RAWIllumination.net

Robert Anton Wilson and Robert Shea. Blog, Internet resources, online reading groups, articles and interviews, Illuminatus! info.

Monday, September 1, 2025

'Vineland' online reading group, Chapter 10



By ERIC WAGNER
Special guest blogger

Deep breath. Most of what I remember and most of what I love about this novel happens in the first half of the book. Perhaps I will understand and appreciate the balance of the novel reading it in 2025, Thanatoids and all. I did enjoy the bit about Rolls Royces in chapter nine.  

The discussion of faces on film on page 195 makes me think of two things. First, I think of the character on Fear the Walking Dead who recorded interviews with people about their experiences during the zombie apocalypse. Second, I think about the documentary Hôtel Terminus. The surviving members of the French Resistance in that film seem full of life, whereas the collaborationists and Nazis seemed, as Pynchon says, “evasive, affectless, cut off from whatever they had once been by promises of what they would never get to collect on?” 

Pg. 197, xanthorcroid means, “of, relating to, or designating races having light-coloured hair and a pale complexion” according to Collins Dictionary. That fits with the reference to the sisters’ attitude towards the surfing community in this passage. 


Sunday, August 31, 2025

Michael Johnson on 'Illuminatus!'


Michael says this copy of the book is signed! I still have my three original 1970s mass market paperbacks, but I'm afraid they aren't signed. 

The latest Michael Johnson piece for Substack, "Thoughts on the Structure of Illuminatus!," takes on one of my favorite literary works. Michael explains that it is an "anatomy" under Norbert Frye's definition and offers other points. I am wary of trying to summarize Michael's new piece, but you can read it here and then read the comments, such as mine.



Saturday, August 30, 2025

Timothy Leary heckled

A footnote to the posting a few days ago about the new movie on the Nova Convention:  Jesse Walker sent along this sound clip, remarking that is is "Notable less for RAW's participation than for the bit of audience jiu-jitsu that Leary pulls off at the beginning." And indeed, Leary copes well with the heckling. 



Friday, August 29, 2025

A bit more on Pynchon and some links

My favorite bit in Oz' last post was the textual evidence he finds to show that "Wilson & Shea wink at Pynchon in Illuminatus! and Pynchon winks right back at them in Vineland through the shared rubric of "Kick out the Jams." I think Oz makes a pretty strong case.

Here's a bit where RAW is asked about Pynchon:

JW: How do you regard Pynchon as important? Obviously he's a conspiracy theorist...

RAW: We have a lot in common. It's one of those things, like Darwin and Wallace, when the time is right a couple of people are going to be saying pretty much the same thing. There are enough differences between Pynchon and me that I think I'm a little more than just an echo of Pynchon. At least I like to believe that. Shea and I were finished with Illuminatus! when we read Gravity's Rainbow and then on the rewrite we deliberately threw in a couple of references to it, but we had worked out the structure on our own, mostly on the basis of the nut mail that Playboy gets.

Of course, there's no Pynchon interview I can cite, but Oz' citations convince me.

The Science Fiction Encyclopedia entry on Robert Anton Wilson says (about Illuminatus!), "Throughout, the Paranoia engendered by any and all attempts to understand these pixilated conspiracies, of which all the things of the world were emblems, reminded many readers of Thomas Pynchon; but an unPynchonesque lightheartedness permeates the sequence." Vineland certainly has a lot of lighthearted humor; could that be the influence of Illuminatus! on Pynchon? Just throwing that out there to see if anyone thinks that makes sense. 

A few links:

Here's an old post from me, we did eventually do Pale Fire. 

A possible RAW reference Spookah spotted in Inherent Vice. 

Rufus Flypaper on RAW vs. Pynchon. 

A reminder that Robert Shea once published Pynchon. 



Thursday, August 28, 2025

PQ on Pynchon

 PQ has a new post up about Thomas Pynchon, worth a careful read, here is the opening bit:

"Back in April, a screaming came across the sky, the announcement of a new Thomas Pynchon novel, to be published in October, entitled Shadow Ticket. This marks a literary event, an unforeseen comet spark in the darkness. Pynchon is arguably the greatest living novelist on the strength of Gravity's Rainbow (1973) alone, but the reclusive 88-year-old had not published any new books since 2013's Bleeding Edge, so his fans might've been forgiven for thinking his days of writing new stuff might be over."

