Fanged Noumena
Fanged Noumena: Collected Writings 1987–
2007 is a 2011 anthology of writings by English
philosopher Nick Land, edited by Maya Kronic and Ray
Brassier. It was first published by Urbanomic—founded
by Kronic prior—with Sequence Press and later
republished by the MIT Press.[1]
Fanged Noumena: Collected
Writings 1987–2007
The anthology collects essays and texts, initially
published and previously unpublished, spanning
various philosophical and aesthetic interests—as well as
unorthodox writing styles that have been dubbed
"theory-fictions"[2]—explored and utilized by Land over
the titular time period. The book has obtained a cult
following[3] and has subsequently been credited with
influencing
the
rise
in
popularity
of
[4][5]
accelerationism.
Summary
As an anthology primarily aiming to cohere Nick Land's
conjunctional
reinterpretation
of
continental
philosophy and modernist poetry in the 1990s—what
British writer Kodwo Eshun described as a
dramatization of "theory as a geopolitico-historical
epic"[7]—and his subsequent "theory-fictions" which
explored cyberpunk media, Gothic themes and esoteric
systems while utilizing unorthodox and disordered
experimental writing styles, Fanged Noumena consists
of essays and prose texts written by Land during
multiple periods, compiled by Michael Carr, Mark
Fisher, David Rylance and Reza Negarestani, with their
sequence being edited by Kronic and Brassier.[7]
The sequence begins during his time as a lecturer for
the Department of Philosophy of the University of
Warwick, England from 1987 until his resignation from
his academic post in 1998, progressing onto his
contributions to the mythopoeia of "hyperstitions"[8] of
the Cybernetic Culture Research Unit (CCRU) as it was
Cover of the first edition
Editor
Maya Kronic and Ray Brassier
Author
Nick Land
Cover artist
Jake and Dinos Chapman
Language
English
Subject
Acceleration · nihilism ·
cybernetics · continental
philosophy · theory-fiction ·
mathematics
Published
2011
2012
2014
2018
Publisher
Urbanomic / Sequence Press
MIT Press
Publication
place
United Kingdom
Pages
666
ISBN
978-0-9553087-8-9
Preceded by The Thirst for Annihilation
maintained within the university,[6] and concluding with blog posts
written between 2004 and 2007 in his residency in Shanghai, China.[7]
The progression displayed in Land's work, according to Kronic and
Brassier, is essential to the presentation of the book as a response to "an
incapacity to believe that Land actually meant what he said—[his]
writing was indeed nothing but a machine for intensification", and that
rhetorically, "if this volume infects a new generation, already enlivened by
a new wave of thinkers who are partly engaging the re-emerging legacy of
Nick Land's work—it will have fulfilled its purpose."[9]
Kronic and Brassier noted that the emergence of accelerationism in
Land's work is marked by the idea that philosophically, "it is no longer a
matter of 'thinking about', but rather of observing an effective, alien
intelligence in the process of making itself real, [and is] a matter of
participating in such a way as to continually intensify and accelerate this
process."[10] In a lecture for a conference on accelerationism given in
2010, Brassier referred to Land's philosophical project as "mad black
Deleuzianism",[a] referencing a criticism given by French philosopher
Vincent Descombes of the work of Deleuze and Guattari and JeanFrançois Lyotard as "mad black Hegelianism".[11]
When I contacted
Land
about
the
republication of his
works, he did not
protest,
but
had
nothing to add: It's
another life; I have
nothing to say about
it—I
don’t
even
remember
writing
half of those things …
I don't want to get
into
retrospectively
condemning
my
ancient work—I think
it's best to gently back
off. It belongs in the
clawed embrace of the
undead amphetamine
god.[6]
The term denotes the anti-vitalism of Land's reinterpretation of Deleuze's
— Maya Kronic, "Nick
philosophy,[3] distinguished by its "unsavory" orientation towards the
Land: An Experiment in
Inhumanism", 2013
paradox of "will[ing] the impossibility of willing"[12] and an active
materialist interest ("no longer a pretext for critique but a vector of
exploration")[13] in, according to Kronic and Brassier, "the impersonal and anonymous chaos of
absolute time".[11]
These themes are consistent in the writings featured in Fanged Noumena, with a turn in the 1990s
