Bridging Perspectives: where psychogeography and e.m. meet

Jake Kirkwood reviews an e-book project and suggests it raises issues for development in earth mysteries and neo-antiquarian work.     Almscliff Crag       ALMIAS: Phil Legard, Layla Smith, and Simon Bradley E-book produced as part of Harrogate Festival 2010 – currently available online as PDF download If like me, you are somewhat reluctant […]

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‘A Flint for the Memory’: A Note on British Ambient and Drone Music

A common theme throughout the history of earth mysteries is engagement with the spirit of places around us. Artists and writers have creatively explored this interface, and Mark Valentine suggests how drone music is exploring the same area For the past 10 years or so, a new musical form has been emerging amongst independent artists

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#8: “We shall not cease from exploration…”

“We shall not cease from exploration…”  Eliot’s advisory for perception. 3 We have been talking of the past, and of the present, and of the hauntological membrane of experience between them. That membrane is of course unanchored, timeless, a hiatus between the twin towers of objective evidence and lived documented experience. Between the two lies

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#7: What’s the editor on about? Earth mysteries, phenomenology and psychogeography

Paul Screeton asks, quite reasonably, what’s the editor on about? Modern understandings of the past, says the editor…   Paul Screeton, Seaton Carew: What to call ourselves collectively is a topic which not only has its peaks of discussion while forever in flux, but also there are also elements of cultural tracking. Neo-antiquarianism distinctly takes inspiration

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