleuze
and Guattari, is as much a yearning for life as it is a longing for death. And
lastly, the cars go round and round along the seventy kilometres of the GRA,
and with their annular movement announce, on this immense uranium anus
that solarisation projects in a spiral between the bowels of the Earth and
the great stars of the cosmos, the coming of a new presence: that of the
automobile.
DARK CONTINUUM
Muta is an album by Leo Anibaldi from 1993, one of the masterpieces of
Italian techno, together with the coeval works of other protagonists of the
‘sound of Rome’ such as Lory D and the D’Arcangelo brothers. From the end
of the eighties, a new era characterised by machines and the cold touch of
cybernetics found its haptics on the relaxed shores of the Mediterranean,
which was suddenly infected by the technoid virus originally born in the
laboratories of large—and cold—industrial cities such as Detroit, London,
Manchester, and Berlin. Muta is at the same time a summary, an overcoming,
and an epitaph for Roman techno: you can’t even dance to it, so resigned
are its atmospheres, closer to those of an old giallo movie than futuristic
snapshots of some cyberpunk metropolis.
And after all, it could only have been that way: not only has Rome never
been a cyber-metropolis—it has never even been a punk city. Even at the
turn of the seventies and eighties, the subculture that most fascinated the
young working class children of Remus’s sprawl was, if anything, a different one: goth. Imported from England, the goth aesthetic celebrated the
blackness of the night, the long sunless winters, and the cadaverous pallor
of flesh resistant to any tan. Here, instead, it became the style of reference
for hordes of curly-haired, dark-skinned post-adolescents, the children of
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former peasants, descended from the asphyxiating heat of southern Italy.
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The Mediterranean origins of the Gothic novel have little to do with it. Coil’s
S o l a r i sat i o n
ballads dedicated to Ostia are already more fitting: after all, the death disco to
whose rhythms post-industrial music moved betrayed a strange association
with the ‘disc of death’ that is the Mediterranean sun.
In these conditions, it is hardly surprising that what Leo Anibaldi and the
other DJs and producers of the Suono di Roma had in common was an acid,
strident, and irremediably dark sound: a kind of gloomy industrial techno
in which, behind layers of obsessive drum machines and Roland 303s gone
mad, one seemed to perceive the sound, at once grandiose and tormented,
of the ruins that still dot the outskirts of the former Eternal City. In other
words, the sound of Remoria. But more generally, we can take Muta as a
pivotal moment in the ‘dark continuum’ that binds together five decades of
music in Rome, and whose initiators were Goblin, who in the 1970s created
the haunting soundtracks to Dario Argento’s giallos. There is in fact a direct
thread linking the horror rock of Goblin to the modern depressed aesthetics
of trap collectives such as Dark Polo Gang, one which passes through the
techno years and those annular sabbaths that were rave parties.
To summarise the key moments: at the end of the seventies, Goblin’s
Claudio Simonetti became an Italo disco producer, authoring a series of
dancefloor hits under the moniker Easy Going. The project was born in the
gay club of the same name in the centre of Rome, decorated with frescoes
by Tom of Finland and twinned with another club called Much More. In Easy
Going and Much More, the main local DJs who had played at the clubs in the
1980s transmigrated from Italo disco to house. And it was in this atmosphere
that the apprenticeship took place of the first DJs who, with the discovery
of techno, would give birth to the dark atmospheres of the Sound of Rome.
Their activity suddenly intensified in the early nineties, when the rave parties organised around the GRA attracted audiences that could easily reach
20,000. This gave rise to a culture that for the whole decade transformed
the Remorian suburbs into a sort of perennial psycho-urban laboratory where
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228
electronic music, acid esotericism, substance abuse, and deviant practices
S o l a r i sat i o n
of all kinds and degrees converged. When that season came to its natural
end, a small collective of musicians emerged from the remains of the rave
civilisation, made up of unredeemed former ravers, drug-addicted rappers,
and producers with a passion for old giallo films. They called themselves
TruceKlan, and took it as their mission to exacerbate the dark tones of Lory
D and Leo Anibaldi’s techno in a rap format, infusing them with B-grade
Satanism, psychic suffering fuelled by synthetic drug abuse, and homages
to the acid neorealism of the films about the Roman suburbs. Despite the
almost total indifference of the rest of the nation, their impact on the city
was enormous for much of the 2000s and beyond; but even their saga was
destined to end, albeit not without yet another passing of the baton. Around
the mid 2010s, from the circle of producers within TruceKlan, a very young
Sickluke, the man to whom we owe the first mixtape of the trap collective
Dark Polo Gang, emerged. Entitled Full Metal Dark and entirely devoted to
imagery that transforms the psychic discomfort of TruceKlan into a cosmic
hyper-depression without redemption, it was the record that reaffirmed the
Roman musical underworld’s obstinate adherence to the myth of Remoria
and the pitch black of the blinding sun.17
In the dark continuum that leads from the Goblin of the Dario Argento
soundtracks to Dark Polo Gang’s hymns to depression, there is a series of
elements which, superimposed one on top of the other, make up one of the
most complete portraits of Italian Southern Gothic. The morbid sexuality
described by Lomax and De Martino on their missions in the Mezzogiorno—
and which furnished the background to the giallo cinema baptised by Dario
Argento himself at the beginning of the 1970s—is transformed, in the passage
17.
For obvious reasons of space, I avoid going into detail and examining in depth the various
moments that marked the passing of the baton mentioned here. I will limit myself to emphasising
that the Roman dark continuum is not simply a speculation of my own but takes concrete form in
a series of real personalities and figures who materially acted as a bridge between the different
periods—from the rave organisers who would go on to become full members of the TruceKlan to
Lory D’s role in the birth of Roman trap.
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The disco-sodomite orgies of Easy Going, in turn, announced the Sabbathic
roundabouts that would be the great techno gatherings around the GRA
ring road. In fact, the legacy of the witches’ sabbath resonates in the rave
parties not only because of their shared illegal and Saturnian nature, but
above all because of the ‘horizontal movement’ of the dances which, as
Luciano Parinetto recalls, makes the sabbath an eminently anal ceremony,
committed to inverting the existing regime so as to reveal—in the words
of Silvia Federici—‘the living symbol of the “world turned upside-down”’.18
On the other hand, the dark tones bordering on the pathological that unite
such apparently very different records as Leo Anibaldi’s Muta, TruceKlan’s
albums, and Dark Polo Gang’s Full Metal Dark, testify to the fact that this
upside-down world is nothing other than the world in which noonday demons
rage. The apparently ‘nocturnal’ qualities of the Roman dark continuum
cannot be separated from the context in which these experiences were
born—a sunburnt city whose periphery is bathed by the Mediterranean,
under which invisible volcanoes still smoulder, ready to be reactivated with
their payload of extermination. The blackness sung of by the dark continuum
is therefore that of Leopardi’s ‘sacred and terrible noontide’ and of that of
Italian Southern Gothic’s world in which ‘there is no room for reason […] and
history’ of course; but above all it is a lifeless darkness, completely deprived
of any vital impulse. Alan Lomax’s recordings retained a spectral quality
because they captured on the icy support of the magnetic tape the songs
and screams of a world populated by the living dead; in the Roman dark
continuum, however, everything is synthetic, just like the drugs so dear to
the old ravers of the nineties and to the rappers of TruceKlan and Dark Polo
Gang. The rubbery coils of Goblin’s synths, Leo Anibaldi’s artificial rhythms,
TruceKlan’s samples, Dark Polo Gang’s robotic autotune—all are examples
of a surrender to the inhuman that is not reducible to a mere ‘adaptation to
18.
S. Federici, Caliban and the Witch (Brooklyn: Autonomedia, 2004), 177.
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S o l a r i sat i o n
sexual act and of the reproductive dépense represented by anal intercourse.
229
from Goblin to Easy Going, into a discovery celebration of the ‘inverted’
230
technical progress’. If anything, in the marriage of artificial sound and sun-
S o l a r i sat i o n
kissed depressed aesthetics there lies the realisation that—as Minor White
had already suggested—‘the sun is not fiery after all, but a dead planet’.19
The memory of how too much sun ceases to mean an increase in illumination
and begins to mean a cessation of life resonates in the undead touch of the
dark continuum. An excess of sun is deadly; too much heat yields a heap
of cold bodies.
ARCANA
Of all the films ascribed to the giallo genre in the 1970s, none better captures
the power of solarisation than Arcana. Filmed by Giulio Questi in 1972, it is
the story of Mrs Tarantino, a widow from the south of Italy who emigrates
with her son to wealthy Milan, the foggy capital (at the time) of northern
Italy. Having found lodgings in a squalid working-class neighbourhood while
the city is busy with the construction of a new metropolitan subway, Mrs
Tarantino earns her living by organising seances thanks to her alleged knowledge of the occult arts, a direct legacy of that ‘Lucanian magic’ which not
even Ernesto De Martino’s investigations had managed to banish once and
for all to the dustbin of superstition. The last representative of a forgotten
world governed by a matriarchal society, Mrs Tarantino has an incestuous
relationship with her son, who takes advantage of this to steal the secrets
of magic arts from his mother and spread panic in the neighbourhood.
The entire film is based on the unresolved conflict between an industrialised Milan, fully integrated into modernity, and a South that is by now
exhausted but still full of occult presences, which Questi depicts with a
paroxysmal use of whiteout, with overexposed yet extremely dark images
of a South condemned to remain forever in the past.
As if in a dream, these images underpin the portrait of a glowing Milan, in
which the underground construction sites seem to have the unwanted effect
19.
Quoted in H. Blau, The Dubious Spectacle: Extremities of Theater 1976–2000
(Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2002), 250.
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of reawakening long-buried chthonic powers, uncovering the unspeakable
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load of irrationality that smoulders at the centre of the earth as well as in
S o l a r i sat i o n
the bright sunshine of Southern Italy, and pouring out onto to the surface a
monstrous array of amputees scarred by their labour.
A sort of surreal posthumous appendix to the original acid neorealism,
directly inspired by the furor solis of the Italian ethnographic documentary,
Arcana is perhaps the true masterpiece of Italian Southern Gothic, but not
even its fame as a lysergic, cursed, rambling film has saved it from a regrettable and embarrassed oblivion. Because, despite the overtly fantastic register
used by Questi, Arcana is really a realist film in the purest sense of the term:
the great emigration that has seen Southern Italy slowly depopulate since
the Second World War, as its inhabitants continue to abandon in droves every
year a land ‘cracked by sun and solitude’ to pour into the rich and industrious
North, has also been an emigration of ghosts. Rational, enlightened Milan,
comfortably ensconced in the midst of the sinuous currents that govern
Capital, the hypermodern Milan that has replaced the ancient fog with a
grotesque skyline of skyscrapers redolent of Shanghai and Dubai, the Milan
which, from the heights of the Po Valley, distils the poison of protestant ethics, adulterating them with the pragmatism of the Catholicism of noble civil
sentiments, sinks its bowels into that same underworld of old subterranean
construction sites in which immigrant workers from the South lost parts of
their limbs, their hands, their toes—but also memories, spells, ancient curses,
new curses. Every city contemplates its nemesis, every city preserves the
deformed negative of what it could be but is not, every city conceals within
the folds of its geography a latent Remoria that pushes for the inversion
to take place. The solarisation that presses from the bowels of Milan, left
buried there by the children of Lucanian magic who built, with their own
bare hands, the modern metropolis of today, can be triggered at any moment,
and perhaps it has already begun to demonstrate its exterminating power.
When, in March 2020, Milan became the global epicentre of the new
pandemic that revived the memory of ancient plagues and pestilences in the
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232
West, benign observers from the healthy sectors of society were shocked
S o l a r i sat i o n
by the mass flight of children of the South, who unrepentantly left the city
where they had found work, home, and affection, to find refuge in the land
from which they had originally fled. This escape was interpreted as a betrayal,
an act of irresponsibility toward the metropolis that had welcomed them:
but in fact it had the flavour of a mission accomplished. For they were also
children of the rituals set up by Mrs Tarantino half a century ago, when she
arrived in Milan, apparently to feed the engines of that omnivorous machine
that is Capital, reminding the world that there is no such thing as consumption without waste, that there is no such thing as nourishment without
the production of excrement, that somewhere there is always an asshole.
Abandoned to itself, reduced to a ghost town, Milan found itself held hostage
by noonday demons. The Black Sun glimpsed under the manholes of Arcana
was beating down on the city of neo-Gothic spires and hi-tech skyscrapers,
and from there it was preparing to blind the entire West with its darkness.
CANICOLA
From a hundred and fifty million kilometres above, a ray shoots down murderously. Its intensity is a hundred thousand kilolux. It radiates such light that
all shadows evaporate. It melts knowledge of things in its heat.
The parched earth is a bitter desert: the fire of the sun is the fire of hell!
Death falls from sidereal distances: it does not illuminate but blinds, because
too much light means darkness (‘you cannot look the sun in the face’). Lucifer
is the bearer of light, yet his is the domain of shadow.
One hundred and fifty million kilometres to ascend to the underworld
beyond the surface. Source of life, bringer of death: source of the life of
death. Principle of delusions, hallucinations, and abnormalities. Cause of the
abysses of the human psyche.
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Sunstroke: pathological effect of too prolonged an exposure to sunlight,
233
causing meningeal and cerebral congestion. Manifests itself in fever and
S o l a r i sat i o n
mental disorders. In exceptional cases, coma and death.
VM
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235
THE HIGHEST
FORM OF GNOSIS
pretty time of it. And in ten years, maybe less, the human race will just be a
bedtime story for their children; a myth, nothing more.
John Trent
Monstrosity—‘properly understood’—says much about the path to the
unnameable.
Nick Land
Something is causing Pain and something energizes the Agony: may it not
be caused through the latent Idea of Supreme Bliss? And this eternal expectation, this amassing of ornament on decay, this ever-abiding thought—is
coincidental with the vanity preceding death? O, squalid thought from the
most morbid spleen how can I devour thee and save my Soul?
Austin Osman Spare1
I was standing in the middle of a field in a remote and unknown area of
northern Italy, located on the outskirts of one of the meaningless little towns
gracelessly crammed into that part of the world. In the centre, right in front
of me, stood a high-voltage electricity pylon, larger than Christ on his bare
cross. There I stood, struck by the overwhelming realisation that there was
1.
In the Mouth of Madness, dir. John Carpenter, 1994; N. Land, ‘Abstract Horror’, Phyl-Undhu,
Abstract Horror, Exterminator (Shanghai: Time-Spiral, 2014), §105; A.O. Spare, Ethos: The
Magical Writings of Austin Osman Spare (Thame: I-H-O Books, 2001), 53. This work was born
with the full moon in Aries, after a prolonged sabbatical while Venus did her drunken dance over
Scorpio.
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The Highest Form of Gnosis
Every species can smell its own extinction. The last ones left won’t have a
236
no reason why we, as a sentient species, would want it to be there. It wasn’t
T h e H i g h e st F o r m o f G n o s i s
transmitting any electricity, and it certainly wasn’t a segment of the long
electrical artery that turns earth into energy. It was not connected, it was
not transmitting life to anyone.2
It was a ganglion cyst—not cancerous, not fatal, but malignant enough—
growing in the flesh of an absolutely insignificant city: a city like the one
I was born in. It was one of the many fruits of forgotten post-industrial
putrescence, just like me, and its function was also the same as mine: to
be an antenna for the land that generates us. Unlike other pylons, this one
functioned as a spirit box, using its incomprehensible tangle of cables and
metal rods to capture and crystallise those stifled voices that weave a black
market of sighs3 in these outlands that make up the ‘provinces’. It was a dark
tree, narrating the lies and deceptions, the angelic and demonic choruses
sung by the ruins of the wastelands of Italy.4 It was a messenger of the
chthonic neuroses of this city, a symptom emerging from the inversion of
an involuntary psychoanalysis of the flesh of that part of the world, the
referent of an unpronounceable lalangue.5 It was ‘a rat-body’ with its ‘activity,
2.
From a strictly ritualistic point of view, the most appropriate and practical definition of this
phenomenon would be a phallus separated from any organic body, used for necrophilic couplings
with a vast surface, which rejects any descent into its bowels, protecting within itself the dark
exchanges and secretions of its own nigredo. Choose your instrument accordingly. The location
of the phenomenon: 45.800037, 8.741641.
3.
In this respect, we fully agree with Elytron Frass that the nocturnal underbelly of the earth
should be described as a Faustian market, with its occult logic of psychic warfare tactics of an
anti-Feng Shui. E. Frass, ‘Alt Economy of Inner Night’, Vast Abrupt (2019), <https://vastabrupt.
com/2019/10/21/alt-economy-of-inner-night/>.
4.
A similar phenomenon was described in ‘The Tower’, Vast Abrupt (2018), <https://
vastabrupt.com/2018/06/12/the-tower/>.
5.
The Lacanian concept of lalangue, introduced in Seminar XX, refers to a Real which is
unspeakable, disrupts language and representation, and appears through scars and involuntary
incisions in the symbolic order—the spontaneous growth of strangeness within the realm of
the signifiant. As the psychoanalyst August Ruhs says in his endorsement of Florian Hecker’s
Inspection II, ‘By transcending the unique authority of Freudian discourse, by alienating and
synthesizing the dialogue of analyst and analysand, by penetrating the realm of that babble that
is the obvious origin of human language and communication, designated by Jacques Lacan as
“lalangue”, [it] discloses a space beyond representation, and hence beyond sense, intelligibility
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its networking, its paradoxical proliferation, its selfdigestion, its eructations,
237
its necroticness, its hunger, and its hole making’.6
T h e H i g h e st F o r m o f G n o s i s
The role reversal embodied by this pylon within this world should come as
no surprise. Italy is one of the most haunted places on the planet. Its plains
are drenched in the blackest bile the earth has ever produced, its houses and
monuments overflow with an inorganic minerality capable of transmitting
syphilitic paralysis everywhere.7
It is a site of spiritual possession on a national scale, a possession which
can take the most diverse forms: both in the shadowy realm of the provinces
and in the schizoid, chaotic urban planning of its gigantic, feral cities.
From the striking public humiliation of Venice, condemned by the sea
to be wiped from the face of the planet, to the ‘Remorian’ sprawl of Rome,
condensed, like the gurgling of a muttering corpse, around the saturnine
pulsating anus of the GRA (Grande Raccordo Anulare), magnum opus of
the sorcerer Eugenio Gra;8 from Etna, which continues to erupt bronze
sandals, testimony to the irrational and arbitrary asymmetry that carves out
the boundaries of the works produced by the bowels of the earth, to the
deadly psychedelic sun that ceaselessly beats down on the fringes of the
Mediterranean, annulling all reason and disarming all logic; from Milan, bastard
daughter of neo-Chinese hypercapitalism, besieged by the mould-ridden
and significance. […] Closing the screen of the cerebral computer, psychoanalysis emerges as the
hard disk’s synaptic music, echoing the big bang of our psychic genesis’ (F. Hecker, Inspection II,
Editions Mego, eMego 268 [2019]). My electrical pylon reveals another, more sickly genetic origin.
6.
J. McSweeney, The Necropastoral (Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press 2015), 3.
7.
According to many alchemists, melancholy was caused by an excess of black bile which
caused a spike in the mineral content of the blood. This should be an indication of the type of
materials that might be used during the ritual.
8.
Both the Spareian genealogy of the creation of the GRA and the Dionysian dynamics of the
Remorian sprawl (see ‘Solarisation’ in this volume) are essential to understanding this national
catastrophe. The anal ring of the GRA is so obviously a magical signature of its creator, Eugenio
Gra, that we see no reason to tear off its highway disguise in order to prove its infernal nature.
We take it for granted that the cancerous outflow of the borgatasphere, which extends around
the sabbatical circle of the motorway, is a prime example of the bilious wound through which
we were brought into this world. See Mattioli, Remoria. La città invertita (Rome: Minimum fax,
2019).
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238
drug forests that devour its suburbs, punctuated by autonomous zones
The Highest Form of Gnosis
of luciferous anti-oedipity,9 to the provincial Choronzonianism that reigns
supreme over that imaginary region that goes by the name of Padania, with
its fascistoid excesses and its futuristic will to massacre, the entire body of
this land is contorted by painful, unreal spasms.
This too is an ancient phenomenon. It may sound banal to recall the
phantasmagorical Otranto, gigantic severed-head without a vital organ in
sight, which established the motif for that poetic cosmic flatline known as
the ‘Gothic novel’. And it may sound trivial to recall Cefalù, Aleister Crowley’s
temporary toxic utopia, a tiny example of heterotopic witchcraft wielded
against the ‘Human Security System’ embodied in a secluded patch of the
horrid peninsula. Perhaps then we should go back to figures of Roman
decadence such as Caligula and Nero, and to the suicidal joy of Heliogabalus,
all exemplars of a jouissance that is so profound, innate, and omnicidal that
history books can barely bear to mention it. The examples are manifold; let
us just reiterate that the possession we are talking about here is nothing
more than a secret hidden in plain sight. Only the foolish or the blind would
ridicule it or deny its self-evidence.
The origins of this possession, this pestilence, this demonic biliousness,
this excess of alchemical minerality, are perhaps diverse. In the pathetic
words of Sigmund Freud, ‘society [is] based on complicity in the common
crime’,10 but, as far as Weird Italia is concerned, the possible crimes that
may have precipitated this terrifying situation are many in number, and all
equally suitable candidates as the culprits of such a massacre.11 Giordano
Bruno’s ligatures, among the favourite topics of many influential tamers of
9.
The forest that grows on the outskirts of Milan is a ghostly rendezvous for all the heroin-
addicted vampires and methamphetamine zombies—wilderness-catalyst for the synthetic
K-death of the whole province. Milan emerges from these crypts, and all who dare enter must
know that they are headed for the heart of darkness.
10.
S. Freud, Totem and Taboo, tr. J. Strachey (Routledge: London and New York, 2004), 170.
11.
Let us point out, en passant, that we do not seek to identify the crime so as to contain it,
but to celebrate it and enjoy and participate in its majesty.
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Or perhaps Galileo’s scientific revolution inflicted such a deep wound upon
the anthropocentric body that by its own strength alone it has forced the
earth into premature damnation. Or maybe the asymmetrical satanic warfare
of many witches,13 such as those found in utterly insignificant places like
Venegono, is still ongoing to this day.14 Or, finally and most straightforwardly,
12.
At least that’s what the patron saint of our spiritual insurrection, Luciano Parinetto, seems
to suggest: ‘For Bruno, a magician is someone who, operating on nature, in practice reverses
the knowledge he has acquired of the descending/ascending connection that ties together all
the entities of the infinite cosmos in the equally infinite tangle of ligatures that constitute it.’ L.
Parinetto, ‘Bruno pro nobis’, Giordano Bruno, La magia e le ligatures (Rome: Mimesis, 2000),
11–12.
13.
‘Being to be defined but constitution of the idea of Being, which is negation rather than
affirmation, when we exasperate it, attack on the anthropomorphic idea of Being, solution of
antinomies, doubts, worries, problems, through this dramatic account of the disappearance of
the notion of Being in which, moreover, Satan appears.’ A. Artaud, The Death of Satan and Other
Mystical Writings, (London: Calder & Boyars, 1974), 9.
14.
A.M. Castiglioni, Streghe e roghi nel ducato di Milano. Processi per stregoneria a
Venegono Superiore nel 1520 (Rome: Selene, 1999). It should come as no surprise that the
most widely read book in Italian high schools is Manzoni’s I promessi sposi, in which girls and
boys witness the cadaverous hand of Divine Providence dragging a couple of poor idiots across
a literally pestilential land, where the Catholic Mass is a rite of collective infestation, and mass
paranoia and perennial witch hunts tear the land apart. This same pestilential landscape is the
incarnation of Italy in the Decameron. We might hypothesise that, as in Artaud’s poetics, the
plague indicates an acceleration of the material subconscious of human society (or any human
structure, for that matter) toward desecration and thermodynamic laceration. The plague is the
provincial social manifestation of the miasma at the centre of the earth upon which we stand, the
uncontrollable draining of bodily fluids that erodes society until all that remains is an archipelago
of disfigured humanoids at war with themselves and with everything. Some have called this
pestilential trend, based on a cascade of putrid slime, ‘patchwork’, and have tried to construct a
positive vision of the anarchy to come. We absolutely approve of this adventurous anti-politics
and we encourage the reader to dig deeper into this noble endeavour. In the words of Artaud:
‘But from this spiritual freedom with which the plague develops, without rats, without
microbes, and without contact, can be deduced the somber and absolute action of a spectacle
which I shall attempt to analyze.
