The Aesthetics Of Accelerationism
| fiercely-loyal gas station nibblets | 07/19/18 | | angry erotic nursing home | 07/19/18 | | Lascivious Sandwich Office | 07/19/18 | | Lime Racy Range | 07/19/18 | | Supple generalized bond | 07/19/18 | | splenetic sexy indian lodge dingle berry | 07/19/18 | | fiercely-loyal gas station nibblets | 07/19/18 | | Supple generalized bond | 07/19/18 | | Insecure Rigor | 07/25/18 | | violent filthy market | 07/19/18 | | provocative national | 07/19/18 | | fiercely-loyal gas station nibblets | 07/20/18 | | angry erotic nursing home | 07/19/18 | | Lascivious Sandwich Office | 07/19/18 | | Supple generalized bond | 07/19/18 | | provocative national | 07/20/18 | | Supple generalized bond | 07/20/18 | | provocative national | 07/20/18 | | Supple generalized bond | 07/20/18 | | Lime Racy Range | 07/20/18 | | provocative national | 07/20/18 | | fiercely-loyal gas station nibblets | 07/20/18 | | House-broken cocky jap | 07/20/18 | | fiercely-loyal gas station nibblets | 03/15/19 |
Poast new message in this thread
Date: July 19th, 2018 9:40 PM Author: splenetic sexy indian lodge dingle berry
In 1998, Land resigned from Warwick. He and half a dozen CCRU members withdrew to the room above the Leamington Spa Body Shop. There they drifted from accelerationism into a vortex of more old-fashioned esoteric ideas, drawn from the occult, numerology, the fathomless novels of the American horror writer HP Lovecraft, and the life of the English mystic Aleister Crowley, who had been born in Leamington, in a cavernous terraced house which several CCRU members moved into.
“The CCRU became quasi-cultish, quasi-religious,” says Mackay. “I left before it descended into sheer madness.” Two of the unit’s key texts had always been the Joseph Conrad novel Heart of Darkness and its film adaptation, Apocalypse Now, which made collecting followers and withdrawing from the world and from conventional sanity seem lethally glamorous. In their top-floor room, Land and his students drew occult diagrams on the walls. Grant says a “punishing regime” of too much thinking and drinking drove several members into mental and physical crises. Land himself, after what he later described as “perhaps a year of fanatical abuse” of “the sacred substance amphetamine”, and “prolonged artificial insomnia ... devoted to futile ‘writing’ practices”, suffered a breakdown in the early 2000s, and disappeared from public view.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4030622&forum_id=2#36462674) |
|
|