The title of the piece is "Return of the Counterforce." Peter explains what the Counterforce is and reveals his favorite Pynchon novel. Here is another bit:

"I'm glad to see in the summer of 2025, Thomas Pynchon is now having a moment. It means great literature is having a moment. A new book from such a legendary writer is some of the best news of this year. I've been seeing copies of Vineland stacked forefront in bookstores across the country in the past year. A new movie inspired by Vineland is about to drop, with Benicio del Toro and DiCaprio. And then we get Shadow Ticket. Something like the counterforce is returning."

Tuesday, August 26, 2025

Harold Garfinkel, a RAW influence


Harold Garfinkel (Creative Commons photo. By Arlene Garfinkel - Garfinkel's family, CC BY 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=12017435)

While we wait for Michael Johnson to write the definitive article (or book) about Thomas Pynchon and Robert Anton Wilson, here is another can't-miss Substack piece: "Robert Anton Wilson and Ethnomethodology," on the influence of famed sociologist Harold Garfinkel on RAW. The Wikipedia article on Garfinkel provides some background, but Michael has some great additional angles. I have not had a Harold Garfinkel as a label on a post until now, so this is apparently an underrated influence. 

Monday, August 25, 2025

'Vineland' online reading group, Chapter 9

 


By OZ FRITZ
Special guest blogger

"Unfortunately for anyone's peace of mind, especially his own, a shaman's behavior will tend to be a blend of his most annoying manifestations, magnifying his complex conflictual relationship with social protocol; nerve-wracking non-sequitur and unexpected blasphemies constantly send ripples of shockwaves through unsuspecting bystanders; he seems utterly unresponsive to the most obsequious blandishments." E.J. Gold, Life in the Labyrinth.

Takeshi reveals his shamanic nature in this chapter beginning at the bottom of page 147: "Through years of stately unfoldings of the deep actuarial mysteries that allowed him to go on making a living, Takeshi had come to value and watch closely in the world for signs and symptoms, messages from beyond, and even discounting the effects of drug abuse, nothing about the city seemed quite right tonight."

"Stately unfoldings" is an interesting phrase; "stately" connects with the beginning of Ulysses,  a novel which unfolds in a way related to shamanic exploration. The beginning of Wikipedia's description of actuary also applies to a shaman: "An actuary is a professional with advanced mathematical skills who deals with the measurement and management of risk and uncertainty."

I see this as an inflection point in the book; from this point on the subject of death increases its presence dramatically. Takeshi is about to experience a series of events that puts him in a position of confronting the distinct possibility of imminent death directly every day. This plot point seems an excellent metaphor for the Sufi advice to die before you die; or for Castaneda's shamanic advice to always keep death just behind your left shoulder. We seem never more alive when faced with the prospect of dying soon.

Not only does Pynchon write about shamans, his writing exemplifies modern shamanism – going out into the unknown, coming back and writing about it; communicating his vision. The unknown includes crossing over to the other side through the veil of death. 

"Even an apparently simple thing like a common language which we are all forced to use in order to communicate with others becomes something different in the hands of a shaman. Shaman always seem to lean heavily toward those tooth- gnashing, fingernail-scraping, annoyingly Ivesian-Stravinskian-Schoenbergian ways of communicating that just don't seem to be able to conform themselves to well-defined human conventions." - Life in the Labyrinth. 

Pynchon was denied the Pulitzer Prize for Gravity's Rainbow in 1974. The jury who decides these things unanimously recommended it but the Pulitzer advisory board refused to give it to him on the grounds that the book was obscene and unreadable. No award was given that year. In Schrödinger's Cat, Robert Anton Wilson asks if his novel might not serve as a shamanic manual. Some of the more adventurous and imaginative Quantum physicists perform shamanic functions, though usually communicating in a very technical way. Writers like Pynchon, Wilson, Joyce and others use literature and literary tricks to bring the attentive and ambitious reader into their headspace, into the non-ordinary territory they've explored.

"A shaman will often seem to make a sudden shift to left field, leaving the linear literal mind holding the bag, so to speak, temporarily off-balance and unsure of its footing, but the shaman knows that nothing is ambiguous; he sees the underlying causes and knows how to attune himself to them. He knows the irony of expectation, and the ecstasy of disappointment; he has learned to follow life as one's vision follows the face of a lover." - ibid.