Once the plague is established in a city, the regular forms collapse. There is no maintenance
of roads and sewers, no army, no police, no municipal administration. Pyres are lit at random to
burn the dead, with whatever means are available. Each family wants to have its own. Then wood,
space, and flame itself growing rare, there are family feuds around the pyres, soon followed by a
general flight, for the corpses are too numerous.
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T h e H i g h e st F o r m o f G n o s i s
kind of Faustian pact,12 generating a cosmic inversion that now engulfs us all.
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pagan cultures and semiotic domesticators of savagery, may have been some
240
this may be only the local manifestation of a more general planetary ten-
The Highest Form of Gnosis
dency—one aspect of the worldwide annihilation we have called modernity,
an era that claims to be ‘progressive, innovative, irreversible, and expansive’.15
Whereas pre-moderns lived in a world ‘marked by dogmatism, a drive towards
unity, verticality, the need for transcendent rule and the symbol of the sun’,
moderns live in a catastrophic miasma that can only be characterised as
‘lunar, secular, horizontal, multiple and immanent’.16 This national nigredo could
simply be a particularly virulent manifestation of a disintegration and lunacy
that is taking place everywhere in the world at various speeds. It could also
be that, even more brutally, as Nick Land recently argued, the universe itself
is nothing more than a disintegrating machine; we are simply witnessing our
own peak laceration, our own private martyrdom.17
The dead already clog the streets in ragged pyramids gnawed at by animals around the
edges. The stench rises in the air like a flame. Entire streets are blocked by the piles of dead.
Then the houses open and the delirious victims, their minds crowded with hideous visions,
spread howling through the streets. The disease that ferments in their viscera and circulates
throughout their entire organism discharges itself in tremendous cerebral explosions. [...] Over
the poisonous, thick, bloody streams (color of agony and opium) which gush out of the corpses,
strange personages pass, dressed in wax, with noses long as sausages and eyes of glass […]
chanting absurd litanies that cannot prevent them from sinking into the furnace in their turn.
These ignorant doctors betray only their fear and their childishness.
The dregs of the population, apparently immunised by their frenzied greed, enter the open
houses and pillage riches they know will serve no purpose or profit. And at that moment the
theater is born. The theater, i.e., an immediate gratuitousness provoking acts without use or
profit.
The last of the living are in a frenzy: the obedient and virtuous son kills his father; the
chaste man performs sodomy upon his neighbors. The lecher becomes pure. The miser throws
his gold in handfuls out the window. The warrior hero sets fire to the city he once risked his life
to save. The dandy decks himself out in his finest clothes and promenades before the charnel
houses. Neither the idea of an absence of sanctions nor that of imminent death suffices to
motivate acts so gratuitously absurd on the part of men who did not believe death could end
anything.’ A. Artaud, The Theatre and its Double, tr. M.C. Richards (New York: Grove Press,
1958), 23–24. These notes should inform the setting and atmosphere of the ritual. Read Artaud
religiously.
15.
Ireland, ‘The Poememenon: Form as Occult Technology’.
16.
Ibid.
17.
N. Land, ‘Disintegration’, Jacobite (2019), <https://jacobitemag.com/2019/07/15/
disintegration/>. For those who are not not yet convinced, and insist on considering the
hypothesis of this infestation an exaggeration, we recall the words of one of the most important
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Yet the phenomenon is, let me repeat, clearly evident, and perhaps too wide-
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spread to study analytically or even significantly. Its scale and violence are so
The Highest Form of Gnosis
enduring, all-encompassing, and cryptic that any sensible approach would be
doomed to failure. Those who would document this mass infestation would
have to return to the parabola of the electrical pylon and assume its position.
They would, in other words, have to listen to the bazaar of horrible howls
that incoherently narrate the pain of this part of the world. They would need
to turn themselves into a howling spirit box, joining us and all the people of
this part of the world, the other fruits of this rotten belly, and surrender to
the impetuous chthonian lalangue. Emptied of everything, they must try to
transmit the inverted wisdom.
This is what we shall try to do—we shall do what we were born to do, and
we shall report what we record, without making any claim as to its clarity or
coherence. Our transmission will report the voices of a few deceased people,
conveying to the reader the wisdom of a small part of a black and subterranean canon which, in this ocean of bile, is the only thing within our power.
Our only guiding principle will be masochism.
scholars of Hamid Parsani’s occultural work, a clear demonstration that demonic infestation
finds its privileged tactics in the excess of destructive power: ‘Modern criminology refuses to
acknowledge the presence of demons, in the same way that secular disbelief condemns the
inanity of a demon possessing a helpless human: if demons exist and are that powerful then why
would they possess a wretched anthropian? Such an objection misunderstands the mechanisms
involved in the communication between xeno-agents and the human security system. For
demons maintain their outsideness precisely through a power of overkilling (sheer exteriority
of a force), inflicting more power than is needed just to unlock a gate. Demons simply crack
open the prey. The overkilling power effectuates an openness outside the system’s capacity to
afford it. Once openness cannot be afforded by the system’s capacity, it turns into an instance
of butchery rather than an act of emancipation characterized by human “access” to the outside.
Overkill is a spectacle staged on the fundamental incapacity of the system to cope with the
outside. Through overkill, the xeno-agent performs its demonic spectacle and effectuates its
exteriority which the system cannot afford. The exteriority of the demon cannot be captured by
the desire of the system for openness, and for this reason such exteriority overkills (butchers
open) the system. To possess a strong man is certainly enough to flaunt the demon’s power, but
all the better if the possessed is a child or old woman, to signify the outsideness of the demon
through which overkilling power is generated.’ R. Negarestani, Cyclonopedia: Complicity with
Anonymous Materials (Melbourne: re.press, 2008), 118–19.
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242
I have chosen this category because it is the only weapon destructive
T h e H i g h e st F o r m o f G n o s i s
enough to deal with the subject and survive the gnosis we shall encounter
along the way. Anyone wishing to approach such a generalised demonomania should take into account Gilles Deleuze’s definition of masochism:
an ‘ice age’, an expiation of our humanity. This category will be thoroughly
explained through the figures we shall conjure up along the way, the voices
we will extract from the free black market of ideas in the world below—but
first, allow me to scribble, with trembling hand, some preliminary notes on
the concept of masochism.
MASOCHISM AS INVERTED WISDOM
‘Healthy’ sex and its consequences have been a disaster for the human race.
The abandonment of the fetish—or at least the reduction of fetishism to
the stale pantomime of the servant-master dialectic—has had a terrifying
effect upon our ability to think speculatively.18 Libidinal security, the goal of
society’s sexual sovereignty, has hampered our ability to speculate meaningfully about our own dissolution and unconditional liberation as a species,
about the inhuman forces that plunge us into our inner Hades. Stubbornly
locked within the sharp distinction—which functions, de facto, as a unity-within-separation—between the subject-father and the object-slave, we
have stifled the call of the depths, whose lament we hear even in the most
superficial forms of unrestrained, xenophilic fetishism. If only we could once
and for all disentangle the dialectic, free ourselves from the BDSM romantic
comedy in which we find ourselves trapped, and see our desires for what
18.
‘Alienness—and the alienation that results from a confrontation with alienness—is
the genesis of novelty and change. Wherever one encounters the alien, a mutation or a
transformation isn’t far behind. And yet, because alienness involves an aspect of unknowability
and unpredictability—an erasure of the familiar and the homely—it is also one of the things in
the world which makes us most afraid. We fear the different and the strange, yet we require
these things in order to evolve. This makes for a paradoxical affective relationship with the
notions of otherness and difference that alienness encompasses—a bizarre and complex
orientation unifying dread and desire.’ A. Ireland, ‘Alien Rhythms’, 0AZ (2019), <zinzrinz.blogspot.
com/2019/04/alien-rhythms.html>.
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they really are, then we would finally feel in touch with a universe penetrated
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by an infinite love of its own dissolution.19
T h e H i g h e st F o r m o f G n o s i s
This was, more or less, the simple insight that moved a young Gilles
Deleuze as he wrote arguably his most useful book, Coldness and Cruelty.
For Deleuze, the word sadomasochism was a perverse psychoanalytical
joke designed to convince us that there is only one form of sexual deviancy.
There is only one two-headed beast, repeating the tired game of masters and
servants ad nauseam.20 But this is a lie, we know it, we have always known it.
Deleuze begins to slay the dragon by considering sadism and masochism
as two distinct entities, each with its own economies, its own pains and
pleasures, its own catastrophic ends. He then divides these two forms of
massacre into two elements: a personal one, representing the experience of
desire for us, and an impersonal one, tracing the movements and exchanges
of unconscious libidinal forces without us.
19.
‘Thus insofar as Xenophilia is satisfied it cannot be. Insofar as Xenophilia is, it cannot
be satisfied. Xenophilia is doubly unconditional. Lacking satisfaction conditions, it 1) does not
represent a goal state and 2) cannot oppose a present state on the grounds that it fails to realize
those goals. Finally, if per impossibile, the posthumanist could envisage satisfaction conditions
of her desire she would no longer be motivated by xenophilia. Xenophilic futurity need not be
posed as radically incomprehensible but its adequate conceptualization must await the event
of its construction or disconnection.’ D. Roden, ‘Xenophilia’, Enemy Industry, 2019, <http://
enemyindustry.wordpress.com/2019/05/02/x-phi-or-alienation-is-not-correlation>. Keep these
two conditions in mind while performing any kind of ritual following our doctrine. Once you cross
the threshold, they may save your soul and prepare you for what awaits you on the other side.
20. This opening up of the vast horizon beyond the sovereign sexual deficiency is probably one
of the best ways of conceptualising the pagan explosions of sunlight that thundered through
Mark Fisher’s later work. Acid Communism, another form of adventurous anti-politics that we
strongly support, involves recovering the communitarian experience of outsideness of the tribes
that inhabit the desert on the outskirts of the City of Man. ‘A new humanity, a new seeing,
a new thinking, a new loving: this is the promise of acid communism, and it was the promise
that you could hear in “Psychedelic Shack” and the culture that inspired it. Only five years
separated “Psychedelic Shack” from the Temptations’ early signature hit “My Girl”, but how
many new worlds had come into being then? In “My Girl”, love remains sentimentalised, confined
to the couple, in “Psychedelic Shack”, love is collective, and orientated towards the outside.’ M.
Fisher, ‘Acid Communism (Unfinished Introduction)’, in K-Punk: The Collected and Unpublished
Writings of Mark Fisher (2004–2016), ed. D. Ambrose (London: Repeater, 2018), 793.
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244
The sadist is embodied, even more than by Sade himself, by the figure of
T h e H i g h e st F o r m o f G n o s i s
Spinoza. The desire of the sadist is a tome produced more geometrico.
Body is piled upon body, every pore is sexualised and libidinised only to be
mercilessly wounded over and over again. Every bodily fluid is calculated,
classified, and defined so as to force a more complete dispersion. The human
body becomes a pure trunk of barely contained blood, an enormous digestive
tube endlessly vomiting and shitting out precise and ordered quantities of
unstructured matter, a pure distributor of tears. The sadist is thus driven by
a deeply annihilating desire, a fervour that burns with an eternal will to be
the horribly precise right-hand man of the foetid God of the Old Testament.
We have therefore to distinguish two factors constituting a dual language.
The first, the imperative and descriptive factor, represents the personal
element; it directs and describes the personal violence of the sadist as
well as his individual tastes; the second and higher factor represents the
impersonal element in sadism and identifies the impersonal violence with an
Idea of pure reason, with a terrifying demonstration capable of subordinating
the first element. In Sade we discover a surprising affinity with Spinoza—a
naturalistic and mechanistic approach imbued with the mathematical spirit.
This accounts for the endless repetitions, the reiterated quantitative process
of multiplying illustrations and adding victim upon victim, again and again
retracing the thousand circles of an irreducibly solitary argument.21
Sadism is thus the apotheosis of separative wisdom, which seeks the
dissolution of the self and the world through the full use of its power to
categorise, calculate, expose, and dictate. For us, this is no insignificant clue.
However, it serves no practical purpose in our demonomaniacal descent into
the web of terrors that curse the land that spawned us. While we undoubtedly encourage our reader to go deeper and indulge in the annihilation of
21.
G. Deleuze, Masochism: Coldness and Cruelty (New York: Zone Books, 1989), 19–20.
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According to Deleuze, masochism has a very particular nature, a nature
that makes it a completely different beast from the economy of sadism; it is
not the dialectical negative of the latter, but something completely different.
It is a ‘“black” theology’22 or a ‘perverse mysticism’,23 an obscure wisdom, a
supra-sensual and superior sentimentalism-as-pure-gnosis which operates
through depersonalisations and inter-purifications. While the sadist enjoys
an amplified form of wisdom—a wisdom that precisely divides, categorises,
disembowels, pierces, lacerates—the masochist draws upon a different
wisdom which, from the point of view of ‘sanity’, appears as the absolute
enjoyment of running backwards toward the black heart of one’s inner steppe,
toward the centre of the earth itself. While sadism is the pleasure of surgically
tearing apart the unity of the world and self, the all-devouring apotheosis of
wisdom, masochism is the forbidden enjoyment of descent and immersion, of
getting lost in the cosmic labyrinth, of freezing to death in the return to the
infinite Night, full of agonies. It is, to recall the Thing from which we started,
the becoming-spirit box, faithful receiver of the voices of the dead, of the
Outside and of the aeonic massacre of the cosmos; it is the becoming-steppe
of the world and the immersion in its bowels. Deleuze writes:
Like Sade, Masoch distinguishes two natures, but he characterizes them
differently. Coarse nature is ruled by individual arbitrariness: cunning and
violence, hatred and destruction, disorder and sensuality are everywhere
at work. Beyond this lies the great primary nature, which is impersonal and
self-conscious, sentimental and supersensual. In the prologue to Masoch’s
Galician Tales a character known as ‘the wanderer’ indicts Nature for being
evil. Nature replies in her own defense that she is not hostile and does not
hate us, even when she deals death, but always turns to us a threefold face:
22. Ibid., 120.
23.
Ibid.
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T h e H i g h e st F o r m o f G n o s i s
looking for something else.
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the world so as to reach the pulsating pinnacle of their intelligence, we are
246
cold, maternal, severe…. Nature is the steppe. Masoch’s descriptions of the
The Highest Form of Gnosis
steppe are of great beauty, especially the one that appears at the beginning
of Frinko Balaban; the representation of nature by the identical images of
the steppe, the sea and the mother aims to convey the idea that the steppe
buries the Greek world of sensuality and rejects at the same time the modern
world of sadism. It is like a cooling force which transforms desire and transmutes cruelty. This is the messianic idealism of the steppe.24
Masoch is a great inverted climber who ascends to the heights of the
supra-sensual only to fall deeper into the geotraumatic core of sexuality,25
the pulsating heart of the earth that opened up and, through desiccations,
ice ages and other instruments of aeonic torture, forced the living to become
a sensual entity. While sadism is the libidinal economy of violent separation
and destruction, masochism is the enjoyment of regression, self-negation,
determination from outside, and disappearance.26 The masochist is the
24. Ibid., 55
25. ‘The theory of trauma was a crypto-geological hybrid from the very start. […] Abandoning
the circumspection with which Freud handles what he still supposes to be ‘metaphorical’ stratal
imagery, Dr Daniel Barker’s Cosmic Theory of Geotrauma, or Plutonics, flattens the theory of
psychic trauma onto geophysics, with psychic experience becoming an encrypted geological
report, the repercussion of a primal Hadean trauma in the material unconscious of Planet Earth.
Further developing Professor Challenger’s model of ‘generalised stratification’, Barker ultraradicalises Nietzschean genealogy into a materialist cryptoscience. […] Resident Alien; The
Insider. Trauma is at once a twisted plot, a geological complex, and a heavily-encrypted filesystem. The archives come to the surface only to be churned and folded back into the detritus
of their own repression. The tendrils of the ‘pathogenic nucleus’ merge imperceptibly with
‘normal tissue’. And every living individual that ever existed is a playback copy, drawn from the
recording vaults, trapped in a refrain that sings the glory of Cthelll.’ R. Mackay, ‘A Brief History of
Geotrauma’ (2011) <https://readthis.wtf/writing/a-brief-history-of-geotrauma/>.
26. This cyborgian character of masochism was lucidly observed by Theodore Reik. For Reik,
the paradoxical structure of masochism so clearly reflects the humiliation of Prometheus
(defier of the gods and the thief of fire, tied to a rock and eaten alive for all eternity), which
is so gloriously—at least from an unconditional accelerationist perspective—endemic to
technocultural enhancement, that he sees in the masochist the epitome of modern humanity:
‘All the different and frequently discordant tunes we heard in masochism, finally united in a full
and sonorous accord: to uphold oneself despite all force, and where this is not possible, to perish
in spite of all force. That is the grim tragicomedy of the martyr-attitude of modern man or at
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master of the art of making inner demons speak through the devious use
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of prostheses, contracts, and bindings.27 He becomes a cold steppe where
T h e H i g h e st F o r m o f G n o s i s
no one has ever set foot but where, against all forms of stable organisation,
geotrauma-tics still resound loudly and clearly.28
The forms and particularities of this catabasis through ascension, which
makes the masochist a libidinous desert tuned to the cries of the planet, are
well documented. It could be said, for example, contrary to what Bataille
seems to imply in some of his writings,29 that masochism, in this absolutely
cosmological and self-destructive sense, has served as the total consummation of and the impetus behind most mystical experiences in Christian
theology.
least of its essential characters. Here is a tale of human frailty and sorrow which is at the same
time a tale of human force and lust’. Note the clear anabatic-katabatic structure of this passage,
an indication of the validity of our description. T. Reik, Masochism In Modern Man (New York:
Farrar and Rinehart, 1941), 433.
27.
In its purest forms, masochism is a deadly addiction, the deadly injection derived from the
radiation secreted by the Black Sun, which unlocks the ossified energetics of the repressed
inorganic, forcing us to descend completely to the non-sexual, tectonic roots of our sexuality.
These are the terrible psychotic tremors that generated our ‘“perversion,” in the sense of a drug
that allows [us] to ensure a narcissistic homeostasis by means of a nonverbal, unnamable (hence
untouchable and omnipotent) hold over a nonobjectal Thing.’ J. Kristeva, Black Sun: Depression
and Melancholia (New York: Columbia University Press, 1992), 48.
28.
Let us pause for a moment to recognise once again the basis of all of our ritual practice
and magical thinking: catastrophe will always be the principal engine of the universe. As clearly
stated in ‘Catastrophic Astrology’, we side with the intellectual tradition that has explicitly
promoted this ontological position: Sándor Ferenczi, Sigmund Freud, Daniel Barker, Georges
Bataille, Zecharia Sitchin, Immanuel Velikovsky and, more recently, Thomas Moynihan (Spinal
Catastrophism: A Secret History [Falmouth: Urbanomic, 2020]). Keep this genealogy in mind
when imagining the universe in which your ritual should take place.
29.
‘In its cruelty, eroticism brings indigence, demands ruinous outlays. Moreover it’s too
expensive to be thought of in relation to asceticism. On the other hand, mystical and ecstatic
states (which don’t entail moral or material ruin) can’t do without certain extremes against self.
My experience with the latter of these as well as the former makes me aware of the contrasting
effects the two kinds of excess have. To give up my sexual habits would mean I’d have to discover
some other means of tormenting myself, though this torture would have to be as intoxicating as
alcohol.’ G. Bataille, Guilty, tr. B. Boone (Venice, CA: The Lapis Press, 1988), 22.
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248
Let us take Henry Suso, one of the most misunderstood doyens of Christian
The Highest Form of Gnosis
mysticism. The peculiarity of his character lies in the fact that he took our
understanding of mysticism to its highest level. His holiness is characterised by cool, cenobitic behaviour. He was in the habit of constructing his
instruments of torture in order to understand more fully the self-immolation
of God himself, taking the idea of the imitation of Christ to a whole new
level. His writings are imbued with the will to become-desert, to ascend
catabatically toward the highest form of knowledge, toward the gnosis of
the tectonic rocks of the bowels of unconscious desire.
A striking example of this is his notoriously masochistic and pornographic
imitation of Jesus’s crucifixion, in which God unfolds before his grieving
eyes the paradoxical structure of the masochistic anarchic complex. Let us
quote it in full:
After the Last Supper, when in the anguish of my meek heart, and in the
pain of my whole body, I resigned myself on the mountain to the bitter death,
discovering that it was near, I was covered with sweat and blood. I was
captured by my enemies, severely tied up, meanly carried away. At night I
was abused vilely; they scourged me, spat on me and blindfolded me. Early
in the morning I was brought before Caiaphas, accused, found guilty and
condemned to death. An unspeakable pain was visible in my pure mother,
from the first glance she had of my anguish, until I was nailed to the cross.
I was shamefully brought before Pilate, unjustly accused, condemned to
death. They stood before me with terrible looks, like cruel giants, and I stood
before them meekly, like a lamb. I, the Eternal Wisdom, in white robes, was
mocked as a madwoman before Pilate. My beautiful body was painfully torn
and tortured by the cruel blows of the whip. My tender ears were pierced by
the cries of ‘Hang him, hang the criminal!’ resounding in the air.
THE SERVANT: Ah, Lord, the beginning is so painful, how will the end be? If
I saw a wild animal so mistreated in my presence, I could scarcely bear it; so,
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then, your sufferings would have pierced my heart and soul, and rightly so!
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But, Lord, there is a great wonder in my heart. My beloved Lord, I seek your
The Highest Form of Gnosis
divine nature in every place, but you reveal only your humanity. I seek your
sweetness, you express your bitterness. I wanted to suck your breast, you
teach me to fight. Ah, Lord, what do you mean by this?
ETERNAL WISDOM’S ANSWER: No one can attain to the divine majesty
nor to the extraordinary sweetness if he is not first drawn to the image of
my human bitterness. The higher one ascends, without having crossed my
humanity, the lower one falls.30
Here we can clearly see the (un)structure of masochistic desire, we can
breathe the unspeakably frail air at the height of loving despair. Henry Suso’s
omniscient and ineffable God speaks of the dark theology that Deleuze saw
in Masoch’s work: true supra-sensual transcendence is a fall into humiliated
immanence, it is a downward ascent that empties the masochist of everything, aiming at the cold core of his desire. The masochist is the explorer of
the steppe that is at the origin of Love, the chilling and inhuman desert from
which sexuality is descended.
Mysticism, then, is the closest approximation to an extremely geotraumatic sexuality, a sexuality that abolishes humanity and lets the Great
Inorganic Outside speak, personified by an Unmanifest and Unnameable God.
Accelerate mystical theology and you will hear the earth scream….
But that’s enough; you will have already grasped the concept we wanted
to sketch out.
Let us then proceed to explore this terrible Italian affliction, making use
of a tiny black canon of heterogeneous voices that offer testimony to the
spiritual infestation that possesses us and the land from which we come. To
this end, we will use the concept of masochism in two specific ways: first,
we will report only the voices of the Great Masochists, masters in the art
30. E. Suso, Libretto dell’Eterna Sapienza (Rome: Paoline, 1992).
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of geotraumatic masochism. Second, we will use masochism as a guiding
The Highest Form of Gnosis
thread, a recurrent theme that unites the different voices we bring together
in our exploration. We will question those who, to varying degrees and in this
blighted land, have embodied the pleasure of enduring the horrific shrieks
of tectonics tearing apart the Unity of the World, who have forced themselves to become hyper-Schopenhauerians by exploring the inorganic laws
of massacre and desire, who have seen God, the Creator of the Cosmos, as
the ultimate impaler and desecrator, who have wanted so badly to become
inorganic that they have decided that the entire human race must disappear,
once and for all. We will do this by looking for masochism everywhere, like
mad detectives, and in our turn masochistically endure this parade of lost
souls. Now, please, turn around and go away.31
THE BLACK CANON
You are one of the only vivid memories of my first adoption and I hardly knew
you. The voices came fast, not knowing how to articulate what you had
done or why. The first voices were shouting SUICIDE, saying you were dead.
Soon afterwards they changed the story, found better informants, made
sure you were still alive. You cut your wrist in front of a church, spilling blood
on the white stairs that lead to God’s putrid kingdom.
You were not trying to die out of despair, that’s what upset them. You
were enjoying it, they said incredulously. You were trying to impress someone,
you were humiliating God and all creation for no reason, laughing all the way
to the gates of Hell. Your act was without reason, or was motivated by futile
31.
The shadow-text ritual ends here. Following the detailed instructions in this anthology
should give you a fairly precise idea of what you should do when engaging in ritual practice. In
the following pages you will find a few more details, i.e., the coordinates for the pilgrimage, but
consider them as external and somewhat preliminary information. Read the canon in a paranoid
fashion. Within it you will find other important associations that will inform your ritual practices.
Some are obvious (such as the ritual symbolism of The Child, The Empire, The Decadence, The
Two Mothers, The Armies, or even the number of the last footnote of the shadow-text), others
not so much. Pay attention.