towards "the 'inconceivable alienations' outputted by the monstrous machine-organism built by
capital" according to Kronic and Armen Avanessian,[14] and a further turn into the 2000s towards
"ever more abstract planes of an alien Outside's absolute deterritorialisation of reason and sense",
according to Vincent Le.[15]
Late 1980s—early 1990s
The sequence of Fanged Noumena begins with "Kant, Capital, and the Prohibition of Incest: A
Polemical Introduction to the Configuration of Philosophy and Modernity", initially published for
Third Text in 1988. Land has since retroactively dismissed the essay for its inaccuracies.[16][17]
"Narcissism and Dispersion in Heidegger's 1953 Trakl Interpretation", initially published in 1990,
analyzes what Land identifies as Heidegger's suppression of the effectivity of the Dionysian tropes in
Trakl's poetry,[18] which Kronic and Brassier identified as Land's "mounting impatience" with
Heideggerian philosophy, leading to a resolution of the "exit problem" where "the manner in which
the (failed) insurrectionary attempts at 'escape' made by artists each open up the prospect of [a]
heterogeneous space that subverts order"[19]
This concept is explored further in the subsequent literary criticism essays "Art as Insurrection: the
Question of Aesthetics in Kant, Schopenhauer, and Nietzsche", "Spirit and Teeth" and "Shamanic
Nietzsche", which were published prior to and following the 1992 publication of The Thirst for
Annihilation: Georges Bataille and Virulent Nihilism (An Essay in Atheistic Religion), Land's student
thesis for the University of Warwick.[20]
Prior to these, "Delighted to Death" extends from his research conducted for The Thirst for
Annihilation, identifying regulatory and repressive principles of Christian morality in Kant's ethical
system, and elements of martyrdom in the experience of the sublime. On the contrary, Land also
focuses on the history of the concept of genius as an "a contingent, impersonal creative force"
according to Kronic and Brassier, a theme which reappears in the aforementioned essays.[21]
McKenzie Wark characterizes this essay as focusing on the appearance of "a priori forms as constants
for novel experiences" in Land's topics.[3] The 1993 essay "After the Law" also extends from Land's
then-present philosophical research, analyzing the Apology of Socrates and Bataille's political antiphilosophy to focus on exceptions to the moral law that similarly creatively escape judgment.[3]
"Making it with Death: Remarks on Thanatos and Desiring-Production" marks Land's first thorough
engagement with the theory of Deleuze and Guattari, including the formative proto-accelerationist
speculations made in Anti-Oedipus and especially their practice of schizoanalysis (also referred to by
Land as "stratoanalysis"), while also further developing a philosophical history of Deleuzian difference
and the body without organs that had previously been articulated in the conclusion of "Art as
Insurrection"; Kronic and Brassier summarized this development as Land's assertion—rejecting
Deleuze and Guattari's disavowal of Freudian drive theory—that "all temporary [existential] obstacles
are dispensable coagulants inhibiting death's unwinding."[22] Land also referred to this philosophical
interest during this period as "libidinal materialism".[3]
Responding to the assertions made in the essay, Brassier theorized that while if "schizoanalytical
practice is fuelled by the need to always intensify and deterritorialize, there comes a point at which
there is no agency left: you yourself have been dissolved back into the process", the difficulties
appearing in Land's initial approach could be amended by further deviations by future subjects.[12]
Kronic and Avanessian described the 1992 essay "Circuitries"—which incorporates abstract and
impersonal prose—as observing "a darkness" descending "over the festive atmosphere of desiringproduction envisaged by" post-structuralists associated with accelerationism; whereas these prior
thinkers envisioned "the transfer of all motive force from human subjects to capital as the
inauguration of an aleatory drift", Land hails accelerationism as instead "gleefully explor[ing] what is
escaping from human civilization", with emphasis on the deregulation of "runaway" processes.[23]
The essay links the concepts present in the influence of Antonin Artaud's experimental writing on
Deleuze and Guattari, especially with regards to the body without organs and Artaud's
