Erik Davis: Nomad Codes
I learned again that I still have a long way of filling up the holes in my knowledge about the interplay of technology and religion. Reading an announcement from BoingBoing about a new book by Erik Davis pushed him close to the top of my reading list. The post includes a quick summary of the essay collection and a few answers from an interview about the the new book titled: Nomad Codes: Adventures in Modern Esoterica. Learning more about the author I realized that I have to read his previous book: TechGnosis: Myth, Magic & Mysticism in the Age of Information. Meanwhile here is the description of Nomad Codes form the author's website:
Essays from the man Peter Lamborn Wilson calls “the best of all guides to modern American spirituality.”
In these wide-ranging essays, Erik Davis explores the codes—spiritual, cultural, and embodied—that people use to escape the limitation of their lives and to enrich their experience of the world. These include Asian religious traditions and West African trickster gods, Western occult and esoteric lore, postmodern theory and psychedelic science, as well as festival scenes such as Goa trance and Burning Man (of which Davis is the best-known chronicler). Articles on media technology further explore themes Davis took up in his acclaimed book Techgnosis, while his profiles of West Coast poets, musicians, and mystics extend the California terrain he previously mapped in The Visionary State.
Whether his subject is collage art or the “magickal realism” of horror writer H.P. Lovecraft, transvestite Burmese spirit mediums or Ufology, tripster king Terence McKenna or dub maestro Lee Perry, Davis writes with keen yet skeptical sympathy, intellectual subtlety and wit, and unbridled curiosity. The common thread running through all these pieces is what Davis calls “modern esoterica,” which he describes in his preface as a “no-man’s-land located somewhere between anthropology and mystical pulp, between the zendo and the metal club, between cultural criticism and extraordinary experience, whether psychedelic, or yogic, or technological.” Such an ambiguous and startling landscape demands that the intrepid adventurer shed any territorial claims and go nomad. Davis wanders with sharp eyes and an open mind, which is why Peter Lamborn Wilson calls him “the best of all guides to modern American spirituality.
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