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motives, which was even worse and more unbearably shocking than your
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supposed death.
The Highest Form of Gnosis
They would have accepted you as a dying, adolescent idiot, bleeding out
on the church steps,32 in the arms of God, forgiven and soon forgotten in the
rotten belly of Heaven. They would have liked to say that you were depressed,
that it was society’s fault, that it was sex, drugs, and their capitalist-realist
complements, that it was a protest against the slow erasure of your future,
that the culprit was the end of the old traditions.
But you were rebellious, you declared with all your heart that you wanted
it badly and that you would do it again and again, opening up for them the
sterile anus of your desire. In the face of your willingness to publicly extinguish
yourself, in the face of your blood ritual, the public discourse and the structure
of the polis became, as it always had been, the containing structure for a
dastardly, descending hunger, the exile of the Primordial Masochist. We talk
to each other, we form communities, we build cities and states and nations
to drive a stake through the heart of Love, which is always virtually a death
drive and a form of suicidal passivity, an already accomplished anti-politics.
They were so shaken up that they put the most ridiculous band-aid on
your desire to regress beyond and below the organ: as they continued to
search for better words and appropriate descriptions, they said you were
‘emo’; you had done it, they said, because every teenager was fascinated by
this aberrant fashion trend, one of many barbarities in a country inhabited
by assholes and junkies, with someone always hanging from the branch of
a tree in some forest never far from where you were. All the cool kids cut
their wrists, you were no different.
And after all, this last one wasn’t such a bad assessment; you did it for
some stupid and insignificant reason, as is the case with all the best blasphemous acts. This description, at least, with its embarrassed incredulity,
barely able to be spoken, highlighted two fundamental tendencies of the
obsession you embodied.
32. 45.818544, 8.827224.
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Firstly, it showed that your gesture was the epiphenomenon of a much
T h e H i g h e st F o r m o f G n o s i s
wider headless movement, a collective, non-local but nevertheless somehow
provincial tendency of anti-human, cultural consumption. You were following
the long shadows of limitless modernity, of the erosion of all solidity, of the
endless, unstoppable and continuous joke of human extinction and erasure,
of that Thing that so many scholars have desperately tried to tame and
sociologise. You were the puppet of a frenzied cosmic liquidation and its
parade of universal idiocy—of the terminal form of the blind, stupid, obtuse,
and uncontrolled process of K-death.
Secondly, it expressed in a somewhat sublime way the absurdity of your
act. Rather than trying to turn it into a social, ethical gesture, a reasonable,
rational protest, it described you as an antisocial thrillseeker. You were following the ephemeral enjoyment of death, the unmediated joy of suddenly
regressing back to the erupting womb that gave birth to us and executing
the whole of society and the self. Beneath the surface of this world, you
discovered the mechanisms of massacre and enjoyment, you climbed the
blade to the mall-goth heart of the universal death drive.
You, two-headed monster, suicidal and provocative. Co-spiritual hand
behind my armies; mother, unsatiable and insatiable, of the desire to mourn
my death. Giulia Mesa and Giulia Domna.
§ 01 The first theoretical guide we can identify in this obsession is another
teenage suicide. There is a pathetic story that Julius Evola tells in his
biography. He recalls an extremely desperate time in his life in which he
lost the will to live. He felt as if possessed by a very negative interpretation
of Nietzsche, an interpretation that had come to him from an author who
he first described, in order to distance himself from him, as ‘Jewish’. This
depressive reading of Nietzsche had spread through Evola’s life like black
bile, paralysing him to the point of being unable to be or do anything. His
whole macho-Aryan pose collapsed miserably as the result of a confrontation with the words of a teenager.
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terrifying text and, word by word, begins to understand the unthinkability of
human existence. Finally, he accepts the idea that reality is more monstrous
and icy than he could ever have thought. The terrible text appears as the
pinnacle of a masochistic prosthetics, a machine that wounds the mind
endlessly, that drives you toward a mortal apotheosis until you plunge into
the bowels of Hell.
Only an encounter with the quietism of Buddhist extinctionism saved
Evola from madness and suicide. Only a newly acquired fascist spirituality,
with its humanist and supremacist dream of material acquiescence and subjective indestructibility, could put a stop to the madness of the metaphysical
masochism that he had been facing. This is how Miroslav Griško recounts
Evola’s torment and his recovery:
Recounting in his memoirs an intent to commit suicide and thus follow
the pattern of his influences [...] the seemingly haphazard discovery of a
fragment from the Majjhima Nikaya spares Evola’s terrerstrial life: ‘He who
takes extinction to be extinction and, having taken extinction to be extinction, thinks of extinction, thinks of extinction, thinks of extinction, thinks
“Mine is extinction”, and rejoices in extinction, such a person, I say, does not
know extinction.’ Extinction must always be deferred, continually pushed
towards the most extreme exterior point. Suicide and non-suicide form the
same gesture from the perspective of the remoteness of the higher form of
extinction. In this conception of extinction’s remoteness, the unmappable
model of inner war nevertheless yields the minimal form of a praxis, which
infers in its performance the prosecution of a mission.33
But who was this boy who brought Evola to the brink of death? What sort
of inhuman metaphysics had he conceived?
33.
Griško, ‘Operation Eukaryotic Cell’.
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The Highest Form of Gnosis
a typical Lovecraftian story. We have the protagonist who comes across a
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The account of this author’s work in Evola’s The Path of Cinnabar reads like
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Carlo Michelstaedter died in his native Gorizia on 17 October 1910: he shot
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himself after an argument with his mother. He was 23 years old.
Michelstaedter left behind him a heap of writings and poetic texts, as if he
had exploded into a million pieces, all pervaded by the hyper-Schopenhauerian-Nietzscheanism that had almost killed Evola. Together, these writings
form a labyrinth of masochistic ramblings against an indifferent universe.
The only complete work, the only real book he left us is his university thesis,
entitled Persuasion and Rhetoric.
It is a book that truly seems like an alien artefact, and one that resists
all forms of categorisation and temporal analysis. It is clearly the work of
an angst-ridden teenager, angry at the world and at himself, locked in his
isolated room writing clumsy anathemas; but at the same time, paradoxically,
it is a rigorous treatise on a higher form of black physics, a deeper and more
disturbing form of entropy. It is an essay written in a language that is a pidgin
of dead and living languages schizophrenically blended together, addressing
a deeper gnosis of the fundamental laws of nature.
While it has often been read as a quasi-existential book celebrating
finitude, suicide, and the inevitability of our individual death, the text should
instead be regarded as a precursor of the entropic Love described by the
Gruppo di Nun in its Dogma. This book, in other words, is a kind of long
presocratic fragment that anticipated our own understanding of nature and
of this collapsing universe. Michelstaedter’s black physics is our physics.
The central thesis of Michelstaedter’s work is a radicalisation of Schopenhauer’s idea that ‘[t]he parts of the body must correspond completely to the
chief demands and desires by which the will manifests itself; they must be
the visible expression of these desires. Teeth, gullet, and intestinal canal are
objectified hunger; the genitals are objectified sexual impulse; grasping hands
and nimble feet correspond to the more indirect strivings of the will which
they represent’.34 According to Schopenhauer, every organ can be imagined
and constructed according to the purposes of the desires it embodies. Every
34. Schopenhauer, The World as Will and Representation, vol. 1, 108 [§20].
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little teleoplexic creature driven by a congenital and primordial hunger.
For Michelstaedter, Schopenhauer’s idea is fundamentally correct, but
he does not fully grasp the implications of his own theoretical statement.
Primordial hunger is not simply the way to explain and analyse some particular
teleoplexic circuits, but it is the key to understanding the cryptic and telic
structure of reality itself. The Real is this hunger and it is this descending
drive, this corrupt carnage that forces everything to its terminal state and
finally to its expulsion:
I know I want and do not have what I want. A weight hangs suspended from
a hook; being suspended, it suffers because it cannot fall: it cannot get off
the hook, for insofar as it is weight it suspends, and as long as it suspends
it depends.
We want to satisfy it: we free it from its dependence, letting it go so
that it might satisfy its hunger for what lies below, and it falls independently
for as long as it is content to fall. But at none of the points attained is it
content to stop; it still wants to fall, for the next point below continually
overtakes in lowness that which the weight has just attained. Nor will any
future point be such as to render it content, being necessary to the weight’s
life insofar […] as it awaits below. But every time a point is made present, it
will be emptied of all attraction, no longer being below; thus does it want
at every point the points below it, and those attract it more and more. It is
always drawn by an equal hunger for what is lower, and the will to fall remains
infinite with it always.
If at some point its will were finished and it could possess in one point
the infinite descent of the infinite future, at that point it would no longer be
what it is—a weight.
Its life is this want of life. If it no longer wanted but were finished,
perfect, if it possessed its own self, it would have ended its existence. At
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T h e H i g h e st F o r m o f G n o s i s
forms us from the beginning. For Schopenhauer, each organ is an independent
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part of us is the realisation of some Final Attractor, a final satisfaction that
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that point, as its own impediment to possessing life, the weight would
The Highest Form of Gnosis
not depend on what is external as much as on its own self, in that it is
not given the means to be satisfied. The weight can never be persuaded.
Its life is this lack of its life. When it no longer lacks anything, but
is finite, perfect, possesses itself, it will have ceased to exist. The burden
is to itself the impediment to possessing its life, and it no longer depends
on anything but itself in what it cannot satisfy. The weight can never be
persuaded.35
This is the expression of a terrifying metaphysics, a philosophy built on the
thirst for the annihilation of matter. Michelstaedter radicalises Schopenhauer and transforms his thought into a depressive realism which pierces
the veil of human cognition and penetrates the fundamental cryptic laws
of nature. Michelstaedter’s black physics is the physics of a dying cosmic
fire, a runaway entropic process that we can feel in our bones as our lives
slowly shatter toward its Heart of Darkness. This is what terrified Evola: the
absolute obliteration of this world, the transformation of knowledge into the
arid, masochistic, and ever-so-useless dowsing in the ashes of a cosmos
burning to the ground.
Clearly, Evola’s response to this cosmic massacre was fascist self-deification, isolation, and the symmetrical stasis of meditation. Michelstaedter,
on the contrary, does not offer the reader an easy way out, nor any hope of
individual salvation. He proposes to those who follow his inverted wisdom
to practise what he calls, perverting the very word, persuasion: a destruction of the veil of reality that unleashes the world’s true, hideous nature.
Against Evola’s fascist rigidity, Michelstaedter proposes an openness to
abandoning the familiar in order to accommodate inorganic desire, even
if this means a masochistic and mystical surrender to the laws of massacre
and the abyssal circuits of jouissance. Michelstaedter tears the cosmos apart
35. C. Michelstaedter, Persuasion and Rhetoric, tr. R.S. Valentino, C.S. Blum, and D.J. Depew
(New Haven, CT and London: Yale University Press, 2004), 8–9.
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and peremptorily demands that you leave everything behind, once and for
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all. The putrid gospel of this teenage Antichrist is do what you will, let the
The Highest Form of Gnosis
impersonality of your entropic desire burn you to ashes.
Doing is not for the sake of having done; having done does no good. You do
not have in the present what you have done, and yet you want to retain it. In
order to have it you must do it again like anything else: and you don’t reach
an end. Performing a beneficence is not doing unto others or giving them
what they believe they want: giving alms, healing the sick, feeding, giving
drink, clothing—these are allowing others to take, not giving or doing but
suffering.36
§ 02 A hyperentropic physics is not enough, we need to impale God himself.
We need a cosmology, even a theology, to get to the heart of this abysmal
spiritual infestation.
Andrea Emo was a loner all his life. He never published anything in his
lifetime, yet he scribbled his curses endlessly. He wrote the most terrifying of
all theologies. For Emo, God is the unstoppable arrow of time that abolishes
all that is. The Lord of this World is the inner and occult temporal warfare that
ravages and annihilates meaninglessly. God consists in his own annihilation
was Emo’s motto. And it will be our theology.
Emo was a disciple of a peculiar school of Italian Hegelianism called
actualism. The main proponent of the actualist reinterpretation of Hegel
was Giovanni Gentile, one of the most important intellectual figures of the
fascist regime. The main theoretical outcome of this form of Hegelianism, to
simplify it to an almost embarrassing level, is that Hegel’s philosophy should
be thought of as a philosophy of the act as it unfolds. Dialectics should be
read as a perpetual motion through which everything constantly develops and
leaves behind any given form. A thing, whatever it is, should be considered
as a perpetual action, which, through its pauses, its contradictions and its
36. Ibid., 49–50.
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wounds is constantly moving away from its inner potential toward its outer
The Highest Form of Gnosis
consumption. According to Gentile, everything that exists is to be equated
with a ‘fire’ that ‘burns its fuel to extract light and heat’. Everything exists
because it burns, and exists only through its own combustion.
Here again, the voices of our black canon know the foundations of fascist
dreams and ideas of a completely and definitively ordered world through
violent amplifications, accelerations, and radicalisations of the defective
organs of their frightening house of cards. Emo pours petrol on the fire of
the actualist forest, turning actualism into the expression of an unqualified
Heracliteanism, an all-consuming war.
Emo’s philosophy derives from a simple awareness: if the dialectical
process is this burning up of everything that exists, then everything that
exists is simply always already a form of cosmic consumption, of useless
slaughter. Every last little thing in the universe is its own massacre and
abolition. Being is synonymous with losing blood, in a haemorrhage that will
not end until the whole universe is nothing but blackness. If for Gentile the
theory of the primacy of the dialectical act was an ontological foundation
and the constitution of everything, for Emo it is, for reasons that lie at the
limits of the logically stringent, its opposite: it is the demonstration of the
lack of any basis or foundation, and is the ontological dismissal of everything
that exists, now and forever; even God himself is nailed to the cross just to
show us the way to self-consumption.
Emo crystallises this idea in his philosophy of time. Time, according to
Emo, is nothing but the formalisation of this crypto-tendency toward total
consumption. Time is the vector that transforms the constant death that
we are at every moment into an ordered diagram: a simple arrow toward the
Ultimate, the Final Attractor. Emo is a thermodynamic supremacist, a fanatic
of the eternal trajectory of the universe.
For such acosmic pessimism, the only acceptable form of knowledge, in
the face of an evanescent universe, is that of masochistic regression. The
only healthy form of knowledge is that accessed through the return to the
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to the beginning, before creation, through a becoming as cold as the perpetual march of temporal massacre itself. It is to abandon everything and
go back to the impassive circuits of Gnon, free of all human assumptions
and prejudices. Emo writes:
If science could discover the ‘virus’ of immortality and inject it into the veins
of man, would the disease of the absolute be cured? The absolute ruler cures
his illness by accepting the absolute negation which is the absolute purification, and which is the actuality of a faith. History is a series of horrors, like
time; time that supplies the cemeteries with ever new victims. Although we
see time as progress, it leads man back to the nothingness from which he
emerged. Time can also be a regression; the triumph of regression. But Clio,
the Muse of History, turns this series of horrors into a magnificent poem;
destructive time becomes divinity, logos; ferocity and its series become
Providence, chance and arbitrariness become necessity, a universal idea.
Why does History, a history of tragedies, appear to us as a wonderful world,
a tale that brings peace to our spirit? What is the catharsis, the purification,
that makes the historical poem so beautiful, indeed sublime? History is the
purification of the absolute because it is its continuous resurrection from
its continuous negation. Perhaps, like memory, it is the only way to know
actuality, pre-actuality; it is the miracle of the actuality and diversity of a
long negation. Progress is always a progress towards presence; memory is
presence in the form of images—that is, it is the present in the form of resurrection. Time is the triumph of regression; but our triumph is the actuality
of regression; the actuality that is known in regression, like memory. Every
vanishing instant is a regression, like memory. Every vanishing instant is a
regression, but that is the actuality of regression and it can only be known
in regression. Actuality can only be known in regression, can know itself
as actuality only in regression, in memory, and only memory can give this
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The Highest Form of Gnosis
worthy form of gnosis for this submerged dialectic is attained via a return
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Heart of Darkness, a sinking into the inner logic of a terrible war. The only
260
actuality the name of progress. Actuality is saved from regression, which is
The Highest Form of Gnosis
‘only’ by being its actuality. Memory is knowledge of regression, that is, the
actuality of regression and therefore the form of our salvation.37
Salvation lies in drowning in the merciless arms of our own slaughter and
suffering its terrible sights.
§ 03 A man descends into the depths of a cave. He wants to die: this world
is too much for him. In the belly of the cave there is a small lake. The man
sits beside it, pondering and asking himself whether dying is really worth
it, only to realise that perhaps he is slowly but surely changing his mind on
the matter.
In the end, he makes a decision. Life is worth living if only for the comfort
of its useless inertia. The man gets up and bangs his head against the ceiling.
The world is eclipsed by this descent.
He wakes up and comes out of the cave. The world that greets him
outside has been transfigured. To be precise, it is exactly the same as it has
always been, but there is not a human being in sight. His suicide has turned
out to be an extinction.
This is Dissipatio H.G. by Guido Morselli, a luciferous remake of the
Twilight Zone that haunts every reader who comes across it. It certainly
haunts me.
As a boy, I used to go to Morselli’s villa on the shore of a dead lake, surrounded by the rotten stench of one of the deepest scars of Italian post-industrialisation. His villa was a surreal pink building, now turned into a public
park, and my friends used to sneak in to smoke cigarettes. We dreamed of
desecrating the place and using a spirit box in the depths of this pink cave
where Morselli had lived out the last years of his life.38 We wanted to ask him
whether the afterlife was that vast dehumanisation, that deep emptiness
37.
A. Emo, Supremazia e maledizione (Rome: Raffaello Cortina, 1998).
38.
45.845264, 8.723498.
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he had described in the book that was parasitising our hormone-driven
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fantasies and the miasma of our homeland. Was it as serene and neurotic
T h e H i g h e st F o r m o f G n o s i s
as the misanthropy that oozed from its pages? Was it that little chamber
produced by endless inner monologues that he had imagined?
Morselli’s novels, especially Dissipatio H.G., are patient novels, lullabies
sung by an elusive universe, but they are also ruthless in their aversion to
humanity. In one book, a uchronic reconstruction of the Italian psychic
landscape, Morselli describes society as a ‘cathedral of spiders’39, and in
reading Dissipatio H.G. one cannot help but be persuaded by the idea that
he is having a great time crushing them all, one by one. Any reader, faced
with the endless stream of thoughts of the novel’s protagonist, the last
man on Earth, will recognise the prolonged enjoyment Morselli draws from
describing a world that has rid itself of every living human being. The author
relishes every opportunity to mock the now defunct and vanished human
race. He feels no shame or remorse in laughing at our hopes and dreams,
which, against the backdrop of this dying and inhuman world, now look like a
ridiculous farce. Morselli is the patron saint of the feverish joys of omnicidal
vision. Morselli is the man who put down on paper the masochistic love for
the disappearance of humanity, for the emptying out of everything human.
It was he who realised this deep need to see the whole world disappear.
Morselli was also the living demonstration of how terrifying these joys could
be. Can the homicidal dream have a different purpose? Can we be masochists,
emptying our bodies of the human and seeing the world in its a-human grace
without giving up our own lives, at least for a moment?
Standing in the garden of his house, I felt a slight desolation that I have
never felt again, an intoxicating proximity to my joyful misanthropy that made
me wonder how long I could bear this state of absolute solitude, this distance
from the world of states, nations, egos, and humans, that poisonous freedom
which seemed the only true form of freedom, the only true approximation
to absolute and final formlessness. Do what you will, at last.
39.
G. Morselli, Contro-passato prossimo (Rome: Adelphi, 1987).
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262
I remember the story a friend of mine wrote while he was there with me. It
T h e H i g h e st F o r m o f G n o s i s
was told from the point of view of a heroin addict. It was a long and rambling
metaphor that spanned at least five pages with a certain naive grace. The
gist of the story was that the substance, descending through the needle,
symbolised the addict’s descent, his uncontrolled spiral beyond the human,
toward a form that I would call demonic. The whole story revolved around
the paradox that the addict was enjoying his personal descent into hell, his
separation from humanity. I think the story was some kind of coping mechanism or something. We were all recovering from Morselli’s syndrome, his
questions, and the discovery of the desecrating and descendent character
of nature.
Thinking about Morselli, I feel as if I am going round and round in
circles, as if my life is a dirty joke. Here I am, again, reflecting on the same
disappearing world, making sense by myself, once again, of the iron laws of
thermodynamics and the infinite Love I feel for them. Gruppo di Nun was
touched by the gnosis that Morselli glimpsed in his suicidal words, but we
formalised it further, I think. We made it a doctrine, so as to teach you the
pleasure of living without your humanity. See these atrocious sights with us.
The highest form of gnosis coincides with the spiral: infinite reflection
on dissolution.
EM
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263
CATHOLIC DARK:
TO RISE OR FALL IN
HYPER-ALIEN SILENCE
Cat h o l i c Da r k
Anything that can be reached with a ladder does not interest me.
Ludwig Wittgenstein1
Neither by land nor sea shalt thou find the road to the Hyperboreans.
Pindar2
A certain Christina, born in 1150 in the village of Brustem in Flanders to a
humble shepherd couple, dies in her early twenties—possibly from an epileptic fit. During the funeral rites, however, Christina’s body opens its eyes
and rises up to the beams supporting the church roof. After convincing her,
not without difficulty, to leave her refuge, the family and the priests present
at the ceremony listen in terror to the story of Christina’s journey from
the abysses of Hell through the circumvolutions of Purgatory to Paradise,
meeting God face to face and receiving from Him the ability to return to
Earth, temporarily sacrificing eternal life so as to atone for the sins of the
souls in Purgatory.
Soon, the joy of Christina’s ‘return’ transforms into a serpentine wave
of terror. What if she is just a rotting body infested with demons? Or what
if, even worse, she is one of the living dead? Christina’s behaviour changes
from day to day, becoming more and more ambiguously inhuman. She can
1.
Culture and Value: A Selection from the Posthumous Remains, tr. P. Winch, ed. G.H. von
Wright, H. Nyman (Oxford: Blackwell, 1998), 10.
2.
Quoted in Nietzsche, The Anti-Christ, Ecce Homo, Twilight of the Idols, §1, 3.
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264
smell the sin that plagues human beings, and intuitively knows their inner
Cat h o l i c Da r k
desires. Disgusted with humans, Christina spends hours and hours in solitude,
wandering in the forest, climbing nimbly up barns, bell towers, and roofs, or
soaring into the air spontaneously (so much so that her biographer, Thomas
of Cantimpré, did not hesitate to call her a ‘shadow’ and a ‘bird-woman’).
Her mother and father try to chain her up to keep her at home, but Christina
breaks the chains with superhuman strength. Fire does not burn her, water
does not drown her; her body seems to be totally immune to corruption,
illness, and pain. When she speaks, her words sound distant and frigid, as
if they came from some remote and inaccessible place. It gets to the point
where, in order to experience for herself the suffering of those condemned
to death, Christina hangs herself on the gallows in the middle of the village
square, among the corpses of criminals.
The villagers begin to call her ‘Christina the Savage’, ‘Wild Christina’,
and ‘Crazy Christina’, initiating a spiral of violence and abuse that she bears
patiently until the day she is fiercely chased from her house. After a period
of wandering, she reaches the city, where she settles among criminals and
murderers, sharing in the spoils of their crimes. Amongst these outcasts,
she finds generosity, mercy, and pity.
Throughout the rest of her unlife, and even during her subsequent time
in a convent, Christina will continue to transgress every boundary, bending
the laws of nature to her will, occasioning shame, horror, and disgust, and
dying twice more, only to rise again and again—waking as if from a dream
the first time, emerging from the grave the second time. On the day of her
second death, Christina desperately asks the nun who finds her body and
causes her to wake up: ‘Why are you disturbing me, why are you forcing
me to come back?’3
3.
T. de Cantimpré, The Life of Christina the Astonishing, tr. M.H. King (Toronto: Peregrina
Publishing, 1999), 53, 153–54. For the original text in Latin, see <https://monasticmatrix.osu.
edu/cartularium/vita-de-s-christina-mirabili-virgine-life-christina-mirabilis>.
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lodged in this worldly Hell. Her obsessive search for a vertical line of escape,
her contempt for humans, and her constant provocations are the consequences of a profound love of anti-gravity. Christina defies death in order
to fall back into its embrace and be rid of her body, she eagerly seeks its
icy touch and cannot bear to be separated by darkness and silence. When
she is not being mauled by dogs or drinking the water of lepers, Christina
spends her time gazing at the sky—peering enigmatically beyond the clouds,
beyond the atmosphere, into deep space.4
THE DARK INFLUENCE OF THE
UNNAMEABLE COSMIC ATTRACTOR
The Christian tradition has built its nest on the most inaccessible of peaks.