"antihumanism", to the principles of cybernetic science and thermodynamics.[24] "Machinic Desire",
initially published in 1993, continues this interest while displaying "popular investment in dystopian
cyberpunk SF, including William Gibson's Neuromancer trilogy and the Terminator, Predator and
Bladerunner movies";[14] Land began, from this essay onward, to redefine cyberpunk as a "textual
machine for affecting reality by intensifying the anticipation of its future", incorporating its dynamic
concepts of posthuman progress into his re-envisioning of philosophy.[25]
Mid-1990s
"CyberGothic" is the first published text by Land to extensively use multiple contemporary cultural
reference points that would become fixtures in his work, including postmodern literature and its
authors' concepts, especially Gibson's 1984 cyberpunk novel Neuromancer and the concept of
cyberspace, as well as digital financial speculation, emerging forms of complex electronic dance music
such as jungle music and drum and bass, and cyberdelic hacker culture.[26] Alongside a
reinterpretation of Neuromancer and its concept of cyberspace as "K-space"—an amoral model of
immanent existential interactions "that melds gleaming abstraction[s] to eldritch portent[s]"[27]—in
relation to the Deleuzian body without organs, Land proposes a "cybergothic" model of a philosophy
of death that Kronic and Brassier noted resulted from Land finding parallels between his own
preceding developments and Gibson's novel, culminating in his philosophical identification of the
novel's character Wintermute as "a new type of intelligence: aggressively exploratory,
incommensurable with human subjectivity and untethered from social reproduction."[28]
"K-space" was the first concept of Land's to use the "K-" prefix, a shorthand for "cyber(netic)", with
his concept of "K-war" guiding his later abstract prose texts; Kronic and Brassier clarified that this
shift in Land's focus expresses that "the insurrectionary basis of revolution now lies at the virtual
terminus of capital—the future as transcendental unconscious, its 'return' inhibited by the repressed
[alternate] circuits of temporality", concerned more with intensity and spontaneous intensive spaces
than with ideal orders,[29] at a point of "increasingly autonomous technics' pursuit of their own selfreplication without any interest in serving human use-value" according to Le.[30]
The dialogue "Cyberrevolution", initially published in the first issue of Kronic's journal ***Collapse,
features a scenario where figures speaking on a fictional dystopian news broadcast attempt to
understand the cause of mass riots in multiple continents, before escalating into a passionate
argument over the relevance of critical theory to the situation. It serves as a hyperstitional explanation
of the failure for acceleration to be commonly understood.[3] Meanwhile, the abstract prose texts
"Hypervirus" and "No Future" utilize themes of virality and depersonalization alongside Land's
interest in runaway processes to create the effect of what Kronic and Brassier described as "full-blown
delirium".[8]
Alongside the stylistic influence of Gibson's novels, in these texts, "Land's anti-humanist speculation
is combined with an evident enjoyment of wordplay and a renewed appreciation for the
anthropological, mythological and psychoanalytical sources of Capitalism and Schizophrenia",
according to Kronic.[6] The unpublished conference paper "Cyberspace Anarchitecture as JungleWar" contains these elements in addition to a clearer focus on the cultural relevance of the complexity
of jungle music inspired by Kodwo Eshun's concurrent writings and lectures, and the potential for a
"K-insurgency".
The literary criticism essay "Meat (or How to Kill Oedipus in Cyberspace)", extending from this
concept, uses a comparative speculation made by William S. Burroughs between the Kurtz of Joseph
Conrad's 1899 novella Heart of Darkness and the Colonel Kurtz of Francis Ford Coppola's 1979 film
quasi-adaptation Apocalypse Now as a starting point for a reinterpretation of Deleuze and Guattari's
use of anthropology. It uses the distinction between the cyberpunk concepts of cyberspace and
meatspace to suggest that as the processes of civilization and globalization continue, uncivilized and
primitive social elements reemerge and are absorbed in a process of deterritorialization.
