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In this episode, JF and Phil discuss Ridley Scott's 1979 sci-fi/horror blockbuster Alien. Together, they wipe off the patina of familiarity that beclouds the film, restoring it to its original weirdness. What is the organism that terrorizes the Nostromo? What's its relation to technology, evolution, industry? How does it differ from the monsters of older horror classics? How does one interpret without explaining away?
Music in this episode: "Hypnagogic," from Pierre-Yves Martel's Weird Studies Vol. 3.
Events
Shannon Taggart's Lily Dale Symposium (July 23-25, 2026Transcendence in the Age of AI, a Weirdosphere chat with Michael Garfield and JF Martel, hosted by Joel Gunz - June 25, 2026
Kickstarter campaign for Artist as Astronaut: The Otherworldly Art of Ionel Talpazan from Strange Attractor Press. The campaign closes June 27!
References
Ionel Talpazan, Romanian experiencer and artist
Ridley Scott (dir.), Alien
Peter Bebergal, All Our Famous Monsters (forthcoming)
Malachi Martin, Hostage to the Devil
Vilhelm Hammershøi, Danish painter
H. R. Giger, Swiss artist
Simon-Max, French entertainer
Eric Wargo, Passion of the Space Jockey
Weird Studies, Episode 213 on “Eric”
Mel Brooks (dir.), Spaceballs
Howard and Emerson, “Hello, Ma Baby”
Beowulf
Eugene Thacker, In the Dust of This Planet
Graham Harman, Weird Reality
Pierre Schaeffer, French musician
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It was with heavy hearts that Phil and JF learned of Gordon White's passing. Gordon was a force to be reckoned with: as an author and podcaster on all things occult, he offered unique perspectives and provocative interpretations at every turn. In this episode, your hosts discuss Gordon's thoughts on divination—or fortune-telling, as he preferred to call it...
Click here to purchase tickets to the 2026 edition of the Lily Dale Symposium (July 23-25), organized by Shannon Taggart and closing this year with a live recording of Weird Studies.
References
Rune Soup
Fortune’s Fools Oracle Deck
Duns Scotus, Scottish priest
Marshall Sahlins, The New Science of the Enchanted Universe
Henri Bergson, Time and Free Will
Ithell Colquhoun, Taro as Colour
Lord Dunsany, The Gods of Pegana
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Saknas det avsnitt?
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Tom Manning's 2018 graphic novel Eric is that rarest of gems: the self-published masterpiece. Available only on the author's website, it's the story of a washed-up surf rocker who stumbles into a cosmic conspiracy involving elite cultists, post-apocalyptic cowboys, renegade magicians, and three-eyed djinn. In this episode, Manning's work serves as a shining example of what makes comics such a unique and potent art form. There's no need to have read the book before listening—but know that you'll probably want to do when you're done. You're welcome.
Visit the Weirdosphere website to sign up for the Weird Studies Vol. 3 listening party on May 30, 2026.
Join the Weird Studies Patreon and support the show.
References
Tom Manning, ERIC
Leslie Stevens, “So So Surreal”
“Beach Bum #1”
Mike Relm, “Change the Channel”
Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari, What is Philosophy?
Sarah Heston, “Magical Los Angeles: An Interview with Tom Manning”
Scott McCloud, Understanding Comics
David Mamet, On Directing Film
Richard J. Lewis (dir.), Whale Music
Joel and Ethan Coen, The Big Lebowski
Darren Aronovsky (dir.), The Wrestler
Jorge Luis Borges, “The Garden of Forking Paths”
Marcel Proust, In Search of Lost Time
Jean-Paul Sartre, Nausea
Jean-Paul Sartre, The Transcendence of the Ego
David Lynch, Twin Peaks: The Return
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The pianist, composer and sound artist Glenn Gould once wrote: "Art on its loftiest mission is scarcely human at all." What becomes of art and humanity when they are allowed to vary independently of one another? Which serves which, and to what end? In this episode, JF and Phil discuss Glenn Gould's style and vision of music through the lens of François Girard's memorable 1993 film, Thirty-Two Short Films About Glenn Gould.
