Becoming Iconoclastic - A Review of Feral Iconoclasm
We are rediscovering that we have always been wild, we are remembering the power we have. We are reforming and building bonds with those like us, who no longer wish to be tame, who no longer wish to accept the injustices of this world that favours money over all else. We are ‘agents against history’. We are ’unbinding a supposedly bound totality’. We are becoming iconoclastic.
To Spite The Face: a review of Insurgent Supremacists by Matthew N. Lyons
opposition to fascism is not as easy as completing a Buzzfeed quiz or reading an Everyday Feminism listicle.
The Burning Crown: Reading "Dismantling The Tower"
What secrets do [plants] share with us in that forgotten language of sighs and whispers?
A review of Laurie Anderson's Heart of a Dog
A review of Laurie Anderson's Heart of A Dog, and the questions it poses: the hierarchy of relationships - and the role pets play in our lives.
Revolution At The Witching Hour: The Legacy of Midnight Notes
Sylvia Federici's "Caliban & The Witch" radically transformed our understanding of the witch burnings. Here are other books from her and the Midnight Notes Collective of deep interest to Pagan Anti-Capitalists
Book Review: Like Water
by James Lindenschmidt: Like Water is a story about my tribe, my comrades. The reality of police brutality, violence, and murder of civilians on the streets is foregrounded in the story, but the novel never comes across as preachy or even judgmental. The fact is, these characters must endure, each in their own way, in the aftermath of state-sanctioned murder.