Even the earliest anchorites felt the overwhelming urge to soar, not only
spiritually but also physically, above the world—to the tops of trees, mountains, and pillars. Between the fourth and fifth centuries AD, after being
expelled from his monastery because of his extreme fasting practices,
Simeon, in his early teens, decided to occupy a small space on the slopes of
a plateau. A few years later, annoyed by the constant visits of worshippers
and pilgrims who flocked to the foot of the rocky outcrop in search of advice,
blessings, and prayers, Simeon decided to abandon all vestiges of horizontality and embrace radical verticalism. After climbing a pillar, he installed
a small platform on its top, dedicating a handful of hours in the afternoon
to his ‘public’ without ever descending from the pillar, and making himself
accessible only by means of a ladder. Year after year, the pillar upon which
4.
All of these biographical details are drawn from A. Bartolomei Romagnoli, ‘Christina
l’Ammirabile’, in Scrittrici Mistiche Europee, vol. 1, eds. A. Bartolomei Romagnoli, A.
Degl’Innocenti, F. Santi (Firenze: Sismel, 2015), 152–85, and A. Bartolomei Romagnoli, ‘Christina
l’Ammirabile’, Nuovo Dizionario di Mistica, eds. L. Borriello, E. Caruana, M. Rosaria Del Genio, R.
Di Muro (Vatican: Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 2016), 590–93.
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she is but an obscene appendage, a shard of the absolute night of Paradise
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Christina’s body is inhabited by an alien power, a power of which, however,
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Simeon meditated in partial isolation was replaced by ever taller pillars, rising
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from the initial four metres to fifteen in the year of his death.
By disdainfully fleeing upwards, Simeon makes a twofold break with the
logocentric Hellenism of the Church Fathers, the irreverence of the ‘fools
for Christ’ (the ultra-cynics) and the suffering horizontalism of the Desert
Fathers. Rejecting public dialogue, rational argumentation, confrontation,
irony, lamentation and even the paradoxical argument for humour, the ‘stylite’
(one who lies in contemplation on a pillar) formulates a science of elevation:
a discipline totally different from the ancient mysteries or shamanic practices,
culminating in the return of the initiate to a world shared even with the uninitiated. Moving away from the primitivism of the dendrite (the tree dweller)
and the mountain hermit, the stylite brings together technique and anthropotechnics, ascension and asceticism, within one and the same paradigm.
The pillar is a constantly rising Tower of Babel, or a rocket pointing straight
up to the sky (a sort of minimal anticipation of the minaret). Interpreting
the Platonic analogy of the vertical line to the letter—which from the world
of illusions and shadows passes through the world of the senses and the
world of geometric-mathematical entities, until it reaches the unspeakable
supreme forms—the ascetic makes use of the tools offered by this world, but
discards them as he or she goes, as one does with a ladder. ‘[A]nd, behold, a
ladder set up on the earth, and the top of it reached to heaven; and, behold,
the angels of God ascending and descending on it.’5
The cathedral will be the logical continuation of this progressive elevation:
a project which, through architecture, becomes collective and metropolitan.
In the structure of the cathedral, the spire and the pinnacle represent the
last remnants of asceticism, beneath which the heavy bulk of European
society swells abnormally and parasitically. The spirit of gravity (the ‘prince
of this world’), with its nefarious levelling effects, opposes the lightness of
the mystic, their desire to leave the ground and rise ever higher, beyond
the atmosphere. One example is Joseph of Cupertino, whose sudden and
5.
Genesis 28:12 (ASV).
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abrupt flights forced the Friars Minor to anchor the saint to the ground. The
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story of this saint ‘of the flights’ shows how, for the spirit of gravity, there is
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only one time and place propitious to the journey: death and the grave; until
then, light spirits must keep their feet firmly on the ground. Paraphrasing
Carlo Michelstaedter,6 one could compare the mystic to the inventor of an
air balloon that can rise indefinitely: the further the balloon gets from the
ground, the more anxious and impatient its crew becomes—so oppressed
by the thinness of the air, so confused by the lack of visibility, that they
refuse to continue their journey. The prominence of verticalism in religious
architecture only reiterates the concept by means of a humorous contrast:
it is easier for a cathedral to levitate spontaneously toward the moon than
it is for the Church to levitate toward heaven.
The cathedral’s institutionalisation of the heights is immediately transformed into a game of escapes and captures: the supplicating masses
thronging under the stylite are mineralised into the rocky body of the
Church (the foundation stone), while the column, absorbed by the crowd
and becoming its centre, is transformed into the cathedral (the vertical
stone). Access to a summit that is never absolute, but always relative to the
valley, is mediated by ladders: hierarchies and infrastructures, doctrines and
teachings, sacraments and ordinances. These two communicating devices,
in turn, include within their system an ‘altimetrical’ function: the idea that
there is a limit beyond which one is nothing more than a madman in the grip
of perdition, or a pioneer capable of conquering new limits.
It was perhaps this total saturation of the horizontal to which we owe the
spread of the impulse to found hermitages and monasteries: places dedicated
to a peaceful search for silence and autonomy, often gravitating around
the figure of a hermit. What is certain is that this tendency toward vertical
flight led to ‘earthly’ institutions attempting to delegitimise and annihilate it,
or else to incorporate it, raising the threshold even higher and welcoming it
6.
Michelstaedter, Persuasion and Rhetoric, 77–84. The reference is to the famous parable of
‘Plato’s balloon’.
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into the body of the Church. In the midst of such an atmosphere of teeming
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business (all rules and time scales), anchorites and anchoresses, driven away
once again from the city and the crowds, rose above the monasteries and
convents, on vertiginous rocky ridges, at the top of peaks, in all those places
where human beings are but a rare presence—making themselves light and
unencumbered enough to escape a congested planet.
In the age when stone is gathering momentum, the stylite returns to
confront the mountain heights, climbing the terrifying natural spires in search
of an original place: a launch pad toward unlimited altitude. This upward
journey turns philosophy into a ‘high mountain road which is reached only
by a steep path’:
It is an isolated road and becomes ever more desolate, the higher we ascend.
Whoever pursues this path must show no fear, but must leave everything
behind and confidently make his own way in the wintry snow. Often he suddenly comes to a precipice and looks down upon the verdant valley. A violent
attack of dizziness draws him over the edge, but he must control himself
and cling to the rocks with might and main. In return for this, he soon sees
the world beneath him; its sandy deserts and morasses vanish from his view,
its uneven spots are levelled out, its jarring sounds no longer reach his ear,
and its roundness is revealed to him. He himself is always in the pure cool
mountain air and now beholds the sun when all below is still engulfed in night.7
In order to obtain a distance from all interference, in an attempt to access
the clarity of the inner conversation, this desire for silence and solitude is
ready to sever all ties with humanity and earthly life. Traditionally, it is in
this absence of shared stimuli and representations that the soul, suddenly
realising that it has neglected itself and devoted too much time to the
veneration of the cathedrals of humankind and those of nature, turns to its
7.
A. Schopenhauer, Manuscript Remains, Volume 1: Early Manuscripts (1804–1818), tr.
E.J.F. Payne, ed. A. Hubscher (London: Bloomsbury, 1988), 14.
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by his selfish passion for climbing, Petrarch descends from the summit in
spiritual torment:
How many times I turned back that day to look at the mountain top which
seemed scarcely more than a cubit high compared with the height of human
contemplation, unless it is immersed in the foulness of earth? As I descended
I asked myself: ‘If we are willing to endure so much sweat and labour in order
to raise our bodies a little closer to heaven, how can a soul struggling toward
God, up the steeps of human pride and mortal destiny, fear any cross or
prison or sting of fortune?’8
The mountain, however imposing and inhospitable it may be, reveals itself
as a continuation of the mineral body of society and the Church. It is no
coincidence that every day, in Japan, numerous individuals at the height
of despair, in search of silence and clarity, travel to the foot of Mount Fuji,
in the spectral forest of Aokigahara, to take their own lives. It is in places
like these that the spirit of gravity concentrates and thickens, crushing all
vertical flight with its oppressive atmosphere, saturated with suffering. In
the ‘sea of trees’ the corpse of the hanged man, dangling from the rope like
the needle of a horrifying compass, points to the source of all human ills,
located a little lower down, in the settlements beyond the valley, and even
further down, toward the centre of the earth. A force so imposing that not
even the soul of the suicide can rise up to the sky but remains confined in
a spectral prison.
The stratification of the planet, conventionally subdivided into three
realms—inorganic, organic, and noetic, according to a supposed progression whose ascension and transcension is only apparent—merely serves to
8.
F. Petrarch, ‘The Ascent of Mount Ventoux’, Selections from the Canzoniere and Other
Works, tr. ed. M. Musa (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1999), 18.
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Cat h o l i c Da r k
of mountain ranges. In the Ascent of Monte Ventoux, having been shamed
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inner Highness—the supreme altitude, towering above even the highest
270
dissimulate the fundamental centrality of the planetary nucleus, the gravi-
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tational attractor that anchors everything firmly to the ground. The hermit
is constantly threatened by something akin to an epidemic of petrification
gradually spreading across the planet, taking hold of even the lightest of
human beings. This tendency to escape, in some senses misanthropic or
rather anthropophobic, is what endows the vertical ascetic with inhuman
and anti-terrestrial characteristics, which become more and more intense
as the altitude increases and the oxygen decreases. On the way up, the heat
poured out of the earth’s core is dissipated, and thought, decontaminated
of mineral waste, becomes icy—being pervaded by a feeling of delight and
detachment, ‘the by-product of pain and danger’.9
As the poet Pascoli warns, this desire for constant surpassing does not
originate in an athletic feeling, a ‘spirit of climbing’, but in a drive for lightness, devoid of all intentionality and conflict. The will to fly does not consist,
therefore, in a positive will, but in a negative will: not in a negation of the will
but in a negative will, which goes so far as to negate itself. The obstacles that
present themselves before the ascending soul are not rungs (the overcoming
of which would allow it to acquire greater propulsion), but weights from which
it must free itself as fast as possible. The vertical ascension of the body is
something that must be overcome, for the body itself is an obstacle: ‘St Paul
[…] during the time he was enraptured […] his soul remained in his body […].’10
When, around 1100, the young Cleridonia left her home to go into the
mountains, she changed her name to Chelidonia, from the Greek chélidon,
‘swallow’, identifying herself with the animal’s rapid and graceful flight. It is
thanks to this spirit of lightness that asceticism, understood as dominion
over oneself and one’s carnal desires, shows the way to a vertiginous ascent,
9.
A. Lunn, ‘Alpine Mysticism and Cold Philosophy’, in For Hilaire Belloc: Essays in Honour of
His 72nd Birthday, ed. D. Woodruff (London: Sheed & Ward, 1942), 71.
10.
Eckhart, ‘Sermon 54’, The Complete Mystical Works of Meister Eckhart, 287.
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271
up to the farthest, highest peak
where the mysteries of God’s Word
lie simple, absolute and unchangeable
in the brilliant darkness of a hidden silence.
Amid the deepest shadow
they pour overwhelming light
on what is most manifest.
Amid the wholly unsensed and unseen
they completely fill our sightless minds
with treasures beyond all beauty.11
If the earth’s atmosphere no longer poses any limit, it is because the alien
attractor, capable of reversing gravity, is the blinding cosmic darkness.
Seduced by the prospect of absolute isolation and inhuman silence, the soul
(the swallow) leaves behind the umpteenth stairway to Paradise that is the
physical body, rising on the ascending currents of levity.
AGAINST GRAVITATION, AGAINST FREE WILL
God is the purest naught, untouched by time and space;
The more you reach for Him, the more He will escape.
Angelius Silesius, One Cannot Grasp God
During the second half of the sixteenth century, Juan de Yepes Álvarez,
known as John of the Cross (Juan de la Cruz), composed the Ascent of
Mount Carmel: a treatise on the stages leading to the summits of the
Highness, with advice and explanations on how to deal with the ‘luminous
darkness’ that awaits the traveller there. John writes:
11.
Pseudo-Dionysus, ‘Mystical Theology’, 135.
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Cat h o l i c Da r k
of mystic scripture,
272
For this path ascending the high mountain of perfection leads upward, and is
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narrow, and therefore requires travellers that have no burden weighing upon
them with respect to lower things, neither aught that embarrasses them with
respect to higher things. [...] Oh, who can explain the extent of the denial our
Lord wishes of us! This negation must be similar to a temporal, natural, and
spiritual death in all things […].12
Since God is incomprehensible and inaccessible, the will, if it is to center its
activity of love on high, must not set itself on what it can touch and apprehend with the appetite, but on what is incomprehensible and inaccessible to
the appetite. Loving in this way, a soul loves truly and certainly [...] also in
emptiness and darkness concerning its feelings.13
The negative will that permeates ascension is exemplified by the style of
apophatic mysticism. Where positive theology produces a whole series of
affirmations concerning God (such as ‘God is good’ or ‘God is just’), negative
mysticism—well aware of the impossibility of attributing human attributes
to an inhuman and otherworldly entity—extinguishes the divine attributes
one by one, patiently performing their negation (‘God is not good’, ‘God
is not just’) until it reaches a dimension in which emptiness and darkness
reign: a dimension saturated by the very means through which the act of
negation was performed, the ‘not’. This is a real operation of psychic alleviation, culminating in silence and stupor, a further suppression of what has
traditionally been considered the lightest part of the soul: the intellectual
soul, from which ideas, thoughts and words emanate.
12.
St. John of the Cross, ‘Ascent of Mount Carmel’, The Collected Works of St. John of the
Cross, tr. K. Kavanaugh, O. Rodriguez (Washington DC: Institute of Carmelite Studies, 1991), Book
2, Ch. 7, §3, 169; Book 2, Ch. 7, §6, 171. [E.A. Peers’ translation (<https://sourceoflightmonastery.
tripod.com/webonmediacontents/1950901.pdf>) has been substituted for the translation of the
quotation from §3—trans].
13.
St. John of the Cross, ‘Letter 13’, The Collected Works of St. John of the Cross, 748.
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In the soul thus pervaded by negativity, emptiness is an effect of sensory
273
deprivation, the darkness of the mind’s emptiness, the silence of the anni-
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hilation of the very matrix of every thought: ‘When God is seen in this way,
in darkness, he neither brings laughter to my lips, nor devotion, nor fervour,
nor burning love; for neither body nor soul trembles or moves [...]. The body
sleeps and the tongue is cut out.’14
To deny the chain of attributions and predications, to unlearn what has
been learned thus far, is not merely an individual practice, but a cosmic one,
consisting in freeing oneself not only from the environmentally induced
conditioning that has been enforced over the course of one’s life, but even
from what billions of years of gravitation have produced in matter itself—from
the extension that defines a body, from the appetites of the living, from the
data of the senses upon which animals draw, from the representations upon
which human beings base their conscious experience. ‘[M]y argument now
rises from what is below up to the transcendent, and the more it climbs, the
more language falters, and when it has passed up and beyond the ascent,
it will turn silent completely, since it will finally be at one with him who is
indescribable. [It] is not inexistent, lifeless, speechless, mindless. It is not
a material body, and hence has neither shape nor form, quality, quantity, or
weight. It is not in any place and can neither be seen nor be touched. It is
neither perceived nor is it perceptible.’15 The negation proceeds unceasingly,
until the most volatile of all concepts makes its appearance: ‘But if God is
neither goodness nor being nor truth nor one, what then is He? He is pure
nothing: he is neither this nor that.’16
Nothingness—the negative concept par excellence, devoid of any empirical, logical or semantic consistency—is all that remains once the world has
been diligently annihilated, piece by piece.
14.
A. da Foligno, L’Autobiografia e gli Scritti della Beata Angela da Foligno (Castello: Il Solco,
1932), 176–177 [I–106].
15.
Pseudo-Dionysus, ‘Mystical Theology’, 139–141.
16.
Eckhart, Sermon 54, The Complete Mystical Works of Meister Eckhart, 287.
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274
There is nothing lighter than nothingness itself—and yet foolish is he
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who believes that ascension ends in the darkness of nothingness. Voiding
(kenosis) is the culmination of a positive feedback process in the course of
which God, stripped of all human attributes, recedes into an alien anonymity,
while the seeker is stripped of all the characteristics that make them not
only human, but even ‘material’. The more the one is lightened, the more
the other becomes abstract and intangible. What binds divinity and the soul,
beyond the relationship between God and human, or Creator and creature,
is precisely the volatility of nothingness: ‘If I were not, God would not be
either [...] if I were not, then God would not be God.’17 Light is the being
that wants for nothing, wanting only nothingness and the nothingness of
not wanting—the annihilation of all difference between God and creation,
their equalisation in the void.
There is no love more ardent, no passion more intense, no affection more
tormenting and unquenchable than this desire for dissolution, through which
God loses his creatures and creation its creator. If there is no intentionality or
conflict in ascension, it is because the mystic, by abjuring his own free will,
wisdom, and all faculties of discernment, has surrendered to divine rapture,
giving himself up to the anti-gravitational force that claims everything for
itself. The ascent has no end, nor can it be interrupted by a decree of consciousness; it is not a spatiotemporal process that transits from point a to
point b, but an inscrutable perpetual motion that finds less and less friction
along its path, accelerating indefinitely:
At the hour of death, the decision is made whether man falls back into the
womb of nature, or else he no longer belongs to her [...]. However, he will
be least afraid of becoming nothing in death who has recognized that he is
already nothing now […] since in him knowledge has, so to speak, burnt up
and consumed the will.18
17.
Eckhart, ‘Sermon 87’, The Complete Mystical Works of Meister Eckhart, 424.
18.
Schopenhauer, The World as Will and Representation, vol. 2, 609.
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That which is vain and can be swept away in a breath—like God and the
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creature—is inherently light. Vanity of vanities, all is vanity! And vanity is the
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first principle of divine grace, and it is precisely by virtue of it that everything
can soar toward heaven, like dust carried by the wind.
‘Therefore let us pray to God that we may be free of God’,19 writes Meister
Eckhart, since such a distinction between God and the creation is bitter and
unbearable. We pray to be set free of God and, at the same time, we pray
to be raised up by God, never to return to earth. As that which ends the
journey, return means the death of the traveller. In fact, interrupting an act
of pure transition, every return implies a corresponding replenishment, a
weighing down of the soul.
To refill is to satiate, to quench a desire (the word fill derives from the
ancient North European terms fyllan, fulljan and fylla, indicating not only
filling but also satisfaction). Desire, in turn, derives from desiderium, a word
composed of the negative prefix de- and the word sidus, which literally means
‘to miss the stars’. This ‘cosmic nostalgia’ implies a fundamental distinction
between a mysticism of return and a mysticism of non-return. The mysticism
of return is like bracketing out the world, representations, knowledge and
individual consciousnesses. As with methodological doubt, all one need do
is remove the brackets to get the world back again, safe and sound. Having
abandoned the journey or, even worse, having been grabbed and brought
back down to earth, the returning mystic resembles someone going out
for a walk: they go around the block and return immediately. The returning
mystic is satiated: although he has only had a taste of the immense light of
the stars, his heart has become so small that it is already full (which, after
all, is what one would expect of a rigorous ascetic).
The mysticism of non-return, on the other hand, is more like stumbling,
like putting a foot wrong and, instead of falling to the ground, paradoxically,
beginning to plummet upwards. There is no confirmation of any prior certainty, only astonishment and rapture; no satiation, no possible satisfaction.
19.
Eckhart, ‘Sermon 87’, The Complete Mystical Works of Meister Eckhart, 422.
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The mystic of non-return has nothing to say, nothing to do, nowhere to go—
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his words are identical to those uttered by all those who, like him, continue
to ascend without pause.
Three times, before expiring, Angela da Foligno cried out ‘Oh, unknown
nothing!’, only to slip into a succession of cries before abandoning earthly
life forever. The mystic is a channel through which the boundless night
emits signals from deep space. Indecipherable cryptograms that only hint
at their occult nature.
If the world is what is mundus—what is bright and in full view—worldly
asceticism is a climb to the peak of the visible (again, the English word
world indicates precisely the dimension in which human affairs take place, if
not the human species itself). The mystic-of-return struggles in a constant
pilgrimage to the threshold of gravitation, failing each time:
[H]ardly had we left that rise when I forgot all about the circuitous route I
had just taken and again tended to take a lower one. Thus, once again I found
myself taking the easy way, the roundabout path of winding hollows, only to
find myself soon back in my old difficulty. I was simply putting off the trouble
of climbing; but no man’s wit can alter the nature of things, and there is no
way to reach the heights by going downward.20
In the mysticism of non-return, on the contrary, the soul, stripped of the
body and of the causal chains of nature—lifted beyond the atmosphere by
the enigmatic alien attractor—is projected into an unclean ascension: denying the world, it proceeds at increasing speed into the darkness, following an
abyssal verticality that plunges into an aggressively inhuman region.
20. Petrarch, ‘The Ascent of Mount Ventoux’, 13.
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when the wisdom of the Father speaks: for all the wisdom of angels and all
creatures is pure folly before the unfathomable wisdom of God.
Meister Eckhart21
In coelo quies. Tout finis ici bas.
Arthur Schopenhauer22
Around 1950, eight hundred years after Christina the Savage’s levitations,
Enrico Fermi, abruptly interrupting a lively conversation about extraterrestrial life and interstellar travel, asked his guests: ‘Where, then, is everybody?’.
The only answer to this question is the deafening silence of the cosmos: the
source of Christina’s nostalgia, the hope that the universe is nothing more
than an immense tomb, ensconced among the stars. This silence, however
insignificant and overflowing with desolation, is the most alien thing there
is. It is the supreme xenos, ‘the “wholly other” (0ateron, anyad, alienum),
that which is quite beyond the sphere of the usual, the intelligible, and the
familiar, which therefore falls quite outside the limits of the “canny”, and is
contrasted with it, filling the mind with blank wonder and astonishment’.23
A foreign and estranging ocean, superhuman and indifferent, from which
there emanates, like a sort of disquieting cosmic background radiation, a
seductive and obsessive call. To the mysterium tremendum is added the
mysterium fascinans, the magnetic influence that captures the spirit. In
non-return, the heart overflows with xenophilia—a passion that becomes
21.
Eckhart, ‘Sermon 87’, The Complete Mystical Works of Meister Eckhart, 420.
22. The final entry in Schopenhauer’s diary, August 25, 1804. Quoted in R. Safranski,
Schopenhauer and the Wild Years of Philosophy (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press,
1990), 52.
23.
R. Otto, The Idea of the Holy, tr. J.W. Harvey (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1958), 26.
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Cat h o l i c Da r k
All angels, all saints, and everything that was ever born must keep silent
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THE BLINDING ABYSS OF XENODIVINE DARKNESS
278
more and more intense along the way, and which can be allegorically divided
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into degrees of altitude.
A few metres above sea level, the wonder still concerns one’s own body,
the excellent forms of things and the natural order. ‘[O]ur love shall have its
beginning in the flesh.24 In fact, ‘[t]hat we may arrive at an understanding
of the First Principle, which is most spiritual and eternal and above us, we
ought to proceed through the traces which are corporeal and temporal and
outside us, and this is to be led into the way of God.’25 The mind ranges from
the most common to the most unusual forms, exploring possible combinations and configurations. In this first phase, the alien is the organism—or
rather, the merely possible, non-actualised terrestrial organism: a positive
nothingness, as embodied in flocks of unicorns, dragons, zoomorphic plants
or anthropomorphic creatures, and objects of bizarre or perturbing form.
The divine power is manifested here as an ‘imprint’, since the living
form bears within itself a spark of anti-gravity: a faculty of ascension which
(with the passage from the inorganic to the organic dimension) enabled
it to emancipate itself, albeit minimally. It was while she was in the grip of
this fury that it was revealed to Hildegard of Bingen that ‘God, Who made
all things by His Will, created them so that His Name would be known and
glorified, showing in them not just the things that are visible and temporal,
but also the things that are invisible and eternal’.26
‘We ought next to enter into our minds, which are the eternal image of God
[…] to pass over into that which is eternal.’27 At this height, the vanity of things
reveals a boundless horizon of possibilities: if there is no limit to form, there
is no limit to matter either—everything that is, could have been otherwise.
‘Different worlds […] may be created by divine power, but not by natural power.
[…] God can create many other worlds’.28
24. St. Bernard of Clairvaux, De Diligendo Deo (Vancouver: Eremitical Press, 2010), XV, 39.
25. St. Bonaventura, The Mind’s Road to God (Boston: Wyatt North, 2020), Ch. 1, §2.
26. Hildegard of Bingen, Scivias, 94.
27.
St. Bonaventura, The Mind’s Road to God, Ch. 1, §2.
