Everything Is Connected

Everything Is Connected
Author: Douglas Eklund
Publisher: Metropolitan Museum of Art
Total Pages: 198
Release: 2018-09-17
Genre: Art
ISBN: 1588396592

Since the mid-twentieth century, conspiracy has pervaded our collective worldview, shaped by events such as the assassination of John F. Kennedy, the Vietnam War, Watergate, the Iran-Contra affair, and 9/11. Everything Is Connected examines how artists from the 1960s to the present have explored both the covert operations of power and the mutual suspicion between governments and their citizens. Featured are works by some thirty artists—including Sarah Charlesworth, Emory Douglas, Hans Haacke, Rachel Harrison, Jenny Holzer, Mike Kelley, Mark Lombardi, Cady Noland, Trevor Paglen, Raymond Pettibon, Jim Shaw, and Sue Williams—in media ranging from painting, drawing, and photography to video and installation art. Whether they uncover webs of deceit hidden in the public record or dive headlong into paranoid fever dreams, these artists use their work to take a powerful and proactive stance against the political corruption, consumerism, bureaucracy, and media manipulation that are hallmarks of contemporary life. p.p1 {margin: 0.0px 0.0px 0.0px 0.0px; font: 14.0px Verdana}

Intimate Alien

Intimate Alien
Author: David J. Halperin
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Total Pages: 311
Release: 2020-03-24
Genre: Body, Mind & Spirit
ISBN: 1503612120

A voyage of exploration to the outer reaches of our inner lives. UFOs are a myth, says David J. Halperin—but myths are real. The power and fascination of the UFO has nothing to do with space travel or life on other planets. It's about us, our longings and terrors, and especially the greatest terror of all: the end of our existence. This is a book about UFOs that goes beyond believing in them or debunking them and to a fresh understanding of what they tell us about ourselves as individuals, as a culture, and as a species. In the 1960s, Halperin was a teenage UFOlogist, convinced that flying saucers were real and that it was his life's mission to solve their mystery. He would become a professor of religious studies, with traditions of heavenly journeys his specialty. With Intimate Alien, he looks back to explore what UFOs once meant to him as a boy growing up in a home haunted by death and what they still mean for millions, believers and deniers alike. From the prehistoric Balkans to the deserts of New Mexico, from the biblical visions of Ezekiel to modern abduction encounters, Intimate Alien traces the hidden story of the UFO. It's a human story from beginning to end, no less mysterious and fantastic for its earthliness. A collective cultural dream, UFOs transport us to the outer limits of that most alien yet intimate frontier, our own inner space.

Visitors to the Inner Earth

Visitors to the Inner Earth
Author: Professor Solomon
Publisher: Top Hat Press
Total Pages: 311
Release: 2011-02
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 0912509104

True tales (or so it was claimed) of subterranean journeys* King Herla in the cavern of the dwarfs* Enkidu and his descent into Sheol* Orpheus and Aeneas in Hades* Sir Owen in Purgatory* Cuchulain in Tir-nan-Og* Reuben and the mikvah stairway* Reverend Kirk and his abduction* Richard Shaver and the Deros* Saint-Yves d'Alveydre in Agharta* Thomas the Rhymer in Fairyland* Olaf Jansen and the polar opening* Apollonius of Tyana in the Abode of the Wise Men* Lobsang Rampa beneath the Himalayas* Doreal and the mysteries of Mount Shasta* Guy Ballard and the Ascended Masters* Captain Seaborn and his voyage to Symzonia* Walter Siegmeister and the Atlantean tunnels* Dianne Robbins and the Library of PorthologosAnd other visitors to the hidden depths of the earth.

The Man from Mars

The Man from Mars
Author: Fred Nadis
Publisher: Penguin Group
Total Pages: 305
Release: 2014-07-10
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 0399168842

Now in paperback, the rollicking, critically acclaimed true story of the legendary writer and editor who ruled over America's sci-fi, fantasy, and supernatural pulp journals in the mid-twentieth century: Ray Palmer. “Palmer could not have asked for a more sympathetic chronicler, or a better one, than Fred Nadis. His prose and his pronouncements are everything Palmer’s practically never were: restrained, nuanced, intelligently considered. Nadis has a great story, and he relates it exquisitely.” —Jerome Clark, Fortean Times “Fred Nadis’s insightful biography demonstrates that Palmer is significant as well as intriguing.” —The Washington Post “One of science fiction’s greatest gadflies gets his due in this lively and entertaining biography.” —Publishers Weekly “Lucidly written and unfailingly lively, The Man from Mars is a biography worthy of its subject.” —Fate magazine

Lemuria

Lemuria
Author: Justin McHenry
Publisher: Feral House
Total Pages: 137
Release: 2024-01-09
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1627311513

Is Lemuria a real place or the fever dream of crackpots, mystics, conspiracy theorists, and Bigfoot hunters? Below the waters where the Pacific and Indian Oceans lies a lost continent. One of hopes and dreams that housed a race of beings that arrived from foreign planets and from which sprang humanity, religion, civilization, and our modern world. It was called Lemuria and it was all fake. What began as a theoretical land bridge to explain the mystery of lemurs on Madagascar quickly got hijacked to become the evolutionary home of humankind, the cradle of spirituality, and then the source of cosmological wonders. Abandoned by science as hokum, Lemuria morphed into a land filled with ancient, advanced civilizations, hollowed-out mountains full of gold and crystals, moon-beings descending in baskets, underground evil creatures, and a breast-feeding Bigfoot. The history of Lemuria is populated with a dizzying array of people from early Darwinists to conspiracy spouting Congressmen, globetrotting madams, Rosicrucians, Hollow-Earthers, sci-fi writers, UFO contactees, sleeping prophets, New Age channelers, a “Mother God”, and a tequila swigging conspiracy theorist. Historian Justin McHenry provides a thoughtful exploration of how pseudo-science hijacked the gentle Victorian-era concept of Lemuria and, in following decades, twisted it into an all-encompassing home for alternative ideas about race, spirituality, science, politics, and the paranormal.