For details on the upcoming Weird Studies Volume 3 listening party, and to register for the event, go to the event page on the Weirdosphere website. The album will be released on May 22, 2026, on Pierre-Yves Martel's Bandcamp page.
Click here to support Weird Studies on Patreon.
REFERENCES
Francois Girard (dir.), Thirty Two Short Films About Glenn Gould
Rob Reiner, This is Spinal Tap
Weird Studies, Episode 31 on Gould’s “Prospects of Recording”
"The Shining Recut"
"Glenn Gould Interviews Glenn Gould About Glenn Gould"
Phil Ford, Dig: Sound and Music in Hip Culture
Glenn Gould, "The Idea of North"
Weird Studies, Episode 124 with Duncan Barford
Francois Girard, Production of Wagner’s Parsifal
Richard Wagner, Parsifal (clip from performance conducted by Reginald Goodall)
Spear of Longinus
Header image by Ana Pismel, via Wikimedia Commons.
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In this episode, Phil and JF discuss Stanley Kubrick's adaptation of Stephen King's novel The Shining. That they are doing this eight years after starting the podcast is weird in itself, so fundamental is Kubrick's "chamber epic" to the modern weird in general, and the hosts' specific interests in particular. Well, as the Overlook Hotel's former caretaker Delbert Grady might put it, consider the situation corrrrected.
Visit Weirdosphere to enroll in JF's upcoming course on Deleuzian philosophy, starting May 7 2026.
Support Weird Studies on Patreon
Interstitial Music: "Corridors" from Pierre-Yves Martel's Weird Studies Volume 2.
REFERENCES
Stanley Kubrick, The Shining
Jan Harlan, A Life in Pictures
Stanely Kubruck, Killer’s Kiss
Alberto Giacometti, “The Palace at 4am”
Gilles Deleuze, What is Philosophy?
Reyner Banham, “The New Brutalism”
Mark Fisher, The Weird and the Eerie
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We regret that we were unable to release a new episode this week. Episode 211 will drop on Wednesday, April 29, and will be devoted to Stanley Kubrick’s The Shining, a film we have long wanted to revisit in depth. In the meantime, we are pleased to offer Phil’s spirited reading of M. C. Richards’ essay “Wrestling with the Daimonic,” discussed in our previous episode and available only to Patreon members until now.
This recording is shared with kind permission from Wesleyan University Press. Visit their website for details on The Crossing Point and other works by M.C. Richards.
To support Weird Studies and get access to exclusive essays and bonus episodes, visit our Patreon page.
And go to Weirdosphere to learn more about JF's upcoming course on Deleuzian philosophy, which starts on May 7th, 2026.
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In this episode, JF and Phil bring together two visionary essays on the daimonic and the imaginal: Cristina Campo’s “On Fairy Tales” and M.C. Richards’s “Wrestling with the Daimonic.” What emerges is a conversation about imagination, personhood, and a world shot through with meaning. Notably, this episode opens with a discussion of what your hosts mean by "imaginal."
Phil’s reading of Richards’s essay can be found on our Patreon page. Thanks to Wesleyan University Press for permission to share this with our listeners.
Go to Pierre-Yves Martel's Bandcamp page to preorder his marvellous new album, Weird Studies Volume 3.
Click here to sign up for JF's seminar on Henri Bergson, happening on the Mutations learning platform on Saturday, April 11, 2026.
Click here for details on JF's upcoming Weirdosphere course, "What is Philosophy?".
Music in this Episode
"Scavenger," from Weird Studies Vol. 3
"Domes and Spires," from Weird Studies Vol. 2
References
M. C. Richards, American artist and philosopher
Cristina Campo, Italian poet and essayist
M. C. Richards, “Wrestling with the Daimonic”
Cristina Campo, “On Fairy Tales”
Henri Bergson, Matter and Memory
William Blake, “Auguries of Innocence”
Weird Studies, Episode 8 on Graham Harmon
Susan Chang, The Tarot Podcast
Ramsey Dukes, The Little Book of Demons
“The Boy Who Knew No Fear,” fairy tale
Una Voce, Catholic movement
Franz Liszt, Hungarian Pianist
Walter Benjamin, The Storyteller
William Shakespeare, Othello
M. C. Richards, Centering
Robert Duncan, American poet
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In this episode, Phil and JF discuss Haruki Murakami’s “Cream,” from First Person Singular, alongside Jorge Luis Borges’s classic tale, “The Garden of Forking Paths.” Together, these two stories occasion a meditation on time, perplexity, and the strange possibility that meaning isn't found at the end of the maze, but discovered only in the course of wandering it.