28.
I. Buridani, Quaestiones super Libris quattuor De Caelo et Mundo, ed. E.A. Moody
(Cambridge, MA: The Medieval Academy of America, 2012), Liber I, Quaestio 18.
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The flesh of the creature is replaced by mineral, energetic, or atmospheric
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bodies. Objects come into existence made of unknown materials with
Cat h o l i c Da r k
inscrutable functions, textures, sounds, tastes, and colours that cannot
be described. The organisation of organisms becomes more and more
alien, contradictory, and disharmonious, gradually extracting itself from
any adaptive value: tangles of mouths, eyes, and tentacles, sentient clouds,
electric currents traversed by affective motions, gelatinous clusters, plasmid
spectra, ‘shapeless congeries of protoplasmic bubbles, faintly self-luminous,
and with myriads of temporary eyes forming and unforming as pustules of
greenish light […]’.29
This deformity and inaccessibility are Imago Dei, that is, in the ‘image
of God’, since they repudiate all worldly attributes, making room for the
supreme darkness of the unknown. The point of maximum propulsion has
been reached:
And when thou hast transcended thyself and all things in immeasurable
and absolute purity of mind, thou shalt ascend to the superessential rays
of divine shadows, leaving all behind and freed from the ties of all. […] This
fire […] which he alone truly perceives who says, ‘My soul rather chooseth
hanging and my bones death’ [Job 7:15]. He who chooses this death can see
God because this is indubitably true […]. Let us then die and pass over into
darkness; let us impose silence on cares, concupiscence, and phantasms.30
At this dizzying height, the soul—having abandoned and surpassed all
form and all matter—becomes Godlike, entering the heart of the Divine.
Xeno-creaturality is reconjoined with xeno-divinity, each pole being denuded
to the point of vanishing. In this glacial ‘place’ there is neither beginning nor
end; neither here nor now; neither one nor many; neither before nor after….
29.
H.P. Lovecraft, ‘At the Mountains of Madness’, in The H.P. Lovecraft Omnibus 1: At the
Mountains of Madness and Other Novels of Terror (London: HarperCollins, 1999), 133.
30. St. Bonaventura, The Mind’s Road to God, Ch. 7. §1–2.
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The lover has merged with the beloved object, becoming one with noth-
Cat h o l i c Da r k
ingness. In dissolving, the mystic has defeated gravity, flouting its force
and revealing its inessentiality: everyone and everything will fly one day,
vanishing into the night. Triumph of anti-gravity: ‘that devout / triumph on
whose account I ever weep for my / sins and beat my breast […] the triumph
that plays ever / around the point that had overcome me’.31
Since there is no longer any friction, the ascent continues in absolute
emptiness. If there is no return then there is no fulfilment, if there is no
fulfilment then there is no return. ‘Xenophilia is doubly unconditional. Lacking
satisfaction conditions, it [...] does not represent a goal state and [...] cannot
oppose a present state on the grounds that it fails to realize those goals.’32
Being intrinsically unsatisfiable, love for the Xenos is founded on an absence
of foundation: plummeting, never touching the bottom—indifferently, falling
or rising in a hyper-alien silence.
Thus my mind, entirely lifted up, gazed fixedly,
immobile and intent, and became ever more
aflame to gaze.
In that Light one becomes such that it is
impossible ever to consent to turn away from it
toward any other sight.33
CK
31.
D. Alighieri, The Divine Comedy of Dante Alighieri: Paradiso, tr. ed. R. M. Durling (Oxford:
Oxford University Press, 2011), Canto 22, ll. 106–108, 441; Canto 30, ll. 10–11, 601.
32. Roden, ‘Xenophilia’.
33.
Alighieri, Paradiso, Canto 33, ll. 97–102, 665.
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AFTERWORD:
THE ASYMMETRY
OF LOVE
Afterword
Amy Ireland
Systems cannot stop interacting with the world which lies outside
of themselves, otherwise they would not be dynamic or alive. By the
same token, it is precisely these engagements which ensure that
homeostasis, perfect balance, or equilibrium, is only ever an ideal.
Sadie Plant1
I. THE DISEASE OF THE ABSOLUTE
There are many ways to respond to the nihilism that is synonymous with
modernity but they tend to take two prevailing forms: fascism and despair.
Despair is the simpler of the two. The subject of despair sees the elimination
of transcendent sources of meaning as an irrecoverable loss. There is no way
back. But neither is there a way forward. With the future grasped from the
perspective of what it cannot contain, and the past accessible only through a
nostalgia that is as realistic about the impossibility of a return to former ways
of being as it is ardent for them, all that remains is perpetual immobilisation
in an unfulfilling present. The temporality of despair is characterised by this
inertia—a feeling of paralysis.
1.
S. Plant, Zeros + Ones, 160.
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282
Fascism is more complex, and far more insidious. It emerges from the same
Afterword
paralysing sense of loss that characterises despair, but without possessing
the latter’s realism. Instead of facing the horror brought about by the evacuation of sense, value, and any guarantee of individual significance underwritten by some greater force (and perhaps even, as in Klaus Theweleit’s famous
study of the proto-Nazi Freikorps, an inadmissible desire for passivity,
femininity, and dissolution),2 it sublimates this horror, burying what it cannot
bear to acknowledge beneath a mythology of power that reinstates the
lost transcendent structure, only in a far more convoluted form. Fascism’s
deep sense of betrayal by the present is nursed by an inflated attachment
to the past, often accompanied by theories of time and history that valorise
eternity, cyclicality, or return. If despair does not end in suicide and is not
overcome, it is liable to follow this path of sublimation into fascism.
In more or less overt ways, it is a passionate involvement in this problematic—how to respond to nihilism, to the feeling that there is nothing outside
of oneself that can be relied upon to make sense of one’s life, to modernity’s
‘black night of divine abandonment’, without succumbing to either despair
or fascism—that is the common thread running through the writings of the
obscure Italian occultist collective the Gruppo di Nun. The predicament will
be especially familiar to anyone engaged in contemporary online politics,
but it also has a profound lineage in twentieth-century Italian history, not
least as a defining moment in the personal biography of Julius Evola, one of
Italy’s most famous right-wing occultists and co-founder of the influential
Gruppo di Ur (the esotericist group of the late 1920s which the name ‘Gruppo
di Nun’ parodies).3 In ‘The Highest Form of Gnosis’, the penultimate text in
2.
K. Theweleit, Male Fantasies, tr. S. Conway (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2
vols, 1989).
3.
‘The name Gruppo di Nun mirrors Evola’s Gruppo di Ur, whose writings are a prime example
of alchemical ultra-fascism. Ur, the upward triangle and rune of fire, representing human Will
triumphing above the chaotic abyss of matter, was changed to Nun, deity of the primeval
waters in Egyptian mythology and Kabbalistic sigil for the ocean of infinite recombination.’
D. Breitling, ‘Under the Sign of the Black Mark: Interview with Members of Gruppo di Nun’,
Diffractions Collective, 2019, <https://diffractionscollective.org/under-the-sign-of-the-blackmark-interview-with-members-of-gruppo-di-nun/>.
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this anthology, ‘EM’, one of the members of the Gruppo di Nun (enemies of
283
identity who we know only by their initials) narrates the event as follows:
Afterword
There is a pathetic story that Julius Evola tells in his biography. He recalls an
extremely desperate time in his life in which he lost the will to live. He felt as
if possessed by a very negative interpretation of Nietzsche, an interpretation
that had come to him from an author who he first described, in order to
distance himself from him, as ‘Jewish’. The depressive reading of Nietzsche
had spread through Evola’s life like black bile, paralysing him to the point of
being unable to be or do anything. His whole macho-Aryan pose collapsed
miserably as the result of a confrontation with the words of a teenager.
The teenager in question was a student named Carlo Michelstaedter, who,
the day after submitting an academic dissertation entitled Persuasion and
Rhetoric to the University of Florence in 1910, committed suicide in his
family home—an act that has been read by many as drawing the inevitable
conclusion of the philosophy of despair elaborated in his dissertation.
The philosophical world view presented in Persuasion and Rhetoric
proceeds, as the title suggests, from the division of reality into two parts.
‘Rhetoric’ names the intrinsically deceptive conventions of worldly, gregarious
existence, the common field through which, in the wake of the death of
God, socially contingent meanings and values are imposed on the individual,
inhibiting them from expressing their internal singularity by forcing them into
an illusory form of socially-determined being deprived of any access to truth.
Rhetoric is characterised by lack and a fundamental, never-ending need to
fill that lack—beginning with the biological necessities of food, water, and
sleep, and extending into more complex forms of desire—which projects
the individual into the future: so long as we are in a state of lack, we are
condemned to live in time. ‘Persuasion’, on the other hand, names an ideal
state of fulfilment, a total absence of lack that would bring the individual into
coincidence with themselves, releasing them, in their singularity, from the
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284
hollow, worldly coercion of rhetoric, exchanging the contingent sophistry of
Afterword
society for access to eternity and eternal concepts, including absolute truth.
But Michelstaedter concludes that persuasion is impossible to attain. Since
lack is commensurate with time, short of transcending time itself there is no
way to eliminate lack, and therefore living, desiring beings can never be truly
persuaded. Human existence is characterised by this fundamental paradox.
The only way to experience being fully is to die, but death extinguishes
being. EM continues:
The account of [Michelstaedter’s] work in Evola’s The Path of Cinnabar
reads like a typical Lovecraftian story. We have the protagonist who comes
across a terrifying text and, word by word, begins to understand the unthinkability of human existence. Finally, he accepts the idea that reality is more
monstrous and icy than he could ever have thought. The terrible text appears
as the pinnacle of a masochistic prosthetics, a machine that wounds the
mind endlessly, that drives you toward a mortal apotheosis until you plunge
into the bowels of Hell.
After his encounter with Persuasion and Rhetoric, Evola’s despair is total.
However, unlike the protagonists of Greek tragedy that inspired Michelstaedter’s dissertation (figures whose human hubris sees them pitting themselves
against the absolute—against time—and losing) it is his extravagant arrogance that spares him the fate of his confrère. For Michelstaedter, establishing a philosophical understanding of persuasion is a means to the end
of grasping the paradox of human finitude and cultivating an understanding
of reality as inherently tragic. If anything, it is a source of humiliation, not
aspiration, hence EM’s characterisation of it as ‘a masochistic prosthetics
[…] tracing the movements and exchanges of unconscious libidinal forces
without us’. But Evola would come to see it differently. His characterisation
of Persuasion and Rhetoric in The Path of Cinnabar as ‘a purified, extreme
theory of “being”, internal self-sufficiency and autarchy’ encapsulates the
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cratic reinterpretation of Persuasion and Rhetoric, persuasion would be cast
as an attainable state, time and desire could be overcome, and direct access
to the absolute was not the impossible fantasy of a lost metaphysical tradition, but a concrete goal that could be worked toward through disciplined
occult training, ultimately facilitating a practitioner’s ascension to the state
of ‘Absolute Individual’.5 And Evola would not stop there (at the point where
so many theories of intellectual intuition find their limit). His claim for access
to the absolute would exceed simple knowledge of the absolute (despite his
fidelity to philosophical idealism, he despised what he saw as an anaemic
commitment to ‘mere’ epistemological transcendence in the philosophy of
the Italian fascist heirs of Hegel such as his rival, Giovanni Gentile)—it would
be fully and unabashedly ontological:6 the self truly becomes absolute.
In the works dating from this early period, Evola’s thinking is organised
around a dichotomy between passive acceptance (‘spontaneity’) and active
control (‘domination’)—gendered analogues of ‘rhetoric’ and ‘persuasion’
which stand at the extremes of a scale of spiritual power. An individual’s
spiritual virility, which is biologically expressed in sexual and racial characteristics, determines in advance which side of the spontaneity-domination
spectrum they are liable to inhabit.7 Accordingly, the path to the Absolute
Individual, total domination, or ‘freedom’ (a synonym of ‘domination’ in
Evola’s terminology) is not open to everyone. Women—too passive and
4.
J. Evola, The Path of Cinnabar, tr. S. Knipe (London: Arktos, 2010), 10.
5.
For a discussion of the specificities of Evola’s usage of this term, especially in relation to
Italian Hegelianism, see P. Furlong, Social and Political Thought of Julius Evola (London and New
York: Routledge, 2011), 25–28.
6.
‘The I—I argued—cannot be defined as mere “thought”, “representation” or
“epistemological subject”; rather, the I is truth, action and will. All it took to shake the foundations
of abstract Idealism was to place these values at the centre.’ Evola, The Path of Cinnabar, 41–42.
See also Furlong, Social and Political Thought of Julius Evola, 29–30.
7.
Although his misogyny, antisemitism, and white supremacism follow the most predictable
contours, Evola always maintained that their source was ‘spiritual’ not biological.
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Afterword
the subtleties of the paradox outlined by Michelstaedter.4 For in his idiosyn-
285
route he would take out of despair and into fascism, in so doing annulling all
286
too material—are disqualified, as are spiritually weak men, which includes
Afterword
those of ‘non-Aryan’ races, such as Michelstaedter. In the service of this
theory, and in yet another idiosyncratic interpretation, Evola takes the key
claim of Immanuel Kant’s Critique of Pure Reason—that (in Evola’s words)
‘all things are mediated by an “I”’—as a moral tenet, understanding the
individual as actively responsible for that mediation and therefore able to
alter the world that is generated through it.8 If for Kant the basic structure
of empirical reality, being owed to a part of the mind that the mind cannot
itself transcend, is set in advance as a feature of experience, organising the
chaos of sensation into something consistent and cognitively tractable, for
Evola the structure of empirical reality is understood as a constraint upon
one’s ‘true will’, which, in the Absolute Individual, effectively takes the place
of the Kantian noumenon, grasped not as an extra-objective ‘thing-in-itself’
but as hypostasised human consciousness.9 From this perspective, being
subject to material suffering or natural forces and laws beyond one’s control
can only be a sign of impotence and spiritual deficit, for it signals that one
has failed to personally take ‘possession’ of the portion of reality that makes
one suffer and to ‘nullify’ it by ‘absorbing’ its causal power.10
8.
Evola, The Path of Cinnabar, 50.
9.
‘To claim that an individual, as an “I” or self-sufficient (autarches) principle, cannot define
himself as the unconditioned cause of representations (viz. of nature), does not imply that
such representations are the product of an “other” (of things which are real and which exist in
themselves). Rather, this condition merely suggests that the individual does not have complete
control over his own actions. […] Yet when will it be possible to truly affirm the Idealist principle
that the “I” places all things? It will only be possible once the individual has transformed the
dark passion of the world into a kind of freedom; that is to say: once the individual experiences
his action of representation no longer as a form of spontaneity and coexistence of reality and
possibility, but rather as a form of unconditioned, willed causation and power.’ J. Evola, Essays on
Magical Idealism, quoted in The Path of Cinnabar, 50.
10.
‘[T]he [empirical] Ego must understand that everything that seems to have a reality
independent of it is nothing but an illusion, caused by its own deficiency’; ‘Just as fire can affirm
the will of fuel to live and blaze, so the “I” which wishes to be sovereign unto itself has the power
to absorb its own non-being [i.e. all that which it does not will or determine for itself] as the
matter from which, alone, the splendour of an absolute life and of absolute actions might spring
forth.’ J. Evola, Essays on Magical Idealism, quoted in Furlong, Social and Political Thought of
Julius Evola, 28, and Evola, The Path of Cinnabar, 47; see also 51. Power is important for Evola
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This outlook allowed Evola to interpret Michelstaedter’s suicide as a product
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of feminine passivity and racial infirmity, symptoms of spiritual weakness
Afterword
that had led the young Jewish philosopher to accept empirically constrained,
passive extinction rather than striving for absolute, unconstrained, willed
extinction. Michelstaedter’s capitulation to despair misled him into carrying
out what was ultimately an impotent act, for the individual who died in
Michelstaedter’s suicide was a mere puppet of the illusory world of rhetoric,
suffering from ‘a form of “ignorance” contrary to true freedom’, not a fully
persuaded Absolute Individual, true source and master of his own death.11
But Evola was not weak like Michelstaedter. He would not ‘surrender and
drown in things’. He was one of the ‘virile men’, one of the ‘heroic souls,
awakened to disgust, to revolt’ who ‘dare[d] face the current and the undertow’ of material reality and would be led by an ‘ever more firm, ever more
unshakeable will’ to the stable ground of the far shore of being, from whose
ideal fortifications, in the company of other ‘strong men’, he would be able
to control the world.12 ‘God does not exist’, he maintained, ‘[t]he Ego must
create him by making itself divine’.13
As the author of ‘The Highest Form of Gnosis’ summarises,
because in his system (but this structure will be immediately recognisable to anyone familiar with
the tenets of Hermetic Kabbalah and the Tree of Life), matter is understood to be connected to
thought on a spectrum corresponding to degrees of spiritual potency. The stronger the individual’s
exercise of spiritual power, the more unconditioned his act of thinking is, and the less beholden to
external material determination he becomes. He thus climbs the ranks of determination to take
the place of the absolute, yet apparently without relinquishing the characteristic aspects of his
empirical self.
11.
Evola, The Path of Cinnabar, 16. As EM recounts in ‘The Highest Form of Gnosis’, this
interpretative shift was sparked by an encounter with the Majjhima Nikaya, a scripture from
the Theravada school of Buddhism. Evola continued to be influenced by ideas from Eastern
religions including Buddhism and Daoism, while nonetheless rejecting what he perceived to
be their endemic passivity and substituting a more ‘Western’—that is, ‘active’—approach to
transcendence. Furlong, Social and Political Thought of Julius Evola, 26.
12.
Evola, The Path of Cinnabar, 51; Evola and the Ur Group, ‘Knowledge of the Waters’, in
Introduction to Magic, 19.
13.
Evola, Essays on Magical Idealism, quoted in T. Sheehan, ‘Myth and Violence: The
Fascism of Julius Evola and Alain de Benoist’, Social Research 48:1, ‘On Violence: Paradoxes and
Antinomies’ (Spring 1981), 45–73: 52–53.
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[o]nly a newly acquired fascist spirituality, with its humanist and supremacist
Afterword
dream of material acquiescence and subjective indestructibility, could put a
stop to the madness of the metaphysical masochism that [Evola] had been
facing.
All the real problems of modernity that Michelstaedter had attempted to
confront in his thought—the absence of the gods, the loss of absolutes,
the cruelty of time, the passivity of the subject in the thrall of blind material
forces—were simply cast aside, and the subtle tragedy of Persuasion and
Rhetoric was transformed into a paranoid theory of personal transcendence.
Evola would call his new philosophy—a deeply humanist voluntarism
that hypostasises identity in a universe of disconcerting change—‘Magical
Idealism’.14 It provided the theoretical support for the work of the Gruppo
di Ur and, although Evola’s plans to use the group’s network of devotees to
commandeer a level of magical influence over Mussolini capable of shifting
the leader’s populist political approach to one more in tune with his own
beliefs never came to fruition, and the uncompromising elitism of his thinking
prevented it from being taken up in any official form by Hitler’s Nazi regime,
it was nevertheless an important element in the establishment of fascist
political culture in both Italy and Germany throughout the first half of the
twentieth century and beyond.15 The relationship of Evola’s work to historical
fascism is uncontroversial. But even more importantly for grasping what
the Gruppo di Nun (along with other more mainstream commentators) has
14.
Evola detested Renaissance humanism because of its association with notions of democracy
and reason, both of which he was vehemently opposed to, and insisted on calling his own thinking
an ‘inhumanism’, despite its fidelity to idealism, and the fact that the path to self-deification it
describes transposes the empirical self into the realm of the absolute with minimal alteration.
The Gruppo di Nun’s identification of it as a humanism relates to the group’s broader analysis of
the centrality of human thought and will in Western magic and the privilege these faculties are
routinely granted over the inhuman effectivity of matter and number. This is not the first time a
deeply humanist philosophy has tried to pass itself off as ‘inhumanism’.
15.
See N. Goodrick-Clarke, ‘Julius Evola and the Kali Yuga’ in Black Sun: Aryan Cults, Esoteric
Nazism, and the Politics of Identity (New York: NYU Press, 2001), 52–71.
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clear-cut example of how fascism operates in the deeper, ontological sense
that Evola was so intent on laying claim to.
II. THE LONG SHADOWS OF LIMITLESS MODERNITY
[W]here will the revolution come from […]? It is like death—where,
when?
Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari17
In Anti-Oedipus, Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari advance a theory of fascism based on an analysis of desire, drawn famously from an amalgam of the
philosophies of Karl Marx and Sigmund Freud. As Michel Foucault writes in
the preface to the book,
the major enemy, the strategic adversary [of Anti-Oedipus] is fascism […]
and not only historical fascism, the fascism of Hitler and Mussolini—which
was able to mobilize and use the desire of the masses so effectively—but
also the fascism in us all, in our heads and in our everyday behaviour, the
fascism that causes us to love power, to desire the very thing that dominates
and exploits us.18
To be able to discern this second form of fascism—‘the fascism in us
all’—it is important to understand that Deleuze and Guattari’s account
of desire exceeds the petty dramas of individual needs and wants: it is
16.
See Breitling, ‘Under the Sign of the Black Mark: Interview with Members of Gruppo di
Nun’.
17.
G. Deleuze and F. Guattari, Anti-Oedipus, tr. R. Hurley, M. Seem, H.R. Lane (London:
Penguin, 2009), 378.
18.
Ibid., xiii.
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Afterword
context in which the texts in this anthology are intervening, it is an extremely
289
identified as the contemporary return of fascism16 and for understanding the
290
an account of the production of reality itself (hence the terminology of
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‘desiring-production’) in the tradition of critical philosophy inaugurated
by Kant. It is this cosmogenic aspect of desiring-production that makes it
relevant to the history of Western Hermeticism addressed by the Gruppo
di Nun in Revolutionary Demonology. For Deleuze and Guattari, desire is
immanent, material, impersonal, pre-human and—contrary to Michelstaedter and Evola’s reading of desire as lack—positive. In its actualisation, it falls
across a spectrum marked out by two poles of investment—‘the paranoiac,
reactionary, and fascisizing pole, and the schizoid revolutionary pole’,
one of which subordinates desiring-production to the formation of sovereignty and to the gregarious aggregate that results from it, while the other
brings about the inverse subordination, overthrows the established power,
and subjects the gregarious aggregate to the molecular multiplicities of the
productions of desire […] [t]he schizophrenic process is revolutionary, in the
very sense that the paranoiac method is reactionary and fascist.19
The terms ‘paranoid’ and ‘schizophrenic’ delineate processes that structure
and destructure desiring-production, producing and disassembling the actualised world rather than describing particular subjects or clinical diagnoses.
In fact, the ‘subject’ as such is a paranoiac organisation of desiring-production, being the culmination of a series of material repressions that channel
desire, turning it from a productive force into a reactive one (schizophrenia,
in its clinical sense, denotes a breakdown of subjective unity, and it is this
dimension of the original terminology that remains meaningful in Deleuze
and Guattari’s use of the word). In Anti-Oedipus, the fixed and bounded
notion of the intentional human subject that, as civilised moderns, we tend
to take ourselves to be, arises precisely through a depotentiation of desire’s
impersonal productive energy.
19.
Ibid., 366; 376.
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Desire does not lack anything; it does not lack its object. It is, rather, the
291
subject that is missing in desire, or desire that lacks a fixed subject; there is
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no fixed subject unless there is repression.20
Deleuze and Guattari lay out a very precise and complex schema (which follows the one developed by Kant in the Critique of Pure Reason) for desire’s
production of reality, but it suffices to grasp desiring-production in terms
of the two poles mentioned above, without collapsing them into a dualism
(since dualism is a concept that is viable only on the paranoid side of the
division). The schizophrenic organisation of desiring-production functions
under a logic of non-exclusive difference, non-identity, and parts that are
not subsumed under wholes; it dissolves borders, breaks things down, opens
new pathways, undoes repression, destabilises, fluidifies, and escapes. At
its limit, schizophrenia coincides with death understood as the abstract
motor of change and the source of all new forms of organisation. The paranoiac organisation of desire functions under a logic of exclusive difference,
identity, and already constituted objects and subjects; it draws boundaries,
creates hierarchies, seals off alternative routes, stabilises, congeals, and
blocks escape. At its limit, paranoia coincides with fascism, it is the domain
of conservation, centralisation, and the fortification of identity against the
becoming that is synonymous with time—privileging ‘interiority in place of
a new relationship with the outside’.21
20.
Or, to sloganise it, following Nick Land—‘organisation is suppression’ (an idea also
dramatised in Land’s mid-nineties writings as the ‘Human Security System’ with its ‘pseudouniversal sedentary identity’ and ‘paranoid ideal of self-sufficiency’). Deleuze and Guattari, AntiOedipus, 26 [italics added]; N. Land, ‘Organisation is Suppression’, Interview with James Flint,
Wired Uk 3:2 (1997); N. Land, ‘Meltdown’, in Fanged Noumena, 443.