"Meltdown"
"Meltdown" was published as the opening essay in the first issue of the CCRU's magazine Abstract
Culture in 1995; Kronic proclaimed that it was an "invocation of apocalyptic planetary technosingularity",[6] while she and Brassier summarized the text as making the "claim—both apocalyptic
and performative as hype—that the compression-phases of modernity, beginning the final phase of
their acceleration in the sixteenth century with Protestant revolt, oceanic navigation, commoditisation
and its attendant (place-value) numeracy, constitute a 'cyberpositive' global circuit of
interexcitement".[31]
The essay uses multiple reference points to convey an ongoing history of acceleration, including
European history, Don DeLillo's 1985 novel White Noise, sociology and nanotechnology research, and
a refracted, strongly terminological writing style. A full-length music video tape was created for
"Meltdown" by London art audiovisual collective Orphan Drift, featuring cyberdelic visuals, an
ambient techno soundtrack and the text being read by processed Apple MacinTalk text-to-speech
voices.[32]
Late 1990s—late 2000s
From the point of Land's de facto leadership of the CCRU onward, he "disintegrated into the numbernames of a hyperpagan pantheon, syncretically drawing on the occult, nursery rhyme, anthropology,
SF and Lovecraft, among other sources", according to Kronic and Brassier.[33] With the collective, he
began to develop the Numogram, a hyperstitional occult system of demonic interactions and
invocations, serving as the model for the process of what the collective identified as "cultural
production".[32] In addition to this development, Land began utilizing experimental writing styles and
diagrammatic forms of presentation, with his creativity increasingly drawing from his use of
stimulants, especially amphetamines.[6]
"A zIIgºthIc–==X=cºDA==–(CººkIng–lºbsteRs–wIth–jAke–AnD–DInºs)" is an abstract prose text
incorporating themes of the Oedipus complex that utilizes superscript symbols that was written for a
1996 exhibition of art by British visual artists Jake and Dinos Chapman. A later artwork by them is
featured on the cover of Fanged Noumena. "KataςoniX" is an invocatory text intended to be read
aloud that was written for a multimedia presentation by ***Collapse and Orphan Drift at Virtual
Futures '96, which was presented at the University of Warwick. It incorporates quotations of
glossolalia from the notebooks of Antonin Artaud, combining nondescript phrases and occult
descriptions with "sub-linguistic clickings and hissings".[33]
The first text in the selection of Land's CCRU texts in Fanged Noumena, "Barker Speaks: The CCRU
Interview with Professor D.C. Barker", is a fictional interview conducted between the collective and
the titular character—an author surrogate for Land—whose study of "geotraumatics" and "ticsystems" extends from his appropriation of cosmic pessimistic speculations made by Deleuze and
Guattari in Capitalism and Schizophrenia, as well as previously by Freud in Beyond the Pleasure
Principle;[34] Wark identified Land's preceding interest in positive feedback loops and autopoietic
patterns as an influence on the concept of geotrauma.[3]
"Mechanomics", published in 1998, is a paper on "schizonumerics"[8] detailing speculations on the
anthropological history of numeracy, prevalent logocentric attitudes to numbering, the
Deleuzoguattarian interpretation of numbers as multiplicity, and Land's own reinterpretation of set
theory and combinatorics where the mathematical proofs of Georg Cantor and Kurt Gödel "open up
humans to an outside of logos" in which notions of quantity proceed past limits of
comprehensibility:[35] "for Land", according to Kronic and Brassier, "the interest of Gödel's
achievement is not primarily 'mathematical' but rather belongs to a lineage of the operationalisation
of number in coding systems that will pass through Turing and into the technological mega-complex
of contemporary techno-capital."[36]
"Cryptolith" is a narrative text written by Land as part of the CCRU in collaboration with Orphan
Drift, extending the character of Professor Barker and the concept of tic-systems. "Non-Standard
Numeracies: Nomad Cultures" is an arrangement of fragmentary invocatory texts, similar to
"KataςoniX", where Land's concept of geotraumatics and his mythological research presented
elsewhere in the writings of the CCRU are both used to convey the Outside breaking into human
conventions.[37]
"Occultures", a set of cybergothic narrative texts that explore the past and present hyperstitional
subcultures and in-universe characters of the CCRU, was later featured on the "Syzygy" section of the
CCRU website. "Origins of the Cthulhu Club" is another selection of Land's collaborative writing
within the CCRU, featuring a fictional correspondence extending off of Lovecraft's Cthulhu Mythos.