Photo by DMzlC via Wikimedia Commons.
Pierre-Yves Martel's Bandcamp page, home of Weird Studies Vol. 3 (to be released May 22, 2026).
Joel Plaskett's website and Substack
References
Geoffrey Cornelius, “Chicane: Double-Thinking and Divination among the Witch-Doctors,” in Divination: Perspectives for a New Millennium, ed. Patrick Curry (Burlington, VT: Ashgate, 2010), 119– 42.
Joe Leduc's Blood Oath
Jorge Luis Borges, “The Garden of Forking Paths”
Haruki Murakami, “Cream”
Marc Augé, Non-Places
Federico Campagna, Technic and Magic
Phil Ford, “The View from the Cheap Seats at the UFO Show”
Nicholas of Cusa, “On the Quadrature of the Circle”
Ethan Weed, “A Labyrinth of Symbols”
Kids in the Hall, “Premise Beach”
David Lynch, Twin Peaks: The Return
David Lynch, Lost Highway
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Don Giovanni
Weird Studies, Episode 66 on “Diviner’s Time”
Gottfried Leibniz, Theodicy
Quentin Meillasoux, After Finitude
Alejandro Jodorowsky, The Way of Tarot
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Kenneth Batcheldor was a British clinical psychologist who, during the final two decades of his life, investigated the paranormal through direct experiments in table-turning. The final fruit of that work was an essay, compiled from Batcheldor’s notebooks by Patric Giesler, entitled “Notes on the Elusiveness Problem in Relation to a Radical View of Paranormality.” Published in the Journal of the American Society for Psychical Research in 1994, it remained unknown to JF and Phil until Shannon Taggart called their attention to it quite recently. Since the theory Batcheldor presents here with admirable lucidity is deeply attuned to ideas they have been discussing on Weird Studies for nearly a decade, they decided to devote an episode to it. The core idea is by far the weirdest of all—in a sense, it is the weird itself.
Read Batcheldor's essay on the Weird Studies Patreon.
Visit Weirdosphere to enroll in Phil's upcoming 5-week course, "A Musical Tarot."
Pierre-Yves Martel's Weird Studies: Volume 3 will be available for preorder on March 13. Visit his Bandcamp page for details.
REFERENCES
K. M. Wehrstein, “Kenneth Batcheldor” in Psi Encyclopedia
Kenneth Batcheldor, “Notes on the Elusiveness Problem in Relation to a Radical View of Paranormality,” ed. Patric Giesler, The Journal of the American Society for Psychical Research 88, no. 2 (1994): 90-116.
Kenneth Batcheldor, “Contributions to the Theory of PK Induction from Sitter-Group Work,” Journal of the American Society for Psychical Research 78 (1984): 105-122.
George P. Hansen, The Trickster and the Paranormal
Quintin Meillassoux, After Finitude
Joshua Ramey, “Contingency Without Reason: Speculation after Meillassoux”
Kenneth Batcheldor, Videos of Table Tipping
Weird Studies, Episode 24 with Lionel Snell
David Lynch, Wild at Heart
William James, The Principles of Psychology
Tom Cheetham, Imaginal Love
A. Irving Hallowell, Ojibwa Ontology, Behavior, and World View
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This is the first of three episodes on J.R.R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings to be released in the course of the next several months. Focusing here on The Fellowship of the Ring, our hosts discuss the first leg of Frodo's journey into darkness, paying special attention to Tolkien's prose style, his modernism, his commitment to a truly magical realism, and his penchant for the weird and the tragic.
Image: "Lothlorien" by Tessa Bronsky, via Wikimedia Commons.