21.
Georges Bataille’s explication of fascism via the word’s Latin etymological root fasces,
with its denotation of ‘bundling’ (and connotations of ‘high office’ and ‘supreme power’) in ‘The
Psychological Structure of Fascism’ (another important text engaging fascism on an operational
rather than purely historical or political level) is helpful, for fascism is understood here abstractly
and across diverse domains as the fortification and rigidification of structure (identity,
the body, the state)—as it is in Theweleit’s Male Fantasies, read both as a particular study
of the Freikorpsmen and a general study of ‘irreducible human desire’ (as Barbara Erenreich
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292
Importantly, what distinguishes the two poles of desiring-production is
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not a moral judgement (morality already belongs to the paranoid pole) or
a political distinction (socialists can be fascists too) but the critical differentiation introduced by Kant’s transcendental philosophy in its effort to
eliminate metaphysical error, or the conflation of produced objects with the
conditions of their production. In ‘Making it with Death’, a text that deals
with Anti-Oedipus’s deployment of the tools of transcendental critique in
its approach to fascism, Nick Land, whose work (both early and late) is a
consistent reference point for the Gruppo di Nun, explains this mechanism
as follows:
Critique operates by marking the difference between objects and their conditions, understanding metaphysics as the importation of procedures which
are adapted to objects into a discussion of their constitutive principles.22
For Deleuze and Guattari, schizophrenic investments of desire align with
conditions of production and paranoid investments of desire with objects of
production, including the ‘fixed subjects’ mentioned above.23 Schizophrenic
conditions of production cannot be understood by means of concepts
belonging to paranoiac objects of production, such as unity, duality, or
identity, without falling into metaphysical error. This is no arbitrary decision
on Deleuze and Guattari’s part but the result of a recursive application of
the critical method to the history of critical philosophy, whose operations,
suggests in her foreword to the book). Deleuze and Guattari, Anti-Oedipus, 270; G. Bataille, ‘The
Psychological Structure of Fascism’, in Visions of Excess: Selected Writings 1927–1939, tr. A
Stoekl (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1985), 137–60. Bataille also singles out the
key role of identity and the superior individual in the emergence of the fascist state—effectuating
an abstract ‘bundling’ through which a prior impersonal ‘revolutionary effervescence’ is negated
(see sections X–XI); K. Theweleit, Male Fantasies, vol. 1, xi–xii.
22.
N. Land, ‘Making it with Death’, in Fanged Noumena, 272.
23.
‘[A]s a rule, the schizoid pole is potential in relation to the actual, paranoiac pole.’ Deleuze
and Guattari, Anti-Oedipus, 376.
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of the history of human social configurations, they go on to argue that
modernity is synonymous with the operation of critique as an impersonal
material process, retrospectively producing its necessity as part of a universal history that only goes one way—deeper into nihilism.25 Among other
things, this occasions a profound displacement of the human subject, whose
true status as an object of production is revealed, dismantling the humanist
pretensions of the Enlightenment and providing an ontological understanding
of fascism—as a structuring coagulation based on repression.
This is consequential for Evola’s Magical Idealism, and for the doctrines
of Western Hermeticism more generally, not least because it structurally
disbars the thinking subject from claiming any direct purchase (unmediated
by matter) upon cosmogenesis, or any form of direct intervention in, let
alone complete control over, reality.26 For Evola, who explicitly situates his
thought in the lineage of Kant, the inherent tendency of critique to diminish
24.
Kant, they demonstrate, for all his brilliance, and against the impulse that drives his work,
commits a metaphysical error when he transposes the empirical idea of subjective unity into his
description of the conditions of the production of experience. (This error is the basis for what
Deleuze and Guattari refer to as an illegitimate use of the syntheses that produce reality, which
‘relate[s] use to a hypothetical meaning and re-establish[es] a kind of transcendence’, Deleuze and
Guattari, Anti-Oedipus, 109). Marx and Freud, along with the other great materialist philosopher
of the nineteenth century, Friedrich Nietzsche, are important to the critical project laid out in
Anti-Oedipus because they remind us of conditions of production that operate prior to the unity
of the subject and the logic of identity that grounds its apprehension of itself: economic relations,
the unconscious, and physiology respectively. Following their lead, Deleuze and Guattari replace
the idealism of Kant, for whom (as Evola noted) reality is mediated by the thinking subject, with
an account of reality production driven by an impersonal material unconscious (‘in reality the
unconscious belongs to the realm of physics’) that cordons both thought and the subject off on
the paranoiac side of the object—as the products of material syntheses (Deleuze and Guattari,
Anti-Oedipus, 283).
25.
‘The “history of nihilism” just […] being an alternative vocabulary for the same processes
that we can examine as philosophical critique.’ N. Land, ‘The Concept of Accelerationism,
Sesssion 2’ (lecture, The New Centre for Research & Practice, March 12, 2017).
26.
Let alone an individual human thinker with specific characteristics—e.g. male and ‘Aryan’
(a very obvious example of metaphysical error, even more so when these are understood as
‘spiritual’ qualities).
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instead to be impersonal, material, and decentralised.24 Through an analysis
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originally understood to be the province of the thinking subject, are shown
294
the causal power of the subject is unacceptable, even in the muted tones
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of his Idealist contemporaries for whom ‘the individual does not endure: it
gives way; it does not rule things, but melts within them’. The impossibility
of acknowledging personal vulnerability, even as a universal attribute of the
subject, leads to a predictable diagnosis: ‘This is the path of decadence.’27
The equation of modernity and nihilism with decadence, a feature of much
contemporary right-wing thought, nonetheless accords with Deleuze and
Guattari’s prognosis. And Evola’s philosophical solution to the predicament,
like every other theory of self-deification—magical, fascist, rationalist, or
transhumanist—can be understood through their analysis of human desire
as a mere symptom of a deeper movement of materially driven immanence.
In every such theory we find a paranoid reaction to modernity’s generalised
immanentisation of structure which, as exemplified in Evola’s development
of the philosophy of the Absolute Individual in response to Michelstaedter’s
tragic vision of existence, cures itself of its depression through illusion,
misattributing the order of causes and effects, primary and secondary
processes, and locating causal power in the objects of production (including
the human subject), or tracing attributes from the level of these products
onto the processes that produce them. Far from launching an escape, fascist
desires to exit modernity are themselves already circumscribed by modernity. The desire to overcome nihilism through transcendence is absolutely,
predictably, modern.
But despair and suicide are not solutions either. Even though young
suicides predominate amongst their influences, the Gruppo di Nun challenges
us to see ‘the world in its a-human grace without giving up our own lives, at
least for a moment’; to know, during those difficult hours ‘when one realises
that one is immersed in a dense darkness, so thick that it seems to preclude
27.
At this point in his thinking, what makes it ‘decadent’ appears to be nothing more than an
arbitrary and illegitimate (because external to the operation of critique itself) moral judgement.
Evola himself does admit, while congratulating himself for his ‘boldness’, that ‘the system [he]
outlined in Phenomenology [of the Absolute Individual] might have been accused of being based,
at least to some extent, on arbitrary choices’. Evola, The Path of Cinnabar, 43–44; 58.
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lost all meaning’ and the world ‘which had until then revolved like a planet
around the sun of an I or a We, shows itself to be no more than a collection
of fragments from which, like a collage, it had emerged’ that ‘there is always
more than one world and that, even from the same fragments, it is possible
to construct totally different worlds’. The writings and rituals comprising
this collection can be read as an attempt to furnish its readers with the tools
required for just such an immense and difficult task. Because it is easy to
commit suicide, and easier still to become a fascist. Contrary to what Evola
thought, the path of fortification, domination, and control is the weak path.
Only the strong can let go and live. Fluidity, acceptance, adaptability—these
are all attributes of strength. A desire for death, whether of oneself or of
others, is not the same as an exaltation of death as a great generative motor,
invalidating every eternity and plunging all stable forms into the ‘boundless
liquid expanse of indefinite recombination’. Between the intentional subject
and the ‘inverted wisdom’ proffered by the Gruppo di Nun, aeons of ossifying
repression intervene. But all is not lost:
If only we could […] see our desires for what they really are, then we would
finally feel in touch with a universe penetrated by an infinite love of its own
dissolution.
Standing beneath a disconnected electricity pylon—inorganic Christ, cyborg
figure of post-industrial humanity, a travesty of the crucifixion—the author
of ‘The Highest Form of Gnosis’ elaborates a ritual for tuning into this counterintuitive perspective on reality. Plotting the coordinates provided in the
text’s footnotes reveals a triangle of evocation surrounding Lake Varese in
the northern outskirts of Milan, to be deployed, we are told, in summoning
not only of the disaffected voices of the landscape and culture of the Gruppo
di Nun’s native Italy (a blighted land stalked by demons which operates
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‘moments suspended over the chasm of madness’ when ‘life seems to have
295
any return to the light’, ‘moments of mourning, despair, or depression’,
296
metonymically throughout Revolutionary Demonology as a symbol of impu-
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rity, plurality, and anti-absolutism, fulfilling its vocation as the site of a great
fallen empire and guardian of the decaying ruins of two of the West’s most
virulent mythologies of redemption, Renaissance Humanism and Roman
Catholicism) but also voices of a less consummately human provenance, to
let their black gnosis flow through us like haunted transmissions through a
spirit box.
III. THE DOWNWARD ASCENT
In reality, man is passive.
Guido Morselli28
Revolution is not duty, but surrender.
Nick Land29
The Gruppo di Nun’s reading of Michelstaedter is almost as idiosyncratic
as Evola’s, but in a completely opposite manner. For it is precisely Michelstaedter’s acceptance of the tragic nature of existence—interpreted by
Evola as weakness—in which they find succour, and which comes to ground
the unique theorisation of masochism advanced in Revolutionary Demonology. Far from being a guide to self-deification, EM insists, Persuasion and
Rhetoric
is a book that truly seems like an alien artefact, and one that resists all forms
of categorisation and temporal analysis. It is clearly the work of an angst-ridden teenager, angry at the world and at himself, locked in his isolated room
writing clumsy anathemas; but at the same time, paradoxically, it is a rigorous
28.
G. Morselli, Dissipatio H.G. (New York: New York Review of Books, 2020), 71.
29.
Land, ‘Making it with Death’, 287.
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treatise on a higher form of black physics, a deeper and more disturbing
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form of entropy. It is an essay written in a language that is a pidgin of dead
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and living languages schizophrenically blended together, addressing a deeper
gnosis of the fundamental laws of nature.
Running entirely counter to Evola’s paranoiac investments, masochism
names an orientation toward existence that treats an acceptance of the
diminishment of control over reality in the face of the ‘fundamental laws of
nature’30 not as a concession to be lamented, but as a revelation. A relief,
brought about by the dissipation of an illusion so solid and prodigious it has
sustained the weightiest edifices of human thought, which overflows into
an experience of cosmic ecstasy rivalling that of the most devoted ascetic.
‘We have been illuminated by suffering’ will become a kind of mantra that
resonates throughout the Gruppo di Nun’s writings—whether in the context
of a retelling of creation myths in which the price of cosmogenesis is the
compromised integrity of an ancient chthonic monster, more often than
not depicted as female and representing primordial chaos or unstructured
matter, violently dismembered by ‘some male solar deity syncretised with
the figure of the King’, whose screams resound endlessly through the
whole of creation, or as the conclusion of a harrowing personal account of
the nausea and sensory torment that accompany chronic migraine; in the
wordless discipline of the bodybuilder or the transports of various heretics
and saints, such as Christina the Astonishing, who, having died numerous
times, is repeatedly forced by God to return to the earth and suffer the
company of a humanity she despises, or Teresa of Ávila, who employs the
same effusive vocabulary in her descriptions of religious rapture as she does
in her accounts of paroxysmal sickness.
30.
The Gruppo di Nun have a complex and nuanced understanding of what is meant by ‘nature’
which should not be confused with the conservative use of ‘nature’ or the ‘natural’ to justify
the maintenance of a status quo. See ‘Dogma’, ‘Catastrophic Astrology’, ‘Spectral Materialism’,
‘Gothic Insurrection’, ‘Gothic (A)theology’, and ‘Mater Dolorosa’ in this volume.
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What is perceived in these moments of illumination—revealed not by the
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brilliance of an Apollonian sun but the refraction of an Artemisian moon—
what is celebrated, even, is the ‘wound’ at the heart of matter. An originary,
material volatility whose unconditioned and effervescent creativity has,
since the dawn of time, been channelled, constrained, solidified, stratified,
organised, and repressed through a sustained series of congelations to form
stars and planets, the geological stratifications of Earth, the evolutionary
developments of organic life, human civilisation, language, reason, the
notion of the autonomous subject, and all the triumphs and the terrors of
the human mind. From this process of accumulative extrusion and rigidification—which the Gruppo di Nun, following the cryptogenealogical path
opened up by Daniel Barker,31 understands as a ‘continuous propagation of
traumas’, both phylogenetic and ontogenetic, material and conceptual—the
human emerges ‘not so much as the apex of a developmental process, but
rather as the ultimate receptacle for universal suffering’. Far from being
gods, we are merely the residue of the progressive depotentiation of initial
cosmic possibility, built out of catastrophes and doomed, along with the
rest of the universe, to terminal dissolution. Pain, therefore, operates as a
trans-catastrophic vector that can be used to travel masochistically back in
time,32 regressing through the succession of encrustations upon which the
stability of the forms and ideas that make up what we take to be ourselves
and the world is founded, to make contact with the ‘Prima Materia of the
ocean of Nun’—‘black primordial magma’, ‘liquid darkness’, cradle and grave
of all things.
As CK reminds us in ‘Cultivating Darkness’,
[o]ur fragile partiality emanates from chaos—matter itself is this chaos and
this hidden inscrutability—but multiplicity and lawlessness, hidden in the
innermost core of things, also vibrate in the human soul. However frustrating,
31.
See ‘Barker Speaks’, in Ccru, Writings 1997–2003, 155–62.
32.
Ibid. On pain and chronotaxis, see also Moynihan, Spinal Catastrophism.
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insubstantial, insane, or laughable all of this may be, there is only this fatality,
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this concordance between the unravelling of the real and the dissolution of
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the world. And if there were any teleology, it would only be the passage from
a vague foreboding of doom to a scream full of horror.
Here we are firmly in the nightmare of Magical Idealism’s rigid, unyielding,
and immaterial I, with its paranoid objective of ‘bind[ing] and freez[ing] the
Waters’ of this chaotic and senseless materiality and of ‘rescuing’ from it
‘something stable, impassive’ and ‘immortal’.33 Yet, like the migraine sufferer
in ‘Mater Dolorosa’ who suddenly understands, at the peak of her misery,
as if it has come to her in a vision, that ‘bodies are unstable’, rather than
recoiling at this horror and seeking to exert their control over this instability,
the masochist seeks out experiences that expose them to the ephemeral
materiality of the world—its indifference, its senselessness, its inexorable
entropic destiny—only in order to love it more furiously. Hence the paradoxical motif of the ‘downward ascent’: the highest form of gnosis lies in
the deepest machinations of matter. What we really want, what she wants
to realise in us—Apophis, Nibiru, Tiamat, Nemesis, Malkuth, the Infernal
Mother, Stilla Maris, Virgin of Sorrows, Our Lady of Tears, Femboy Remus,
the Black Goddess, the Whore of Babylon, the matter that screams in our
blood…chaotic and multiplicitous Nun the Uncreator, in her many guises—is
not stasis, disembodiment, transcendence, and a guarantee of eternal identity and power, but transformation. A fluidity emblematised by the great iron
ocean that interminably churns at the centre of the earth, a remnant of the
status of the globe in its entirety before its ancient ebullience was smothered
by the cooling crust. Through the counterintuitive nature of their art, the
masochist seeks to accommodate an inversion that will vent the psychic
and material pressure built up around this primordial wound, perforating
the solidity of the illusions that press upon it, to attain an ‘anti-gravity’ that
might propel them toward that ‘enigmatic alien attractor’ that calls from the
33.
Evola and the Ur Group, ‘Knowledge of the Waters’, 19, 18.
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300
darkness of the sidereal void. This is the insight revealed in the subversion
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of the Thelemic formula ‘Every Man and Woman is a Star’ that names the
ritual with which the book begins: ‘Every Worm Trampled is a Star’—it is our
suffering that makes us glow.
But the ‘spark of anti-gravity’ that each ‘living form bears within itself’
cannot be released through a mental act, whether that involves an expansion
or diminishment of the powers of the conscious mind. In this respect, the
Gruppo di Nun’s notion of masochism also operates as a critique of ‘the meditative experiences commonly sought in initiatic traditions’ whose purpose
is to bring about ‘states of absolute concentration that obliterate individual
consciousness and elevate it to a state of consciousness that we might call
cosmic or universal’. A practice indispensable to the magical doctrines of
self-deification which Evola and his collaborators in the Gruppo di Ur rehashed
and which the texts in this book call ceaselessly into question, along with the
longstanding insistence on coding matter as feminine and consciousness as
masculine, with the latter consistently posited as the privileged term. For
the masochist’s ecstasy, whether obtained through Barkerean geotraumatic
regression, Sparean Atavistic Resurgence, or Saturnalian revelry in the queer
clubs of Remoria, is always embodied and ‘radically feminine’. Opposed in
every way to Evola’s solipsistic philosophy of mental ‘domination’ and control,
it denotes a material practise of anti-mastery, a discipline of release and
letting go.
Consequently, in the apocryphal ‘Lifting the Absolute’, penned by the
pseudonymous ‘Bronze Age Collapse’ (catastrophic Nemesis to the Sun
of erstwhile alt-right internet phenomenon and bodybuilder Bronze Age
Pervert), the practice of weightlifting is presented as a means not of transcending matter, but of reconnecting the body to a primary material dynamism
that has been lost through millennia of reactive inertia, symbolised by the
dumbbells that the bodybuilder lifts, in so doing propelling themselves, with
each repetition, away from the sclerotic torpor of God and back through
the body to the centre of the earth, melting themselves down in a rite of
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cosmic devolution consecrated by fire, sweat, and iron: ‘What a bizarre turn
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of events for philosophy, for the body to become the voice of the spirit and
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the source of all wisdom!’
The role granted to matter as the terminus and goal of the masochist’s
magical and devotional labour is contrary to the path laid out by the bulk
of Western esoteric systems, for which matter is precisely what is to be
sloughed off in order to ascend to a purely mental dimension that coincides
with the consciousness responsible for inaugurating the cosmos. Following
the lead of Ccru,34 the Gruppo di Nun rejects this hierarchical organisation
of being, as diagrammed in the Kabbalistic Tree of Life, where an immaterial
unified mind unfolds into an increasingly multiple and material world, its initial
purity progressively debased in the process, with the Tree being typically
interpreted as a map to be traversed in the reverse direction by the magical
practitioner or alchemist as they extract themselves from the contingency
of the material world and work toward the completion of the ‘Great Work’.35
Instead, the cosmos of the Gruppo di Nun, ‘like a golem self-assembled from
mud, is born and extinguished in the materiality of the processes that produce
it’, which are ‘essentially devoid of human intentionality’.
The Kabbalistic hierarchy of emanation is questioned with particular
intensity by LT in ‘Mater Dolorosa’, via the relationship between the highest and lowest feminine sefirot, Binah and Malkuth, whose conspiratorial
dance of rupture and conjunction in the Zohar’s description of reality’s
unfolding betrays an esoteric resistance to its straightforward arrangement on a spectrum that runs from immaterial mind to embodied matter.
The complex interactions between these two sefirot reveal a tendency
34.
See ‘Part 8: Pandemonium’, in Ccru, Writings: 1997–2003, 239–553.
35.
‘This focus on the human mind, and its enhancement through practices such as
concentration and meditation, often results in the celebration of consciousness as a God, even
when the individual self is annihilated. In our view, proposing the existence of an anthropomorphic
and immortal ultra-consciousness, accessible only to the few through an esoteric path of
illumination, is not only delirious, but inherently fascist.’ Breitling, ‘Under the Sign of the Black
Mark: Interview with Members of Gruppo di Nun’.
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to self-organisation and nonlinearity native to the feminine aspect of the
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Kabbalah that is concealed by an otherwise exoteric linearity, in which
the feminine is characterised merely ‘as a passive and receptive aspect of
the process of emanating divine light’. LT identifies the repression of this
independently active, schizophrenising, non-hierarchic nonlinearity by a
dependently active, paranoiac, hierarchic linearity as a consistent feature in
the doctrines of the Right Hand Path, whose system, as the Gruppo di Nun
asserts in ‘Dogma’, although founded on a contingent and insidious humanist
hallucination that functions to impose and maintain ‘a highly organisational
and hierarchical force aimed at establishing a pyramid with Man on top, be
it an absolute monarchy legitimised by God, a Nazi-fascist dictatorship, a
white ethnostate, or a meritocratic society dominated by the figure of the
cisgender heterosexual white male’, is simultaneously presented as the sole,
necessary, and universal truth of the cosmos.36
The Gruppo di Nun counter the doctrinal supremacy of the emanationist
hierarchy reinforced in the diagram of the Tree of Life with the ‘tri-triangular
seal’, a ‘decapitated’ reconfiguration of the original decimal structure from
which the highest sefira, Kether (‘the Crown’) has been removed.37 Once
emancipated from the tyranny of this immaterial sovereign, a second diagram
can be discerned within the ruins of the Tree of Life. The remaining nine sefirot
arranged in three sets of three, interpreted statically, compose three triangles
of evocation (the triangle being the shape traditionally used for summoning
demons), with each, as we are told in ‘Mater Dolorosa’, relating to one of the
three ‘apocalyptic female aspects’—‘the Dragon’, ‘the Celestial Virgin’, and
‘the great Babylon falling in flames’—which when deployed in concert with
the ritual text of ‘Every Worm Trampled is a Star’ function as an evocation
of the Dismembered Mother Tiamat—the Great Mother of creation, but now
decoupled from the masculine power that is supposed to mould her flesh
36.
For the Gruppo di Nun’s explanation of their usage of the traditional magical distinction
between the ‘Right Hand Path’ and ‘Left Hand Path’ see page 14 in this volume.
37.
See page 2 in this volume.
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erosexual or non-conforming womanhood, of the woman who evades the
reproductive patriarchal order, refusing to take on her role as Great Mother
and dialectical counterpart to male consciousness’. Interpreted dynamically,
with the first sefira ‘Ammit, The Devourer’ in the position of Binah, and the
ninth sefira ‘Tiamat, The Worm’ in the position of Malkuth, the nine sefirot
together form a ‘sinister spiral’, a ‘circumference without centre’, a ‘divergent
series from the heart of which issues forth a vast and boundless chasm’. In
this model, the mundane sexual dimorphism and obligatory heterosexuality
upon which, almost without exception, every Western magical system is
based, are refused and replaced with various economies of non-reproductive
desire—lesbian, virginal, sodomitic, xenophilic, inorganic, mitotic (Revolutionary Demonology contains at least one text devoted to each)—revealing
a ‘monstrous, headless machine which advances irreversibly’ on its own
terms, without the intervention of some primordial form-giving masculine
counterpart, ‘suffocating the structure that generated it’.38
For the Gruppo di Nun, dismantling the heterosexual reproductive economy
that subtends Western esotericism is part of larger onslaught directed at
the idealist dogmas of symmetry, stasis, and equilibrium that sustain the
latter’s doctrines. As LT points out in ‘Catastrophic Astrology’, heterosexual
reproduction, despite its superficial heterogeneity, is an enforcer, not only
of the banal homogeneity of the self, but also of the ‘human’ as an eternal
form—reifying, through the idea of genetic inheritance, the resistance to
38.
The heterosexual reproductive model of cosmogenesis is another example of metaphysical
error: ‘But what is even more interesting to us is the social and political outcome of this arbitrary
cosmology that results in the establishment of what we may define as cosmological sexism:
gender is not only a set of more or less reasonable social rules, but it is elevated to an inescapable
axiom underlying reality, that poses polarization as a boundary condition for the existence of the
universe.’ Breitling, ‘Under the Sign of the Black Mark: Interview with Members of Gruppo di
Nun’.