In 2004, "Introduction to Qwernomics" was published online on Land's first blog, Hyperstition. It
explores the occult and logical implications made by the specific setups of typographic systems,
especially in consumer technology, and their application for "the qabbalistic tracking of pure coding
'coincidences'."[38] Similarly, "Qabbala 101" is an essay written for the first volume of Collapse,
Kronic's reboot of her earlier journal of the same name, exploring the history of kabbalah, the logic of
its cosmogony and the further occult and mathematical implications of its numeracy.[39]
"Tic Talk", "Critique of Transcendental Miserablism" and "A Dirty Joke" were published on
Hyperstition. The first text is a schizonumeric conclusion to the character story of Professor Barker
wherein every number is written as its factors. The second is an accelerationist polemic that explores a
wide variety of sources to propose a fatalistic model of capitalist society. The third is an
autobiographical text written as a confession of both the "failure" of Land's experimental career and
the success of its longevity beyond his work.[39] The anthology concludes with several pages of
schizonumeric, typographic and geotraumatic diagrams from Land's notebooks, dated between the
1990s and 2000s.[32]
Reception
In a 2014 review of Fanged Noumena for the Religious Studies Review journal, Jeremy Biles called
the book "a bevy of aggressively strange, virulently antihumanistic essays engaging issues including
postmodern capitalism, cybernetic culture, madness, monotheism, and law", saying that "this book
will intoxicate."[40] In a 2017 retrospective article written for The Guardian on the CCRU, Andy
Beckett referred to Fanged Noumena as a text "which contains some of accelerationism's most darkly
fascinating passages."[4]
Analysis
Eugene Brennan referred to the book as a collection which "show[s] Nick Land's waning interest in
Bataille, turning increasingly to the more libertarian thought of Deleuze and Guattari to develop his
accelerationist philosophy", clarifying that much of the early work in the book extended from The
Thirst for Annihilation.[41]
Legacy
In popular culture
In 2018, American rapper Lil B referenced Fanged Noumena in an Internet meme posted to Twitter
which incorporated a facial profile of Land in addition to the cover art of the book.[42]
See also
Capitalist Realism
Curtis Yarvin
References
1. "Fanged Noumena: Collected Writings 1987–2007" (https://mitpress.mit.edu/9780955308789/fang
ed-noumena/). mitpress.mit.edu.
2. Kronic & Brassier 2011a, pp. 4–5.
3. Wark 2017b.
4. Beckett 2017a.
5. Le 2019b, p. 2.
6. Kronic 2013.
7. Fisher 2011b.
8. Kronic & Brassier 2011a, p. 26.
9. Kronic & Brassier 2011a, pp. 51–52, 54.
10. Kronic & Brassier 2011a, pp. 31–32.
11. Kronic & Brassier 2011a, p. 5.
12. Brassier 2010.
13. Kronic & Brassier 2011a, p. 16.
14. Kronic & Avanessian 2014a, p. 21.
15. Le 2019c, p. 101.
16. Le 2019b, p. 17.
17. Outsideness [@Outsideness] (21 October 2019). "Kant, Capital, and thee Prohibition of Incest is
the kind of lunacy that results from not understanding the Hajnal Line. ..." (https://x.com/Outsidene
ss/status/1186144807296458753) (Tweet) – via Twitter.
