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@blackmetaltheory
http://www.lintellettualedissidente.it/musica/theoria-e-praxis-del-black-metal-parte-i/
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Helvete: A Journal of Black Metal TheoryIssue 3: Bleeding Black Noise. Winter 2016. Edited by Amelia Ishmael
Issue 3: Table of Contents.
Editors’ Preface
Amelia Ishmael
Untitled
Alessandro Keegan
Black Noise: The Throb of the Anthropocene
Susanne Pratt
Dead Body of a Performance
Michaël Sellam
Vocal Distortion
Simon Pröll
1558–2016
Gast Bouschet and Nadine Hilbert
Distraction
Bagus Jalang
Leaving the Self Behind
Nathan Snaza
Excerpts from z/w/a/r/t24 and Z/W/A/R/T Magazine 5
Max Kuiper
False Atonality, True Non-tonality
Bert Stabler
Untitled
Faith Coloccia
Nonevent: Grotesque Indexicality, Black Sites, and the Cryptology of the Sonorous Irreflective in T.O.M.B.
Kyle McGee
Distorted Cognitions
Floating Tomb: Black Metal Theory is a collaborative collection of writings in black metal theory (BMT), an amorphous ‘metallecutal’ movement initiated in 2009 with the symposium Hideous Gnosis. According to its earliest formulation, BMT seeks to creatively destroy the boundary between metal and theory, to make something new in the space of their shared negativity: ‘Not black metal. Not theory. Not not black metal. Not not theory. Black metal theory. Theoretical blackening of metal. Metallic blackening of theory. Mutual blackening. Nigredo in the intoxological crucible of symposia’. This volume gathers together previously published and new work on BMT focusing on mysticism, a domain of thought and experience with deep connections both to the black metal genre and to theory (theoria, vision, contemplation). More than a topic for BMT, the mystical is here explored in terms of the continuous intersection of black metal and theory, the ‘floating tomb’ wherein metal is elevated into the intellectual and visionary experience that it already is.
Not to be confused with metal studies, music criticism, ethnography, or sociology, Black Metal Theory is a speculative and creative endeavor, one which seeks ways of thinking that count as Black Metal events — and indeed, to see how Black Metal might count as thinking. Theory of Black Metal, and Black Metal of theory. Mutual blackening. Therefore, we eschew any approach that treats theory and Metal discretely, preferring to take the left-hand path by insisting on “some kind of connaturality between the two, a shared capacity for nigredo.”
Issue 2 focuses on the theme of Inversions in Black Metal. Nailed at the heart of many a logo, suspended from the neck, held out in Satanic blessing: the inverted cross is one of black metal’s anti-icons. The antithesis of a revelation of light, it signifies an originary blasphemy. Forsaking ascension and mining a path towards the centre of the earth, black metal finds a satanic stain lodged at the core of being. However, the significance of this movement is not bound by a simple reversal. The inverted cross hangs above a swarming logic of inversion: the overturning of Christianity, but also a mimesis of Christian self-desecration; the rejection of certain forms of religion, but also of modernity’s pallid enlightenment; the invocation of strange gods of the earth, even as the earth is cursed. When thought becomes poison, it is no longer so easy to determine which way is up and which way is down. To throw down one’s head, to push oneself into the cursed earth, to occupy the place of the inverted crucified: is this to think-by-not-thinking an unconditioned rapture beyond negation and affirmation?
Table of Contents // “The Swarming Logic of Inversion and the Elevation of Satan,” by Steven Shakespeare and Niall Scott — “Through the Looking Glass Darkly: Medievalism, Satanism, and the Dark Illumination of the Self in the Aesthetics of Black Metal,” by Brenda S. Gardenour Walter — “The Way of the Sword: Christianity, Fascism, and the Folk Magic of Black Metal,” by Reuben Dendinger — “A Sterile Hole and a Mask of Feces,” by Bert Stabler — ART PORTFOLIO: “Eccentricities and Disorientations: Experiencing Geometricies in Black Metal,” curated by Elodie Lesourd and Amelia Ishmael [featuring artwork by: Dimitris Foutris, Gast Bouschet and Nadine Hilbert, Andrew McLeod, Sandrine Pelletier, and Stephen Wilson] — “Giving Life Harmoniously: Animal Inversion in Cattle Decapitation,” by Erik van Ooijen — “Contempt, Atavism, Eschatology: Black Metal and Bergson’s Porous Inversion,” by Louis Hartnoll
Melancology: Black Metal Theory and Ecology. Ed. Scott Wilson. Winchester: Zero, 2014.
Melancology addresses the notorious musical genre black metal as a negative form of environmental writing that ‘blackens’ the cosmos. This book conjures a new word and concept that conjoins ‘black’ and ‘ecology’: melancology, a word in which can be heard the melancholy affect appropriate to the conjunction. Black metal resounds from the abyss and it is precisely only in relation to its sonic forces that the question of intervention in the environment arises in the articulation of melancology with ethics. That is, in deciding ‘which way out’ we should take, in deciding with what surpluses to dwell, with what waste, what detritus or decay in a process of unbinding with sonic forces that traverse an earth choking in wealth and death. The book thus provides a provocative and challenging contribution both to popular and intellectual debates on ecology.
TABLE OF CONTENTS: Catena // Introduction to Melancology – Scott Wilson // Corpsepaint as Necro-Minstrelsy, or Towards the Re-Occultation of Black Blood – Drew Daniel // Black Sun – Aspasia Stephanou // Blackening the Green – Niall Scott // WormSign – Nicola Masciandaro // Shuddering: Black Metal on the Edge of the Earth – Steven Shakespeare // Black Metal In the White Tower: Metal’s Formless Presence in Contemporary Art – Amelia Ishmael // In the Abyss of Lies: A Short Essay on Failure in Black Metal – Liviu Mantescu // To the Mountains: The Implications of Black Metal’s Geophilosophy – Dominik Irtenkauf // The Irreversible Sludge: Troubled Energetics, Eco-Purification, and Self Inhumanization – Ben Woodard // Musca Amusica – Scott Wilson // Black Metal Theory – Dominik Irtenkauf and Nicola Masciandaro // Discography.