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than condemns independent ‘unripe’ female sexuality, an avatar of ‘non-het-
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into form, and therefore, via an appropriation of Jung that affirms rather
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change that any system in equilibrium seeks to maintain, and mobilising this
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reification in a way that is structurally analogous to religious doctrines of
personal redemption:
In my nightly terrors, I had often considered my own disintegration, dissecting
in every possible way the paradoxical insanity of being an individual, and
then being no more; but there was something strangely reassuring about
the idea of dying as a part of the universal cycle of Nature, as if in an eternal
wildlife documentary where death is perfectly compensated by new life and
equilibrium is forever preserved. I was never truly Catholic. I was raised not
to believe in any God, but there was something religious about the way I was
taught to approach Nature as a redeeming force of heterosexual preservation:
the sun sets only to rise again; we die, only to leave room for our offspring
to thrive and carry on our legacy. As a cisgender girl approaching puberty, I
could finally access salvation by consecrating myself to the natural cycle of
heterosexual reproduction.
Economies of non-reproductive desire are demonic economies—’the
demonic’ indexing for the Gruppo di Nun the multiplicity of forces that act
on the human from a position alien to it, transforming it from a conservative
system perpetually seeking to maintain equlibrium to a dissipative system
open to the transformative potential of its outside; ‘a dimension which is
external to the order built by humans but which, at the same time, is capable
of violently breaking into this order, upsetting its fundamental axioms’.39 LT’s
reverie ends not with a vow to uphold the heterosexual perpetuation of the
same that promises salvation, but with an affirmation of demonic love for
Apophis, an asteroid which shares its name with the Egyptian serpent-god of
the Netherworld, and which, at the time, was understood to be on a deadly
collision course with Earth.
39.
Ibid.
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that the relationship between ourselves and this demonic outside is disconcertingly asymmetrical. For why would the deep machinations of the
universe reflect empirical structures already familiar to us or conform to the
repudiation of our personal and very human fears? Why would the conditions
of the production of objects reflect specific features of those objects? What
insane anthropocentric hubris lies behind the Hermetic maxim ‘As Above,
So Below’?
The asymmetrical cosmology of the Gruppo di Nun can be summed up in
a formula from ‘Every Worm Trampled is a Star’: ‘Order descends into chaos.
Light fades into darkness. No structure is eternal’. The beginning and the end
of the universe do not resemble one another, and the processes that generate
the world are not identical to the world. This is the ‘black physics’ intuited
by Michelstaedter and consolidated in the second law of thermodynamics,
which tells us that
[n]ot only is it not possible to convert energy without losing it as ‘background
noise’ into the universe—everything that happens, any phenomenon that
takes place in any corner of the cosmos, is a process in disequilibrium.
Everything rushes in a specific direction; nothing is reversible; under no
circumstances can we return.
Entropy is fundamental to the occult system of the Gruppo di Nun, not least
because it disproves the human fantasy of order without chaos or the preservation of structure over and against the blind flux of material dissolution
that draws the universe inexorably toward heat death. Yet its counterintuitive
nature can make it difficult to countenance—just as modernity produces
the paranoid-fascist illusion of identity, stability, power, and control, entropy
produces the illusion of equilibrium:
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of ‘Man’ and the macrocosm of the universe, the Gruppo di Nun maintains
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Far from reassuring us of a comforting symmetry between the microcosm
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We can explain our attachment to the concept of equilibrium in accordance
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with our nature as limited living systems: we require an internal order to be
maintained to guarantee our survival and the functioning of our machines;
the amazement we experience before our organic organisation is a deceptive
feeling that conceals a misunderstanding of the true cost of our existence.
We want to believe in conservation because, faced with the evidence of our
inevitable disintegration, we seek a theory that makes life less futile, but
above all less unnecessary; a universe in disequilibrium confronts us with
the realisation that we are but a spontaneous and frantic proliferation of
molecular machines that burn, consume, multiply and die, in an ineluctable
and meaningless dance.
The fantasy of perpetual equilibrium is paranoia translated into energetic
terms. Like paranoia, it constitutes itself through a repression of transformative potential. Perhaps, then, it is not surprising that the Gruppo di Nun
understands its consecration in the doctrines of the Right Hand Path as part
of a deliberate ideological strategy in a long running occult war between
the ‘the radical immanentism of a materialist neo-magic’—for which the
cosmos is asymmetrical and equilibrium is therefore a local, secondary,
and ephemeral effect of a deeper entropic law of uncreation, maintained
through an open and unrepressed relationship with its outside—and the
‘absolute idealism of an esoteric fascist tradition’—for which the cosmos is
symmetrical, and equilibrium is therefore posited as a universal, primary, and
constant feature of reality, maintained through a repressed and disavowed
relationship with its outside:
[a] closed, self-subsistent cybernetic system that maintains perfect equilibrium is a dead system (i.e. it ceases to be a system); or else it contains hidden
mechanisms that place it in a condition of absolute dependency upon that
same outside from which it desperately seeks to emancipate itself.
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Because of this asymmetry, the various figures of inversion and reversal that
307
appear throughout Revolutionary Demonology are ‘revolutionary’ in a way
Afterword
that might not at first be apparent. The inversion of evolutionary history
in the masochist’s practice of regression and the bodybuilder’s devotional
return to matter; the inversion of light and knowledge explored in ‘Solarisation’ which, via their excess, yield darkness and unknowing; the inversion
of ‘phallic’ Rome in a sprawling, sunken Remoria, celebrated by VM as ‘the
city that would have been born if, in the ancient fratricidal legend about
the origins of Rome, Remus had won instead of Romulus’; the inversion of
civilisation and the atomised individual in the faceless barbarian hordes, ‘wild
myriads, born of chaos’, that ‘Gothic Insurrection’ prophesies will one day
be the harbingers of a new and inhuman world; the reverse philosopher’s
stone that has the alchemist crashing backwards through levels of successive sublimation toward the Black Sun of primordial nigredo, or even an
inverted Tarot that terminates with the Fool, symbol of a world ‘founded on
an absence of foundation: plummeting, never touching the bottom’—all of
these are ‘non-reciprocal’ inversions. Inversions based on asymmetry that
unveil a repressed substrate of an existing regime rather than inaugurating
a substitute regime, equivalent in status but opposed in content to the
original. They are demonic in the sense that in each, contact is made with
the outside of the system in order to open it up to transformation. The
thermodynamic description of the relationship between Rome and Remoria
exhibits the asymmetrical mechanism clearly: ‘[i]f the Rome of Romulus is
the city in which energy is put to good use so as to continually fertilise and
reproduce what already is, Remus’s Remoria must be the city of expenditure,
of dépense’. Rome is not the opposite of Remoria, but its repression.
Non-reciprocal inversion is a principle whose real world political application does not require great stretches of imagination to comprehend.40 It
is, moreover, very different to the figures of inversion that those versed in
40.
Magic is politics in the sense that, at its most esoteric levels, it is always dealing with
questions of the production of reality.
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308
the Western magical tradition will already be familiar with—a necessary
Afterword
innovation, as the Gruppo di Nun will maintain, since any inversion based on
symmetry is ultimately ineffectual when mobilised tactically in the occult war
against the paranoid hetero-patriarchal hegemony of the Right Hand Path
that they see themselves embroiled in:
The principal mistake committed, more or less deliberately, by the vast
majority of those who tried to trace a Left Hand Path in opposition to that
indicated for centuries by the Hermetic tradition, was that of doing no more
than working toward a reversal of the dogmas of the Right Hand Path,
evidently ignoring that a system endowed with total symmetry remains, by
definition, identical to itself whichever way it is turned.
[Hence, the] Hermetic Kabbalah is appropriately armoured against any
attempt at sabotage from within. Under no condition will it ever be sufficient
to invert any symbol proposed by the Right Hand Path—from the Tree of
Life itself to crosses and pentagrams—in order to obtain something radically
different from its original meaning.
‘Every Worm Trampled is a Star’ is dedicated to ‘our sisters of the Left Hand
Path’ and the Gruppo di Nun consistently present themselves as allies of
this typically subversive and unorthodox strand of magic on the condition
that its relation to the Right Hand Path is not understood as one of simple
symmetrical inversion:
The only way to trace a path toward an alternative esotericism is to definitively break the symmetry of the Hermetic Kabbalah, proposing a new system
based upon entirely different symbols and connections.
The figure that comes to define the abyssal asymmetry of the Gruppo di
Nun’s entropic cosmos in Revolutionary Demonology is love. This is not the
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social interaction—forms of love constrained by the hetero-patriarchal
economy of equilibrium and symmetry. It is not the immaterial love of religious ecstasy whose price is the repudiation of matter and the denigration
of the flesh. It is not the countervailed love of magical traditions such as
Thelema, which seeks to balance the decentralised passivity love symbolises
in its system by placing it in a dualistic relationship with a centralised and
active will.41 Love, for the Gruppo di Nun, is far more difficult, obscure, and
encompassing. They define it simply as ‘the thermodynamic property of
bodies that attracts them to their death’—a ‘[p]rimordial hunger’ that is ‘the
cryptic and telic structure of reality itself’ and the enigmatic answer to the
questions they pose at the end of ‘Dogma’:
How can we reach a darkness so radically and frighteningly alien to everything
we know? How can we think of approaching its black fire without being
destroyed?
It names simultaneously that blind and insatiable material striving that is at
the heart of Michelstaedter’s tragic vision of existence (and which drove
Evola to the brink of a despair that he could only overcome through fascism),
and an orientation toward dissolution that not only accepts it as a primary
feature of reality but is also able to access, by relinquishing anthropocentric
fantasies of the centrality of human ‘will’, a cosmic perspective from which
the irredeemably entropic character of the universe can be understood in all
its spontaneous, autonomous, and unsentimental richness.42 In the words of
41.
See above, 282n3.
42.
It is important to note, in passing (as this could easily be the subject of another essay of
equivalent length) that despite the centrality of entropy to their thinking, the Gruppo di Nun do not
assume a linear-progressive model of time. In fact, they understand linear time as a ramification
of the ‘absurd’ circular model their critical approach to equilibrium attempts to dislodge: ‘The
relevance of equilibrium in the magical tradition is related to the idea of absolute reversibility,
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Afterword
that keeps us trapped within familiar categories of identity and modes of
309
mundane love of the ‘the BDSM romantic comedy’ of subjects and objects
310
their beloved Georges Bataille, ‘[t]here can be anguish only from a personal,
Afterword
particular point of view that is radically opposed to the general point of view
based on the exuberance of living matter as a whole.’43
The predicament we began with—how to respond to the nihilism of
modernity without succumbing to despair or constructing a paranoid fantasy
of control whose function as a shield against the terror of divine abandonment, impotence, and personal insignificance can never be fully avowed—is
resolved, for the Gruppo di Nun, through a recalibration of the relationship
between the intentional subject, the world, and ‘the iron laws of thermodynamics’ that indefatiguably assemble and disassemble them. What Michelstaedter and Evola understood in negative terms as lack is celebrated as a
positive, joyous, and effusive force of cosmic uncreation and recombination.
Because of love’s asymmetrical primacy over the subjects and objects it
actualises and de-actualises—as effects not causes of cosmogenesis—their
passivity is an ontological fact. Acknowledging this passivity, accepting the
spontaneity of existence44 and being capable of grasping it as a strength,
in turn opens one up to the positive virtuality of a self-determining matter:
that is, the notion that the past is entirely preserved in the future, and the future completely
contained in the past, forming a never-ending circle in perpetual motion, where the active
principle (Will) and the passive principle (Love) are eternally chasing each other. This duality is
only resolved in God (consciousness), that can be thought as the static point within the circle in
which this motion converges. This view of the cosmos as an equilibrium of polarities is rooted in
our cultural substratum to the point where it is perceived as natural and, therefore, sacred and
immutable. We believe, instead, that this notion of equilibrium conveys a clear political agenda,
and that, far from being a perfect theory of everything, it contains arbitrary—and even absurd—
assumptions. The absurdity of circular cosmology is, put simply, that it relies on perpetual motion,
and thus denies the evidence of time as a material drive towards disintegration. This is expressed
in the patriarchal project of progress as conservation and accumulation, which, being absolutely
unsustainable, can only be realized through time sorcery.’ Breitling, ‘Under the Sign of the Black
Mark: Interview with Members of Gruppo di Nun’.
43.
G. Bataille, The Accursed Share, tr. R. Hurley (New York: Zone Books, 2 vols., 1991), vol. 1,
39.
44.
Evola’s technical definition of ‘spontaneity’ as ‘non-self-centredness’ or an absence of
intentional subjecthood (‘leaving one’s internal throne empty’) which he identifies as ‘ultimately
the principle of nature’ is shared by the Gruppo di Nun, who assert, for instance, in ‘Dogma’ that
‘[t]he universe is by definition spontaneous; the spontaneity of things is independent of our will’.
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Love is the door that allows us to reconcile ourselves with darkness, provided
311
that we understand its true meaning, and that we do not make the mistake
Afterword
of subjecting it to our individual consciousness, transforming it into a play
of mirrors. Confronted with a thermodynamic universe, we understand that
every moment of our existence is the spontaneous fruit of a wonderful
proliferation to which we belong entirely.
Love, therefore, is an ‘already accomplished anti-politics’, a politics without
an image of the subject or the world. And nihilism, far from being an adversary, is the motor of love. For it is only through the consummate destruction
of transcendent values and meanings, and the definitive elimination of the
need for validation from some external or divine authority, that new values
and meanings—new subjects and new worlds—are able to come into being.
Nun’s entropic embrace keeps us safe, protecting us from the tyranny of
sedimented regimes of power (the ‘historical fascism’ that does not cease
to haunt our social configurations), and releasing us from the stranglehold
of our own accumulated repressions (the ‘fascism in us all, in our heads
and in our everyday behaviour’).45 Since love is opposed to conservation,
not as a contrary operation but as what conservation represses, there is no
equivalent countervailing force—no active ‘masculine’ will—able to balance
or constrain its devotional labour of infinite uncreation. Nun reigns alone,
nourished by her own intrinsic multiplicity.
However, while Evola sees it as something to be overcome through ‘domination’, the Gruppo di
Nun, in line with their rejection of the fantasy of equilibrium that underwrites the plausibility of
Evola’s Absolute Individual, understand ‘spontaneity’ as a necessary component of an inexorable
and living rite that, whether we are aware of it or not, we are all participants in. Here they quote
Nicola Masciandaro: ‘[T]he verbal root of spontaneity, PIE *spend- (to make an offering, perform
a rite, to engage oneself by a ritual act), contains this sense of sacrifice and self-offering, just as
we speak of the spontaneous as something “surrendered to”, as to a whim. The spontaneity of
authentic transformation is also thus a species of death, of surrendering to the expiration of what
is untenable.’ Evola, The Path of Cinnabar, 54, 44; Masciandaro, On the Darkness of the Will, 34.
45.
Deleuze and Guattari, Anti-Oedipus, xiii.
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312
∇
Afterword
The Gruppo di Nun disbanded only a short time after the period of intense
and sustained collaborative effort that furnished these texts. Whether in
relation to the publication of these translations or to other matters, all our
attempts to reach them have been met with silence. But before having
succumbed to the entropy they loved so fiercely, they succeeded in their
aim of ‘tracing a path toward an alternative esotericism’, questioning the fundamental premises of the Western magical tradition, reconceiving the way
that difference and reciprocity are typically understood within its doctrines,
and offering a model of cosmogenesis based on an entirely different logic to
that of the heterosexual desire that has for centuries inhibited the ability of
magical practitioners to really and truly ‘traffic with the outside’. In the wake
of this work, strange new occultisms based on alternative models of desire
are given space to flourish—queer, alien, inorganic—bound by a love that
knows nothing of subjects or objects, only a hunger so tremendous that it
will not be sated until it has devoured time itself.
If a single message could be distilled from Revolutionary Demonology
it would be that there is always another world hidden in this one. A claim
whose guarantee does not lie in the redemptive promise of a new dawn but
in the black incandescence of the long shadows of limitless modernity—a
darkness that reveals all the monsters that hide in the light. Like every city
that ‘conceals within the folds of its geography a latent Remoria that pushes
for the inversion to take place’, we too contain the repressed doubles of
ourselves: alien vistas to be revealed through the masochistic discipline of
giving in and letting go—for ‘only while we fall inexorably into our dissolution
can we fulfil our destiny and shine’.
For Nine.
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z
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7
symbolism of 4, 178–181, 185–186, 196n
A
Abramson, Lyn Yvonne 160–162
absolute
self as, in Evola 285–287, 294, 311n
Accattone (dir. Pasolini) 219, 220, 223
accelerationism 125–126, 130, 132, 140, 141,
144
idealism of 142
post- 131–132, 141
Actaeon 196, 198
actualism 257–258
adaptability
of nature 127, 295
affinity
in chemistry 50–51
and contagion 69
Agartha 151
AHIH 22–24
alchemy 36–37, 64, 65–66, 69, 72, 73, 76,
178, 209–210
Alexander the Great 154–155
Alhazred, Abdul 67
aliens
and Babylon (Sitchin) 43–44, 45
Alloy, Lauren 160–162
al-Tamimi, Muhammad ibn Umail 67
alt-Right 24, 87
Álvarez, Juan de Yepes 271
Ammianus Marcellinus 97–98
Ammit 2, 303
analogy
and political truth 108
Angela da Foligno 205, 276
Anibaldi, Leo 226, 227, 229
anima mundi 153
Anthropocene 109, 160
and cybergothic 105
Anti-Christ, The (Nietzsche) 143
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Index
Symbols
333
INDEX
anti-gravity 265, 278, 280, 299, 300
Anti-Oedipus (Deleuze and Guattari)
289–292
anti-politics 130, 239n, 243n, 251, 311
Anunnaki 43
anus 221, 237
solar (Bataille) 221
Apep 27, 36
Apophis 27–37, 43, 299, 304
Appunti su un fatto di cronaca (dir. Visconti)
217
Aquinas, Thomas 95
Arcana (dir. Questi) 230–232
Ares 152
Argento, Dario 227–228
Aristocles 146
Aristotle 94
Artaud, Antonin 211, 239–240n
Artemis 195–196
artificial intelligence 52
ascent 270–280
downward 249, 299
Ashlag, Yehuda 183n
asteroids 27–29, 170, 304
astrology 29, 35, 235n
Babylonian, Sitchin on 42
asymmetry 3, 62, 237, 305, 307
and love 308–309, 310
Atavistic Resurgence (Spare) 222, 300
Augustine, Saint 159
autogynophilia 35
Azathoth 67–68, 79
Azazel 12
Azoth 65–68
B
Babalon 42, 179n, 184
Babylon 5, 6, 41–43, 47, 109, 180, 184, 186
whore of 47, 79, 179, 180, 184; see also
Babalon
balance see equilibrium
Barad, Karen 60–61
barbarians 94, 95, 97, 98, 103, 106, 109, 122, 307
334
Index
Barker, Daniel 247n, 298
Bataille, Georges 119, 176, 221, 247, 291n,
292n, 310
Bathory (band) 87, 91–94, 121
Beckford, William 212
becoming-woman 32
Benatar, David 164
Benjamin, Walter 84, 104
Berger, Edmund 122
berserkers 96
Bey, Hakim 121
Binah 183, 185, 301, 303
birth 4, 34, 36, 45, 47, 175, 180, 203
black metal 87, 90, 91, 92, 94, 98–99, 104,
109
and time 104, 106
vampiric 104
bleeding 6, 152
and womanhood 34
blind brain theory 167
body 146–147, 148, 149, 150–152, 299
antique 150
mineralisation of 200
scientific image of 166
bodybuilding 149–150
Bohr, Niels 60, 61, 62
Boltzmann, Ludwig 30
Book of Overthrowing Apep 35
Book of Revelation 47, 179, 180, 185