References
J. R. R. Tolkien, The Fellowship of the Ring
Algernon Blackwood, English writer
Weird Studies, Episode 204 on “On Fairy Stories”
Peter Jackson (dir.), The Lord of the Rings
Ursula K. LeGuin, A Wizard of Earthsea
Friedrich Nietzsche, History in the Service and Disservice of Life
Milan Kundera, The Art of the Novel
Kenneth Burke, A Grammar of Motives
Carl Jung, The Red Book
Lord Dunsaney, The King of Elfland’s Daughter
Karl Marx, The Communist Manifesto
David Foster Wallace, “E Unibus Pluram”
Steven Chow (dir.), Kung Fu Hustle
Donna Tartt, The Secret History
Lost Lakes, YouTube Channel
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This episode was recorded before a live audience at Indiana University Cinema as part of Weird Academia, a series of events that brought much high strangeness to Bloomington, Indiana, in January 2026. The discussion followed a screening of Ken Russell’s 1980 cinematic fever dream, Altered States. In it, JF and Phil explore the weird intersection of mysticism, psychedelics, and institutional science, and they close with a brief Q&A with members of the audience.
Visit Weirdosphere to enroll in Phil Ford's upcoming course, A Musical Tarot.
References
Weird Academia and the Center for Possible Minds
Robert Louis Stevenson, Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde
Roger Penrose, physicist and mathematician
Dante Alighieri, The Divine Comedy
Samuel Delaney, Dhalgren
Henri Bergson, Introduction to Metaphysics and Matter & Memory
H. P. Lovecraft, American writer
Herman Melville, Moby-Dick
Aldous Huxley, The Doors of Perception
Clement Greenberg, American essayist
G. K. Chesterton, English writer
David Cronenberg (dir.), The Fly
Michael Garfield, podcaster, writer, musician
Weird Studies episode 205 on the Hierophant
Victoria Nelson, The Secret Life of Puppets
Neil Gaiman, American Gods
J. R. R. Tolkien, "On Fairy Stories"
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In this episode of Weird Studies, we turn to the fifth Major Arcanum, the Hierophant, symbolizing tradition, instruction, and the exoteric aspect of spiritual practice. Drawing on Meditations on the Tarot and other sources, we question the easy opposition between tradition and revolution, exploring instead how inherited forms can foster genuine inner growth, and how an interior revolutions may renew traditions from within.
To reserve seats for Weird Academia events, visit the website of the Center for Possible Minds.
References
Johann Sebastian Bach, F# minor Fugue from The Well Tempered Clavier Book 1 (played by Rosalyn Tureck)
Richard Wilhelm (trans.), The I Ching
J. R. R. Tolkein, The Lord of the Rings
P. D. Ouspensky, The Symbolism of the Tarot
The Catechism of the Catholic Church
Our Known Friend, Meditations of the Tarot
Plato, "The Seventh Letter"
Alejandro Jodorowsky, The Way of Tarot
Dogen, Instructions for the Cook
Gilles Deleuze, Difference and Repetition
Weird Studies, Live at Illuminated Brew Works
Franz Liszt, Hungarian pianist
G. K. Chesterton, Orthodoxy
Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Biographia Literaria vol. 1
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For Tolkien, fairy stories are not stories about fairies, but stories that take place in Faerie. And in doing so, they make Faerie present. They are not escapist fantasies but disclosures of a real mode of being and invitations to live in that mode. In this episode, Phil and JF explore the great writer’s radical claims about the nature of story, life, and reality.
Upcoming Events
Erik Davis and JF's six-week course on Herman Melville's Moby-Dick begins on January 20th. For details and to enroll, visit the Weirdosphere.
For information on the upcoming Weird Academia events in Bloomington (Jan 27-29), visit the symposium web page at the Center for Possible Minds.
Music in this Episode
"What a Load of Gnosis," from Weird Studies: Music from the Podcast, Volume I
"Springtime on Ganymede," from Weird Studies: Music from the Podcast, Volume II
References
J. R. R. Tolkein, “On Fairy Stories”
Immanuel Kant, Critique of Pure Reason
Arthur Schopenhauer, The World as Will and Idea
Franz Liszt, Transcendental Etude No. 4: Mazeppa (played by Lazar Berman)
Dogen, "Instructions for the Cook"
Jeff Kripal, Mutants and Mystics
Eric Wargo, From Nowhere
J.F. Martel, Review of “From Nowhere” for Journal of Scientific Exploration
Richard Wagner, Parsifal
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To tide us over as we prepare for a new season of Weird Studies, here is an "audio extra," originally recorded for our Patreon supporters, wherein we discuss imposter syndrome, the eternal inadequacy of the intellect, the perils of playing with swords, and the role of trust in
creation.