18. Le 2019b, p. 5.
19. Kronic & Brassier 2011a, p. 17-20.
20. Kronic & Brassier 2011a, pp. 16–17.
21. Kronic & Brassier 2011a, pp. 11–13.
22. Kronic & Brassier 2011a, pp. 28–31.
23. Kronic & Avanessian 2014a, p. 20.
24. Kronic & Avanessian 2014a, pp. 20–21.
25. Kronic & Brassier 2011a, p. 32.
26. Kronic & Brassier 2011a, pp. 32–34.
27. Kronic & Brassier 2011a, p. 33.
28. Kronic & Brassier 2011a, p. 35.
29. Kronic & Brassier 2011a, p. 36.
30. Le 2019c, p. 83.
31. Kronic & Brassier 2011a, pp. 38–39.
32. Kronic & Haworth 2019a.
33. Kronic & Brassier 2011a, p. 42.
34. Kronic & Brassier 2011a, pp. 39–40.
35. Kronic & Brassier 2011a, pp. 20–25.
36. Kronic & Brassier 2011a, p. 44.
37. Le 2019c, pp. 85–86.
38. Kronic & Brassier 2011a, p. 45.
39. Kronic & Brassier 2011a, p. 53.
40. Biles 2014, p. 200.
41. Brennan 2017c, pp. 218, 220.
42. Lil B THE BASEDGOD [@LILBTHEBASEDGOD] (12 November 2018). "- Lil B" (https://x.com/LIL
BTHEBASEDGOD/status/1062078819962564608) (Tweet) – via Twitter.
a. This term was also used in the blurb on the inside cover of Fanged Noumena by Kronic and
Brassier.
Bibliography
Beckett, Andy (2017a). "Accelerationism: How a fringe philosophy predicted the future we live in"
(https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/may/11/accelerationism-how-a-fringe-philosophy-predict
ed-the-future-we-live-in). The Guardian.
Biles, Jeremy (2014). "Review of Fanged Noumena: Collected Writings 1987–2007 by Nick Land".
Religious Studies Review. 40 (4).
Brassier, Ray (2010). Accelerationism (https://moskvax.wordpress.com/2010/09/30/accelerationis
m-ray-brassier/). Goldsmiths, University of London.
Brennan, Eugene (2017c). "The Politics of Excess and Restraint: Reading Bataille alongside and
against Accelerationism". In Stronge, Will (ed.). Georges Bataille and Contemporary Thought.
Bloomsbury. ISBN 978-1-4742-6869-1.
Fisher, Mark (2011b). "Nick Land: Mind Games" (http://www.dazeddigital.com/artsandculture/articl
e/10459/1/nick-land-mind-games). Dazed and Confused.
Le, Vincent (2019c). "One Two Many: On Nick Land's Numbering Practices" (https://bridges.mona
sh.edu/articles/journal_contribution/One_Two_Many_On_Nick_Land_s_Numbering_Practices/791
4494). Colloquy: Text, Theory, Critique. 37.
Le, Vincent (2019b). "Slave, Sister, Sexborg, Sphinx: Feminine Figurations in Nick Land's
Philosophy". Hypatia. 10 (10).
Kronic, Maya (2013). "Nick Land – An Experiment in Inhumanism" (http://readthis.wtf/writing/nick-l
and-an-experiment-in-inhumanism/).
Kronic, Maya; Avanessian, Armen, eds. (2014a). "Introduction". #Accelerate: The Accelerationist
Reader. Urbanomic. ISBN 9780957529557.
Kronic, Maya; Brassier, Ray (2011a). "Editors' Introduction". Fanged Noumena: Collected Writings
1987-2007. MIT Press; Urbanomic. ISBN 9780955308789.
Kronic, Maya; Haworth, Christopher (2019a). "Towards a Transcendental Deduction of Jungle
(Interview) (Part 1)" (http://readthis.wtf/writing/towards-a-transcendental-deduction-of-jungle-intervi
ew-part-1/).
Wark, McKenzie (2017b). "On Nick Land" (https://www.versobooks.com/en-gb/blogs/news/3284-o
n-nick-land). Verso Books.
Further reading
Noys, Benjamin (2014). Malign Velocities: Accelerationism and Capitalism. Zero Books.
ISBN 9781782793007.
Shaviro, Steven (2015). No Speed Limit: Three Essays on Accelerationism. University of
Minnesota Press. ISBN 9780816697670.
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