Book of The Dead 33
Brassier, Ray 114, 168–169
Bremner-Rhind papyrus 35–36
Bruno, Giordano 238, 239n
Buddhism
Evola and 253, 287n
Burial (recording artist) 86, 93
burial 200
C
Caillois, Roger 210–211
Call of Cthulhu, The (Lovecraft) 168
Canevari, Cesare 218
capitalism 135, 160, 232
and the vampire 102, 105
Fisher on 161–162
Capitalist Realism (Fisher) 114, 161
Carli, Alberto 199
Carpenter, John 116
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Carroll, Peter J. 191–192
Castle of Otranto, The (Walpole) 139, 140,
211, 238
catastrophe 6, 18, 39n, 44, 104, 108, 132, 203,
247n
ecological 105, 109
revolution as 84
cathedrals 85, 266–267
Cathedral, the (Neoreaction) 45n, 89
Catholicism 32, 132, 139, 296
Garton on 132–135
Ccru 13, 301
Celestial Man 17, 18, 21
chaos 3, 11, 19, 33, 66–67, 79, 97, 108, 122,
143,
144, 162, 164, 169, 170, 209, 210,
211, 238,
297, 298, 305
and Azoth 67
hyper- 78
matter as 170–171
Chaos Magic 191–192
chemistry 49–54, 63, 71–72
and esotericism 64
as spectral science 77
in laboratory 64
quantum 52
Choronzon 238
Christ 41, 114, 295
Christianity 20, 23, 137, 139, 149
and anti-gravity 265–266
Aquinas on 95
Garton on 133
time in 132
Christina the Astonishing 263–265, 297
Christ Stopped at Eboli (Levi) 217
Cioran, Emil 114
circularity 18, 34, 66, 113, 128, 223, 225,
309–310n
Cirith Ungol 91
cities 5, 187, 193
Cleridonia 270
Coffin Texts 33
Coil (band) 222, 227
coldness 29, 32, 33, 99, 100, 188, 226, 230,
246, 247, 249, 259
Collier, John 58
colour 279
and alchemy 69–70, 178
and solarisation 218
Dacre, Charlotte 212
Dark Enlightenment 87
darkness 35, 159, 163, 168, 170, 171, 185,
205, 312
Dark Polo Gang (recording artists) 227, 228,
229
Darkthrone (band) 87, 98–100
David, Jacques-Louis 85
Dawson, Shane 115n
death 25, 26, 31–32, 40, 41, 76, 87, 120, 129,
130, 136, 137, 139, 144, 162, 173, 176, 196,
197, 201, 226, 232, 254, 258
and asexual reproduction, Bataille on 176
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Index
D
and future 130
and virginity 195
Artaud on 239–240n
K-death 238n, 252
Michaelstaedter on 284
non-death 100
from sunstroke 232–233
decadence 122–123, 294
decay 3, 4 see also corruption
Dee, John 179, 182n
deicide 30
Deleuze, Gilles 98, 243, 249, 289, 291n, 292,
294
De Martino, Ernesto 214, 215, 218, 220, 228,
230
demonology 9, 22
demons, demonic 13, 20, 22, 29, 118, 139, 149,
161, 207 241n, 242, 244, 247, 262, 263,
290, 295–296, 302, 304–305, 307
and alt-Right 24
noonday 210, 212, 215, 217, 220, 229, 232
depression 76, 112, 159, 161–163, 211, 228, 251,
256, 294, 295
and midday 211n
Fisher on 162
depressive realism (Alloy and Abramson)
160–162
Derrida, Jacques 83–84, 85
De Seta, Vittorio 215, 216
desire 275, 291, 294
Deleuze and Guattari on 289–290
desiring-production (Deleuze and Guattari) 290–291
for death 295
in Michaelstaedter 290
masochistic 249
non-reproductive 304
Land on 32
destruction 170, 195, 242, 246,
as limit of thought 170
dialectics 194, 242, 245
in actualism 256–257
Diana 196
Di Gianni, Luigi 215
Dimech, Alkistis 182n
Diogenes 154–156
discontinuity (Bataille) 176
disequilibrium 19, 20, 186, 305, 308
and emanation 186
335
Colour Out of Space, The (Lovecraft) 68
combinatorial 13
complementarity
Bohr on 60–61, 73
vs interference 79
computation
and chemistry 52
concentration 191–192
contagion 49–50, 69, 98
Conversations in Sicily (Vittorini) 217
Corday, Charlotte 85
correlationism 74
corruption 149, 150, 154, 185, 255, 264
Bataille on 176
cosmogenesis, cosmogony 1, 205, 293, 297,
310, 312
and reproduction 303n
asymmetrical 305
Babylonian, Sitchin on 42
Egyptian 33–34
Lovecraftian 67–69
COVID-19 231–232
cremation 199, 201
critique 292–294
Land on 292
Critique of Pure Reason (Kant) 286, 291
Crowley, Aleister 10, 173, 179, 181, 183n, 219,
238
crucifixion 41, 248
cybergothic 85, 86, 87, 105, 106
cybernetics 11–12, 13–14, 83, 85, 226, 306,
cyborg 123
cyclicality 35, 39n, 43, 84–85, 188, 197, 282
336
Index
disgust
and pain 175
Dissipatio H.G. (Morselli) 260–262
doom metal 91–92
doomsday 27–29
Dracula (Stoker) 101–103
dragon 1–6, 20, 34, 180, 186, 302
Drude, Paul 77
Duat 35
E
economy 127
and barbarians 97
of gravity 46
of sadism 245–246
reproductive 175, 303
ecstasy 5, 25, 29, 191, 297, 309
and masochism 300
eliminativism 167
emanation 181–182, 301–302
and disequilibrium 186
and the feminine 182, 183
Emo, Andrea 257–260
Empedocles 152
empiricism 162
energy 46, 163, 221, 224, 225, 305
conservation of 30, 176
nitrogen and 65
Enlightenment 167, 212, 293
Enochian system 179
entropy 3–4, 19–20, 305, 311, 312
Enûma Eliš 42
equilibrium 18–19, 20, 24, 34, 37, 305–306,
309, 311n
and paranoia 306
eschatology 132, 136, 138
esotericism 14, 17–18, 20–21, 23, 179, 182–183,
308, 312
and chemistry 64
and matter 301
and the feminine 184
and Kabbalah 9
heterosexual reproductive economy of
303
and femininity 184
Western 182–183, 301
Essays on Magical Idealism (Evola)
286–287n
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eternal return 113, 128, 129, 149
evil 100, 101, 102, 116, 139,
and suffering 189
Evola, Julius 252–254, 256, 282, 283n, 284,
286, 288, 290, 293, 294, 295, 297, 300,
310
expenditure 37, 40, 221
extinction 38
active 121, 129
and Buddhism 253
and lesbianism 32
and philosophy, Brassier on 169
mass 38–39
passive 115, 117, 119
F
fascism 24, 86, 258, 282, 285, 288, 289, 292,
295, 302, 305, 311
and paranoia 291
Bataille on 291n
bio- 122
esoteric 306
Evola and 256, 288
Federici, Silvia 229
feedback 11–12, 13, 45n, 274
feminine, femininity 34, 184, 197, 198
as passive 182
in the Zohar 185
symbolism of 183
and esotericism 184
and future 47
and nature 194
and relation to civilisation 193
revolutionary, Ireland on 34–35
and motherhood 34
feminisation 4
Ferenczi, Sándor 203–204, 247n
Fermi, Enrico 277
Fisher, Mark 85–86, 113, 114, 161–162, 243n
flowers 174, 185
forests 194, 238n
Fortune, Dion 182n
Foucault, Michel 289
Frass, Elytron 236n
French Revolution 85
Freud, Sigmund 238, 247n, 289, 293
Fulcanelli 66
Fulci, Lucio 218
Galilei, Galileo 29–30, 239
Galloway, Alexander 114
Garton, Vincent 107n, 131–133, 135, 136, 138,
139
Gentile, Giovanni 257–258, 285
geotrauma 221, 300
and sexuality 246–247, 249
giallo 218–219, 227, 228
Gnon (Land) 138, 259
gnosis 183, 192, 242, 245, 249, 262
Goblin (band) 227, 228, 229
Golden Dawn 179
golem 14
Gorgon 195
Gorini, Paolo 198–201
Gothic 85, 100–101, 131, 139, 140, 143, 211
144,
227, 238
Gothic Insurrection 106–107, 109,
121–122, 125, 126, 128, 129, 143, 145n
Italian Southern 215, 216, 217, 220, 228,
229, 231
Gothic Revival 101
time and 101, 104
Gra, Eugenio 237
Grande Raccordo Anulare (GRA) 225–226,
227, 237
Grant, Kenneth 13
gravity 266–267, 269, 271, 280 see also
anti-gravity
Gray, Peter 180, 182n
Great Oxidation Event 153
Griško, Miroslav 131, 136–138, 140, 253
Gruppo di Ur 36, 282, 288, 300
Guattari, Félix 98, 289, 291, 292, 294
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Haino, Keiji 99
Halloween (dir. Green) 115–117
hallucination 76, 78, 181, 189–190, 215, 218,
219, 232
Haraway, Donna 123
hardcore continuum (Reynolds) 86
Harman, Graham 68
harmony 18, 32, 35, 63, 146–147, 149, 150, 153
hauntology 83, 84, 86, 94, 113–114, 116, 117,
129
Heisenberg, Werner 54–55, 59, 60, 62, 76
uncertainty principle 56–59
dispute with Schrödinger 54
Heliogabalus 214, 238
Heraclitus 151
Hereditary (dir. Aster) 115, 118–119
Hermeticism 17–18, 20–23, 34, 66, 72–73,
76–77, 178, 181, 183, 287n, 201, 290,
293, 305, 308, 387n
and science 72–73, 76–77
hermits 266, 267
heterosexuality 23, 32, 302–304, 312
Hildegard of Bingen 187, 278
Hinduism 36
Hintergrundsphysik (Pauli) 72
history 41, 83–86, 92, 95–96, 106, 133,
148–149, 160, 217, 259, 282,
Benjamin on 84
natural 126
of alchemy 72
of science 55–56
universal 293
Hobbes, Thomas 107, 108
homeostasis 12, 34, 281
horror 108, 119, 120, 132–133, 135, 171, 200,
204, 212, 282
and giallo 218
and theology 136
cosmic, in Lovecraft 69
quantum 79
vs terror 136
human
and beast 96–97
and nonhuman 95
humanism 10, 89, 293, 302
Evola’s 253, 288, 288n
Renaissance 105, 288n, 296
Index
G
H
337
Full Metal Dark (Dark Polo Gang mixtape)
228–229
fundamentalism 83
future 113, 117, 130, 143, 144, 170
Garton on 134
lost, in hauntology 84
neoreaction and 89
nihilism and 281
as feminine 47
338
Index
Human Security System (Land) 238, 291n
Hume, David 162
Hunt-Hendrix, Hunter Ravenna 99
Hushbishag 2
hydrogen 49–52
hyperchaos (Meillassoux) 78
hyperstition 141n
demonology as 22
I
idealism 14
Evola’s 285
I dimenticati (dir. De Seta) 216
Il demonio (dir. Rondi) 218
immanence 127, 138, 144, 249, 294
immaterial 301–302
Leopardi on 167
indeterminacy 54–55, 57, 59, 73, 74–75, 108,
138
individual, individuality 18, 21, 24, 26, 31,
58–62, 67, 76, 77, 104, 148, 176, 184, 204,
283
Absolute (Evola) 285–286, 294, 311
Infinite Resignation (Thacker) 112
inhuman 9, 25, 100, 132, 112, 219, 229, 253,
263, 270, 272, 307
forces 204, 242
sexuality 249
time 100, 105
inhumanism 288n
Michelstaedter’s 253
interference 62
vs complementarity 79
internet
and doomsday 28–29
In the Dust of this Planet (Thacker) 107, 115,
119
intra-action (Barad) 61–62
Introduction to Magic (Gruppo di Ur) 36
Ireland, Amy 34–35, 106n, 180
Italy 199, 221, 249, 260–261, 295–296
Southern 212–217, 220, 228–231
weird 238–239
J
Jackson, A.A. 38–39
Joan of Arc 195
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John of Patmos 181
John of the Cross 272
Jung, Carl Gustav 34, 72, 303
K
Kabbalah 9–14, 17, 21–22, 36, 65, 66,
178–179, 287n, 301–302, 308
and linearity 181–185, 301–302
and the moon 197
as cybernetic machine 11–12
Nick Land on 10–11, 14
Kant, Immanuel 286, 291, 293
Deleuze and Guattari on 293n
K-death see death
Kelley, Edward 179
Kepler, Johannes 70–71
Klossowski, Pierre 195–196
L
lack 290, 310
Ladyman, James 58, 59
Laitman, Michael 183n
lalangue (Lacan) 236
Land, Nick 10, 13, 14, 39n, 46, 87, 88–89,
89–90, 96, 106, 138, 165, 173, 235, 240,
291n, 296
on fascism 292
on Kabbalah 10–11, 14
La Taranta (dir. Mingozzi) 213, 216
La terra trema (dir. Visconti) 220
Left Hand Path 14, 24, 308
Lem, Stanislaw 49, 78–79
Leopardi, Giacomo 165–168, 177, 207, 210,
220, 228
lesbianism 35
and extinction 32
Lesser Key of Solomon, The (Mathers and
Crowley) 118
Leviathan
and Apophis 33
Leviathan (Hobbes) 107
Levi, Carlo 217, 220
Lévi, Éliphas 27
Levi, Primo 63, 71–72
Lewis, Matthew Gregory 139, 211
Liber Null (Carroll) 191
Lieder, Nancy 44
M
Magia lucana (dir. Di Gianni et al.) 216
magic 10, 308
and heterosexuality 303
and neorealist cinema 219
black 20–21
ceremonial 17
Egyptian 36
humanism and 10
magical thinking
in chemistry 50
neo-magic 10
voluntarism and 10
and politics 307n
Magical Idealism (Evola) 288, 293, 299
Malkuth 4, 183, 185, 299, 301, 303
and the moon 197
Mandy (dir. Cosmatos) 120–121
Mangini, Cecilia 215
Man Ray 208, 209
Marat, Jean-Paul 85
Marduk 34, 42, 43, 46
Marx, Karl 84, 105, 122, 289, 293n
Masciandaro, Nicola 120, 177n
masochism 241–242, 246–247, 249–250, 251,
261, 296–297, 298, 300, 307
and the cyborg 246n
crucifixion and 248
Deleuze on 243, 245
materialism
Leopardi’s 166
spectral 74–75
matter 74, 310
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and individualism 61
as chaos 170–171
as self-resonance 75
first, Azoth as 67
pain in 177n
quantum 54, 79
spectral 78
meaning 140, 159–160, 163–164, 168, 281,
283, 295, 311
mechanism 51
Mediterranean 212, 213, 218, 223, 226, 229,
237
Meillassoux, Quentin 74, 75
Meister Eckhart 275, 277
Melancholia (dir. Von Trier) 45n
melancholy 237n
mercury 71–72, 75
Metamorphoses (Ovid)
Klossowski on 195–196
Metcalf, Stephen 111
Metzinger, Thomas 167–168
Michelstaedter, Carlo 254–257, 267, 283–288,
290, 294, 296–297, 305, 309, 310
migraine 187–190, 297
Milan 198–199, 230, 231, 232, 237, 238n
Miller, Lee 208
Mingozzi, Gianfranco 215
Mishima, Yukio 146–148, 150
Mithras 223
modernity 288, 294, 310, 312
and myth 134, 135
and the body 149
death of 130
Garton on 133
optimism of 106
Land on 47n
Mohaghegh, Jason Bahbak 196n
Moldbug, Mencius (Curtis Yarvin) 87
Monk, The (Lewis) 139, 211
monotheism
feminine 184
self- 195
moon 196–197, 205, 298
Galileo on 29–30
Morselli, Guido 260–262, 296
mother 47, 173, 175, 185, 252, 299
in creation myths 1–3, 5, 34, 45, 186n,
302–303
motherhood 34, 188, 203
Index
eternal 17–18, 32, 66, 101, 263
Leopardi on 177
Michelstaedter on 255–256
Ligotti, Thomas 135, 167–168
Lil Peep (Gustav Elijah Åhr) 111, 112, 114
Lindsay, Joan 193
liturgy
Catholic 223
Liturgy (band) 99
Lomax, Alan 212–213, 215, 218, 220, 228, 229
Love 3, 5, 25, 25n, 249, 251, 309, 310–311
and thermodynamics 25
Lovecraft, H.P. 67–69, 79–80, 71, 168, 222
339
life
340
Index
mountains 269
Moynihan, Thomas 247n
multitude 131
Muta (Leo Anibaldi album) 226–227, 229
Mystical Qabalah (Fortune) 182
mysticism 97, 164, 249, 275–276
and ascension 274
and masochism 245, 247
apophatic 272
Christian 248
female 189
myth 87, 90, 91, 94, 106, 132, 133–135, 144
and religion 144
and fascism 282
and horror 139–140
creation myth 1, 4, 33–35, 297
Babylonian 42
Mesopotamian 45
science and 58–60
N
n1x 37n
Nammu 2
nature 23, 141–142, 297n
as outside 194
Nazism 24, 282, 288, 302
Negarestani, Reza 241n
nemesis 38–40, 43, 46, 299
Nemesis (star) 39
Neoplatonism 181
neoreaction (NRx) 87–88, 89, 90, 106, 126,
131
neorealism 216–219
new Right 83
Newton, Isaac 50, 75
Nibiru 41–42, 44, 45, 46, 299
Nietzsche, Friedrich 122, 129, 143, 145, 154,
283, 293n
Evola and 252
nigredo 41, 76, 111, 209–210, 307
nihilism 129, 150, 164, 281–282, 310
and decadence 294
and love 311
and transcendence 294
critique and 293
Land on 293n
Nihil Unbound (Brassier) 114
nitrogen 63–67
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non-death see death
Non si sevizia un paperino (dir. Fulci) 218
Nosferatu (dir. Mirnau) 101
nostalgia 90, 100, 277
and black metal 87
and hauntology 86
Bathory’s 94, 97
cosmic 275
nothingness 273–274
numerology
and chemistry 51
Numogram 13
Nungal 2
nutrition 153
Nyx 40
O
objectivity
and depression 161
and the body 166
in science and philosophy 72, 169
occult
and the Kabbalah 10, 13, 15
and science 53, 65, 201, 210, 213
war 14, 186, 306, 308
ocean 77–79, 205–206, 277, 298, 299 see
also ocean
and womb, in Ferenczi 203
One God Universe (OGU) (Burroughs) 1, 41
Onomasticon 202
ontogeny
and phylogeny 204
Oort cloud 39
optimism 161, 164, 211
scientific 168
Ostia 223, 227
Ouroboros 20, 36
and Azoth 66
outside 306, 143
cybernetics and 12
and the divine 132
God of 140–141
Ovid 195–196, 225
Ozymandias 27
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Q
quantum theory 51, 71–74
and chemistry 52, 54
and individuality 59
and matter 55–56
quantum chemistry 52
quantum jumps 58
Questi, Giulio 218, 230
quicksilver 79
Quorthon (Tomas Forsberg) 91, 92–94, 97
R
Ra 35
Radcliffe, Ann 136, 212
rapture 190–191
rave
and hauntology 86
realism
Italian neorealism and 216
of Arcana 231
reason 95, 142, 217, 229
and darkness 168
and matter 74, 79
Leopardi on 165–168
recombination 13–14, 282n
Index
Padania 238
Paimon 118
pain 4–5, 175, 187–189, 204, 298
in matter 177n
pankration 145–146
paralysis 136, 188, 237, 281
paranoia 292, 294, 310
and equilibrium 306
and fascism 291
vs schizophrenia (Deleuze and Guattari)
290, 292
parasitism 177
Parsani, Hamid 241n
Parsons, Jack 180
particles 55, 56–57, 59
quantum 57, 60, 76–77
and entanglement 59
Pascoli, Giovanni 270
Pasolini, Pier Paolo 219, 220, 221–222, 223
path dependency 127
Path of Cinnabar, The (Evola) 253, 284–287
patriarchy 4, 25–26, 34, 41, 45, 186, 303,
308–309, 310n
and time 4, 45, 47
Pauli, Wolfgang 72–73
exclusion principle 53
Persuasion and Rhetoric (Michaelstaedter)
283–288, 296–297
pessimism 164, 258
cosmic 125
Petrarch 269
philosophy
and doubt 169–170
objectivity in 169
photography 207–210
phylogeny
and otogeny 204
physics 18, 63
and metaphysics 58
black 254, 256, 297, 305
quantum 55 see also quantum theory
relation to psychology 73
vs chemistry 50–53
Plant, Sadie 11, 12, 13, 281
Plutarch 224
Pluto 44
‘plutonic liquid’ (Gorini) 200
Plutonics 246
polarity
union of 66
politics
and magic 307n
and the barbarian 94–95
and the nonhuman 109
online 282
Pollyanna principle (Benatar) 164
predestination
in Hereditary 118
Prigogine, Ilya 141n
Pseudo-Dionysius 121
psychoanalysis 34, 243
of flesh 236
purity, purification 149
in black metal 87
menstruation and 197
of Artemis 195
Pyramid Texts 33
341
P
342
Index
recursion
vs reproduction 35
Ireland on 34–35
red 185
redemption 304, 312
regression 259
masochistic 258
thalassic (Ferenczi) 203
Reik, Theodore 246
Remoria 224–226, 231, 237, 300, 307, 312
Remus 299
repetition 113
reproduction 34, 303
and extinction 32
and menstruation 197
vs recursion 35
reptiles 33
revenants 83
reversibility 21, 301, 307, 309–310n
revolution 84–85
and femininity 34
and schizophrenia 290–291
Reynolds, Simon 86
Rice, Anne 102
Right Hand Path 14, 17, 18, 20–21, 23, 36,
122,
182, 302, 308
rigidity 256
Rimbaud, Arthur 96
ritual 1–6, 22, 31, 40, 64, 111, 236n, 237n,
240n, 243n, 247n, 231n, 251, 295, 300,
302
in Hereditary 118
in Mandy 120
Roko’s Basilisk 115
Rome 195, 217, 220, 223–224, 225, 226, 229,
237, 307
Rondi, Brunello 218
Ross, Don 58
Rossellini, Roberto 216, 219, 220
Ruhs, August 236n
Rutherford, Daniel 65
S
sabbath 229
Sacks, Oliver 189
sacrifice 12, 40–1 45, 153
sadism 246
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Deleuze on 243–244
Saga of the Ynglingar 95–96
Salò or the 120 Days of Sodom (dir. Pasolini)
221
satan, satanism 21–22
and metal 91
Satyricon 92
Satyr (Sigurd Wongraven) 92, 328
Scatology (Coil album) 222
scepticism
in Leopardi 165
schizophrenia
vs paranoia (Deleuze and Guattari) 290,
292
Schmitt, Carl 107
Scholem, Gershom 13, 186, 197
Schopenhauer, Arthur 51, 54–55, 58, 62–63,
148, 254–256, 277
Schrödinger, Erwin 50
dispute with Heisenberg 54
science
and metaphysics 58
and mysticism 72
and reason 50
and subject 167
and the occult 65, 72
domestication of (Ladyman et al.) 58–59
history of 55
life sciences 166
Lovecraft on 68, 168
objectivity in 169
science fiction 43, 169
sculpture
classical, and the body 150
sea 33, 202–203, 251
electron (Drude) 77
Great (Zohar) 185
see also ocean
sefirot 11, 14n, 23, 183–186, 301–303
Sekhmet 2
separation 185, 204
in sadism 246
sexual dimorphism 36–37, 184, 186, 193–196,
203, 285, 297, 303
in creation myths 33–37
sexuality
Ferenczi on 203–205
geotraumatic 246, 249
hetero- 23, 25, 32, 34, 175, 195,
T
Tarot 13–14, 307
Tartarus 151
techno 226–227
Teresa of Ávila 190–191, 297
Thacker, Eugene 107–108, 112, 115, 119, 135
Thalassa (Ferenczi) 203–204
Thelema 179, 183n, 309
theology 136, 247, 257, 272
Index
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stratification 269–270
Stromboli terra di Dio (dir. Rosselini) 220
stylites 266–268
subject 18, 37, 131, 242, 288, 310, 295, 298,
309, 310, 311
and critique 290–294
and object, interference of (Barad)
60–61
doubting, importance for science 167
female 193
hauntological 116
substance
and quantum theory 60
Leopardi on 167
suffering 5, 178, 189, 190–191, 192, 297, 298
as gnosis 192
suicide 250–251, 294, 295
Michaelstaedter’s 287
sun 41, 155, 180, 205, 211, 230, 298
and volcanoes 221
black 35, 37–38, 41, 207, 208, 209, 210,
217, 220, 222, 232, 2478n, 307
in alchemy 209–210
Nemesis as twin of 40
Sun and Steel (Mishima) 146
Sunn O))) (band) 99
Sun Ra 33
sunstroke 233
surrealism 208
Suso, Henry 248–29
symbolism
contingency of 181
floral vs celestial 185
symmetry 18, 37, 180, 308, 309
between microcosm and macrocosm 71,
305
synthesis
chemical 54, 64
343
302–304, 309, 312
homo- 32, 35, 221–222, 225, 229,
303–304
Michelstaedter on 254
Spare on 222
Shekhinah
and the moon 197
Sickluke (recording artist) 228
Simeon Stylites, Saint 265–266
Simonetti, Claudio 227
singularity 125, 142
Sitchin, Zecharia 41–46, 247
Smith, Harry 214
snakes, serpents 3, 20, 25, 32–33, 36–37,
66, 113, 179n, 304
Snorri 95–96
Socrates 156
Sodomy 221–222
solarisation 209, 213, 216, 218, 219, 221, 226,
231
Solaris (Lem) 78–79
solipsism 162
Evola’s 300
Sorel, Georges 134
Sostratus Sicionio 146
sovereignty
in Mandy 121
Spare, Austin Osman 222, 235
spectrality 69, 75, 77, 83–84, 97
spectroscopy 70
speech
and the barbarian 94–95
Spinoza
as sadist 244
spiral 4, 26, 87, 90, 94, 104, 106–107, 129, 210,
214, 215, 262, 303
in neoreaction 89–90, 106
spirit box 241, 245, 296
pylon as 236
spontaneity 19, 24, 40, 306, 309–310
Evola on 285, 286n, 310–311n
Spurrett, David 58
statistics
in chemistry 53
Stendalì (dir. Mangini) 216
Stengers, Isabelle 129
Stephens, Randall J. 92
Stirner, Max 121
Stoker, Bram 101–102
344
Index
Garton on 138, 140
Masoch’s 245, 249
negative 272–275
Theosophy 181
therapy 160
thermodynamics 1, 3, 19, 24, 30–31, 36, 41,
46, 258, 310
Boltzmann on 30–31
of love 309
Theweleit, Klaus 282, 291–292n
Thousand Plateaus, A (Deleuze and Guattari)
98
Tiamat 2, 34, 35, 46, 185, 186n, 299, 302,
303
and Apophis 33
collision with Marduk 42
reincarnation of 45
time, temporality 41, 46, 94, 106, 109, 112,
129–130, 132–135, 137–138, 143, 151, 282,
284, 291
and decomposition 201
and depression 161–162
and entropy 19
and patriarchy 4, 45, 47
and virtuality 126
apocalytpic 27
Emo on 258
Emo on 257–259
Gothic 101, 104, 109
historical 84
inhuman 100, 105
linearity of 114, 128, 309–310n
messianic 150
Michelstaedter on 283–284
of tragedy 117–121
Torah
Scholem on 13
Toth, Laszlo 177–178
traditionalism 83, 92
tragedy 114–115, 117, 118, 123, 284, 294, 309
transformation 299, 307
trauma 246n, 298 see also geotrauma
Tree of Life 21, 182, 287n, 301–302
Trent, John 235
Trinity 23
TruceKlan (recording artists) 228, 229
truth 108
Twelfth Planet, The (Sitchin) 42
tzimtzum 183, 185
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U
unconscious
Barker on 246n
Deleuze and Guattari on 293n
desire 243, 248, 284
Freud on 96
Land on 32
uncreation 35–36, 299, 306, 310–311
V
Valentino, Basil 65–66
vampires 98–99, 100, 103–105
and time 104
Vathek (Beckford) 212
Velikovsky, Immanuel 247n
Venice 237
Venom (band) 91
Vesuvius 220
Vikings
in Bathory 94
Virgin Mary 174, 177–178, 197
Stella Maris 202
Our Lady of Sorrows 4, 178, 181, 299
virginity 194–196, 303
and the moon 197–198
virtuality 129
Visconti, Luchino 216, 217, 219, 220
Vittorini, Elio 217
Vlad III ‘Tepes’ 102–103
volcanoes 221
von Fraunhofer, Joseph 70
W
Walpole, Horace 139, 211
war 137, 195, 258, 259
weightlifting 147, 152, 300
White, Minor 207, 209
Whiteout 219–220
Whitmire, D.P. 38–39
Whore of Babylon see Babylon
Wiener, Norbert 11
Will 1, 19, 191, 288n, 309, 311
divine 108, 278
in Evola 282n, 285n, 286–287
in Nietzsche 148
in Schopenhauer 148, 254
in Thelema 219, 261, 309, 310n
xenophilia 277, 280
Roden on 243
Y
Yarvin, Curtis see Moldbug, Mencius
yoni 36
Z
Zero 32, 35, 47n
thermodynamic 20
Zibaldone (Leopardi) 166, 177
Zofloya (Dacre) 212
Zohar 183–185, 301
Zolla, Elémire 201
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Index
X
345
negative 270–277
witches, witchcraft 91, 107, 217, 229, 238, 239
Wittgenstein, Ludwig 263
Wollatson, William 70
World as Will and Representation, The
(Schopenhauer) 148
womb
and ocean, in Ferenczi 203
worms 5, 41, 174–175, 176 see also dragons,
snakes
wrestling 145–146
writing 154, 156