Pynchon shows great fondness for the letter V; it becomes a tag for him. We can only speculate why. Attentive readers have already observed this in Vineland.  As a shifting signifier, his affinity for this letter likely has multiple explanations. Of course, his first novel is V. Pynchon's most famous teacher at Cornell, Vladimir Nabokov has a narrator called V in one of his novels, The Real Life of Sebastian Knight. Parallels in plot, theme and writing style between the two books have led some scholars to infer Nabokov's influence. Nabokov's full name begins and ends with a V. He claims to have no memory of Pynchon at Cornell. His wife Vera (whose full name also begins and ends with a V) recalls grading Pynchon's papers.

Eric Wagner recently wrote to me: "The Germans surrendered on May 8, 1945, Tom Pynchon's eighth birthday, Victory in Europe Day, V-E Day. I have long suspected that that influenced Pynchon's interest in the letter V and in the end of the war in Europe in Gravity's Rainbow."  That book, his third, firmly established him in the literary world. The V-2 rocket plays a central role in it. So, Pynchon turned 8 on May 8th of '45 - V-E Day. At a critical juncture in this chapter (and the book), shortly following the Vineland quote above and a few steps before Takeshi's life irrevocably changes, he can "hear large V-8 engines idling" (p. 148).

The passion for V stretches across TP's oeuvre including the little nonfiction he wrote. Evidence for it turns up in the introduction he wrote for his good friend Richard Farina's novel of the '60s Been Down So Long It Looks Like Up to Me. In the introduction to Slow Learner discussing his short story "Entropy" and the origin of this word coined by Rudolf Clausius, Pynchon comments: "If Clausius had stuck to his native German and called it Verwandlunginhalt instead, it could have had an entirely different impact." This is more commonly written as two words, Verwandlung Inhalt and translates as "transformation content." Kafka's most famous short story, "The Metamorphosis" has the German title Di Verwandlung. The reader's transformation or metamorphosis seems one major intent of TP's writing. 

If we may go into the weeds for a moment . . . I was startled by a character in Bleeding Edge that seems to correspond V to the Hebrew letter Feh, a variation of Peh –  "Phipps Epperdew, better known as Vip ...". The difference between Peh and Feh delineates the sound of the letter. Peh gives the hard p sound while Feh gets pronounced more like an f or ph. Phipps has both in one name. Peh and Feh both = 80 in Gematria. Therefore, in traditional Kabbalah both the English P and F letters = 80; V traditionally corresponds with Vau = 6. Crowley changed that in his Qabalah reckonings by assigning F to Vau ostensibly due to F and V sounding similar though it also aided his calculations. I suggest that Pynchon uses the same logic (sound similarity) to reverse Crowley by corresponding V with Feh thus giving it the value of 80, in this instance. What does this have to do with the price of tea in China, or the price of hash in Morrocco? Maybe nothing. It's explored more in my post on Bleeding Edge here: https://oz-mix.blogspot.com/2021/08/bleeding-edge-pynchon-robert-anton.html

In Cosmic Trigger Vol. 1 Robert Anton Wilson describes all the synchronicities he experienced with the number 23 as a key into his Cabalistic lexicon. Pynchon uses 23 as a tag for Wilson in Bleeding Edge– see my blog above. V might be a key into unlocking TP's cryptography. Focusing back on Vineland: though only halfway through we can already observe the predominance of female characters, intelligence, and energy along with the struggles they face. We have the Sisterhood of lady ass-kickers and DL harassing an all-woman motorcycle club. By its shape (the shape of the individual letters holds significance in Kabbalah), the letter V suggests the female reproductive system as well as being the first letter of vagina. Giving V and P the same mathematical identity – Peh and Feh both = 80 – suggests a union of penis (Peh) and vagina (Feh), the blending of male and female as frequently discussed regarding Vineland. Male and female symbolically represented as different aspects of the same general letter suggests Adam Kadmon a symbolic composite being comprised of the balanced union of male and female.