A new episode will drop on Wednesday, January 14th, 2026. Happy New Year to all.
To join our Patreon, go to www.patreon.com/weirdstudies
To enroll in the upcoming Moby Dick course starting on January 20th, visit www.weirdosphere.org.
For information on the Weird Academia conference in Bloomington, Indiana, visit www.possibleminds.org/weird-academia
Episode image: Caspar David Friedrich, Abtei im Eichwald (1808-1810).
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Back in episode 112, Phil and JF devised a gimmick for a show: randomly select one of the many aphorisms in The Book of Probes, a compendium of Marshall McLuhan’s prophetic quips designed by David Carson, and see what happens. It proved lively enough that they’re trying it again nearly a hundred episodes later. The resulting conversation touches the weird across a range of themes: tourism, the two kinds of truth, advertising, Kubrick’s marketing savvy, technology, orality versus literacy, and much more. A fitting feast for the mind as the year draws to a close.
From all of us at Weird Studies, happy holidays.
• Sign up for JF Martel and Erik Davis's upcoming course on Moby-Dick.
• Join Phil, JF, and composer Pierre-Yves Martel for Weirdosphere's Solstice Story Hour on December 21.
• For dates, venues, and the full slate of Weird Academia events in Bloomington this January, visit the Centre for Possible Minds website.
• To participate in the Weird Academia Colloquium, email organizers Emma Stamm and Michael Garfield at [email protected]
Header Image: NASA.
REFERENCES
Marshall McLuhan, Distant Early Warning Deck
Thomas Mann, The Magic Mountain
Plato, The Seventh Letter
Marshall McLuhan, The Book of Probes
Toronto School of Communication Theory
Walter Ong, Orality and Literacy
Paul Kingsnorth, Against the Machine
Charles Taylor, A Secular Age
Plato, The Republic
Marshall McLuhan, Understanding Media
Jonathan Crary, 24/7
H. P. Lovecraft, The Color out of Space
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In this episode, JF and Phil discuss Robert Louis Stevenson’s Gothic classic, the tale that conjured the fog-shrouded London hellscape that has haunted the modern imagination ever since. Though written as a quick “Christmas crawler” to earn a bit of money, the novella has exerted an incalculable influence on art and literature. It also proved strangely prophetic, anticipating Freud and others who would soon make the fragmentation of the human psyche a defining concern of the new century.
"The human is two" is a recurring refrain in the work of the scholar of religious thought, Jeffrey J. Kripal.
References
Dan Ericson, Severance
Robert Louis Stevenson, The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
David Lynch (dir.), Mullholland Drive
John Frankenheimer (dir.), The Manchurian Candidate
Galen Strawson, British philosopher
Juan Eduardo Cirlot, A Dictionary of Symbols
Jeff Kripal, How to Think Philosophically
Rouben Mamoullian (dir.), Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
Weird Studies, Episode 161 on “From Hell”
Sigmund Freud, “The Ego and the Id”
Arthur Machen, Hieroglyphics
Arthur Machen, “The White People”
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In this episode, Phil and JF are joined by independent scholar Peter Bebergal, author of Strange Frequencies, Season of the Witch, and other books on the intersections of culture, religion, and the occult. The topic is Frankenstein—not Guillermo del Toro's latest but James Whale's 1931 talkie along with its 1935 sequel, The Bride of Frankenstein, both starring Boris Karloff. The conversation touches on Gnosticism, alchemy, modern techno-hubris, the Gothic, and much more.
Peter's new online course, Hacking the Invisible: At the Intersection of Technology and Magic, begins on November 20th, 2025, and runs for three weeks on Weirdosphere. Visit the Weirdosphere website for details and to enroll.