Earlier, in connection with chapter 5 and the TV show Hawaii 5-0, we stated that 5 appears significant to the lexicon of this novel. At the end of this chapter, 5 appears both explicitly: "zigzagging toward I-5" and implicitly:

"DL driving, singing
Oh, kick out the jambs, motherfuck-er,
'Cause here comes, that Stove once again –
You though I was somethin' in Olathe,
Wait till, you see me in Fort Wayne"

Though all the lyrics are different except the first line, to me, this appears an obvious reference to the MC5 song "Kick Out the Jams," a proto-punk rock song. The Fort Wayne reference conjures Wayne Kramer, a co-founder and co-leader of the MC5.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yvJGQ_piwI0

Listening to the first 15 seconds seals the deal about that. Slight digression: Illuminatus! has people carrying signs saying "Kick out the JAMs" which in that case stands for the Justified Ancients of Mummu (Illuminatus! p. 127 -128 Dell omnibus edition - thank-you Vineland wiki). Five pages before that in Illuminatus! a TWA stewardess finds notes left behind by a "John Mason" on his way to Mexico City (where Pynchon lived at one point in the 60s). Wilson and/or Shea begin riffing on 5 a little way into these notes:

"Christianity all in 3s (Trinity, etc.) Buddhism all in 4s. Illuminism in 5s. A progression?
Hopi teaching: all men have 4 souls now, but in future will have 5 souls. . . .
Who decided the Pentagon building should have that particular shape?
'Kick out the Jams' ??? Cross-check.

. . .

D.E.A.T.H. – Don't Ever Antagonize The Horn. Does Pynchon know?" 

                                                                    – ibid. p.123 (italics in the original).

The way I read this: Wilson & Shea wink at Pynchon in Illuminatus! and Pynchon winks right back at them in Vineland through the shared rubric of "Kick out the Jams."

V also = the Roman character for 5. Vine = 133 in its Hebrew spelling. 

133 (vine) x 5 (V = vagina) = 665 = "The Womb" in "Sepher Sephiroth." Adding the upright 1( a phallic symbol) gives us 666, a solar number (Tiphareth thrice), the number of THE BEAST and "The Name Jesus." DL briefly refers to Takeshi as a beast when having sex in this chapter. The other city mentioned when DL sings her version of "Kick out the jams" is Olathe, Kansas. Olathe is a Shawnee word for beautiful, another reference to Tiphareth

 Circling back and speaking of reversals, we find an example regarding V in this chapter with Brock Vond (BV) balanced by Vato and Blood partners in "V & B Tow company." Vond and Vato = two proper names starting with V with an opposite qabalistic sense. Vato  = 86 = "A name of God asserting the identity of Kether and Malkuth" as we saw earlier with the channel 86 TV station. Blood describes a Hermetic metaphor for how an individual might go about uniting Kether with Malkuth aka uniting the macrocosm with the microcosm. This gets made evident and put into the student's body and heart along with the intellect through practicing "The Mass of the Phoenix" (takes about 10 minutes), chapter 44 in The Book of Lies; 44 = blood.  

Tow recalls "Fascist Toejam" (kick out the fascist jams) as well as "Cheetos" = Chi (Chinese vital energy = Kether; mentioned a few times in this chapter and key to what DL does to Takeshi)) + toe or toes (Malkuth on the Tree of Life) as I elaborated earlier. Vato = V + a (aleph = The Fool, an androgenous symbol) + to (pronounced toe).

Vond, on the other hand, = 130 = The Devil (raw male energy) = the 5 of Cups (disappointment, trouble, pain, grief and represents a lack of fulfilment or non-attainment of expected results which we get told is Brock's situation regarding Frenesi. Both Brock and Prairie search for Frenesi). But it doesn't seem all black and white. 130 also = "Deliverance" and "The Angel of Redemption" a version of which may or may not happen to Brock during the novel's conclusion; the reader will have to decide.

* * * * * *

A comment I couldn't get to last week: the emphasis on attention in chapter 8 reveals the strong influence of Gold's school. Prairie sees the Head Ninjette emerge from invisibility and asks if she can learn how to do that. "Takes a serious attention span." . . . "Common sense and hard work's all it is. Only the first of many kunoichi disillusionments – right, DL? – is finding that the knowledge won't come down all at once in any big transcendent moment." There's also a short phrase about attention, great  shamanic advice, in chapter 9.

Chapter 9 Notes:

p. 141, a passage covering most of this page got me considering Frenesi = a manifestation of Eris. Hail Eris!

P. 142, "Wawazume Life & Non-Life" seems the first introduction to the bardo chambers up ahead.

p. 147, "shabu" – Japanese slang for speed.