References
James Whale (dir.), Frankenstein
Tobe Hooper (dir.), Texas Chainsaw Massacre
James Whale (dir.), The Bride of Frankenstein
Justin Sledge, Esoterica
Henry Bergson, Introduction to Metaphysics
David Bohm, Wholeness and the Implicate Order
Mary Shelley, Frankenstein
John the Apostle, The Apocryphon of John
Stuart Gordon (dir.), Stuck
Jennifer Kent (dir.), The Babadook
Stephen T. Asma, On Monsters
Thomas Paine, “The Age of Reason”
Jean Gimpel, Medieval Machine
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Originally released in 2018 but remixed for your listening pleasure, here's Phil reading Arthur Machen's classic weird tale, "The White People." Happy Halloween!
Machen's "The White People" was discussed all the way back in Weird Studies episode 3.
Earlier this week, JF and Phil joined Conner Habib on his podcast to talk all about horror. It was a great conversation and we hope you'll give it a listen.
Image: Photo of doll from Auckland War Memorial Museum, via Wikimedia Commons.
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For their 200th episode, JF and Phil turn their attention to H. P. Lovecraft’s “The Call of Cthulhu,” a story foundational not only to modern horror fiction but to the very idea of the Weird. In revisiting this tale of forbidden knowledge and cosmic ambiguity, the hosts reflect on Weird Studies itself as a “slow piecing together of dissociated knowledge” that mirrors the work of Lovecraft’s own bewildered protagonists.
Image by Antoni Espinosa via Wikimedia Commons.
Upcoming Events:
Peter Bebergal teaches on Weirdosphere starting November 20, 2025
JF Martel speaks at Back to Haunt Us in East London on November 8, 2025
Phil Ford speaks at the Durations Festival in NYC on November 7, 2025
Phil Ford hangs out at Archestratus Books and Food on November 8, 2025
References
H. P. Lovecraft, The Call of Cthulhu
Weird Studies, Episode 2 on Garmonbozia
Rene Descartes, Meditations on First Philosophy
Phil Ford, “The Wanderer”
H. P. Lovecraft, "Nyarlathotep"
Weird Studies, Episode 74 on Jung
Phil Ford, Jacob Foster, and J. F. Martel, “Care of the Dead”
Weird Studies, Episode 110 on The Glass Bead Game
Weird Studies, Episode 101 on Tanizaki
Graham Harman, Weird Realism: Lovecraft and Philosophy
Weird Studies, Episode 156 on Donna Tartt
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Photographer and paranormal researcher Shannon Taggart joins JF and Phil to explore the phenomenon that was Michael Jackson. One of the most brilliant and successful musicians of the modern era, Jackson was also a liminal figure sans pareil, a shapeshifter who defied the binary categories through which we order the human world. His art and persona together enacted a transformation that can only be called shamanic.
About Our Guest:
Shannon Taggart is a photographer and author based in St. Paul, Minnesota. Her photographs have appeared in Newsweek, The New York Times Magazine, and The Wall Street Journal, and have been recognized by Magnum, Nikon, and the Alexia Foundation. Her monograph Séance was first published by Fulgur Press (2019) and reissued in a second edition by Atelier Éditions. Shannon is currently developing an illustrated history of SORRAT (the Society for Research on Rapport and Telekinesis) and hosts an annual symposium on the weird and the paranormal in Lily Dale, New York.
Image by Daniele Dalledonne, via Wikimedia Commons.
References
George Hanson, The Trickster and the Paranormal
Robert Chambers, The King in Yellow
Rogan Taylor, The Death and Resurrection Show
Pier Paolo Pasolini (dir.), Teorema
Phil Ford, “The View from the Cheap Seats at the UFO Show”
Michael Jackson, Moonwalker: A Memoir
J. M. Barrie, Peter Pan
Ursula K. Le Guin, A Wizard of Earthsea
Miguel Connor, The Occult Elvis
Tim Powers, Last Call
Weird Studies, Episode 186 on The Wedge
Raymond Moody, Elvis After Life
Sub Rosa, Spectra Ex Machina: A Sound Anthology of Occult Phenomena 1920-2017 Vol.2
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