Back on p. 128 Pynchon makes a connection to his first novel, V. In that book, one aspect of V turned out to be Victoria Wren. In Vineland, the Sisterhood's financial consultant is "Vicki down in L.A. who moves it all around for us." – the only mention of her in the book.

In Straight Outta Dublin Eric Wagner writes of the importance Robert Anton Wilson placed on masks and their various ramifications. Chapter 9 brushes upon the subject of masks in a few different places – chapter 8 too, I believe. The chapter in Life in the Labyrinth following the one with the quotes above talks about masks. It's called "Shapeshifting Up the Totem."

Chapter 9 has two or 3 very subtle allusions to the Sufi classic, The Conference of the Birds by Attar. It seems very related to shamanic voyaging if not identical or close to it. Also at least a couple more music references: "People Are Strange" by the Doors when DL assembles a mask and disguise for herself and "Louie Louie" by the Kingsmen with the lyric commonly misheard as "Me gotta go" (p. 190). That lyric seems a shamanic prerequisite: you gotta drop the ego, at least temporarily, to access the higher dimensions. 

Next week: please read Chapter 10, pages 192 - 203

Sunday, August 24, 2025

A lost William Burroughs film


An article at Filmmaker.com features an interview with the directors of “The Nova Convention… a Free Artistic Experiment," a film featuring "lost" footage, here are the opening sentences: 

"Aaron Brookner and Rodrigo Areias’s Nova ’78 centers around the Nova Convention, a late ’70s avant-garde extravaganza that took place at NYC’s now defunct Entermedia Theater (Second Avenue and 12th Street) in honor of William S. Burroughs’s return to the U.S. after living more than 20 years abroad. It was also a great excuse to gather a who’s who roster of counterculture icons to perform in the presence of the postmodern wordsmith who’d profoundly impacted them all. That would include Patti Smith and Lenny Kaye, Laurie Anderson and Julia Heyward, Allen Ginsberg and Peter Orlovsky, Brion Gysin, Timothy Leary, Merce Cunningham, Philip Glass, John Cage, Jackie Curtis, Robert Anton Wilson, Terry Southern, Frank Zappa and the list goes on. Quite the happening indeed!"

I don't know if RAW is in the film; the "Bob Wilson" referred to in the interview is the famous director, not RAW. I searched for the title at justwatch.com and couldn't find any information on how to see this thing, perhaps it will be available for streaming at some point.

More information. 

Hat tip: Nicholas Helweg-Larsen.


Saturday, August 23, 2025

David Lee on Hilaritas podcast

 

 

As customary, Hilaritas Press has released a new podcast today on the 23rd, and the new one features David Lee.

"Hilaritas guest host Zach West, chats with chaos magickian, author, and educator David Lee on his essay in the recently released anthology assembled by Peter Carroll, This is Chaos."

Probably available wherever you get your podcasts, but here is the official page with links. 

Forty eight episodes so far, with more to come!

Friday, August 22, 2025

New music video from Steve Pratt

 


Renaissance man Steve "Fly" Pratt has just released a new music video he made for a track by the jazz fusion group Garaj Mahal, which recently released a new album. 

I learned about the above video via Steve's Substack, but his Patreon offers the clearest explanation of what's going on here:

Roughly a month ago I was invited to experiment with some visuals for the new album by Garaj Mahal: Rotifer. I accepted and went deep into the microcosmos, a place I've been swimming around for a while with water bears, and came up with the goods.

The first full length video just went live. Enjoy.

@GarajMahalMusic⁩ is: ⁨@FareedHaqueMusic⁩ , Kai Eckhardt, Oz Ozzeldin, Hassan Hurd. Video content generated using Gemini Veo. The creator intends to plant a tree for each full video and encourages anybody who enjoys this video to go support a local artist, or plant a tree, or both!

Stay tuned at: https://www.youtube.com/@GarajMahalMusic

All love

--Fly


The Internet Archive has live performances of bands that allow their shows to be recorded and released by fans, i.e. the Grateful Dead's policy, so  here is a Garaj Mahal performance featuring Steve  that Steve thought was "particularly good."   (I am a Gin Blossoms fan, so here is the Gin Blossoms live collection.)

Here are some of Steve's musical adventures, "interesting throughout," as Tyler Cowen likes to say. 

Thursday, August 21, 2025

A useful movie reviewer


Scott Sumner (Creative Commons photo, information). 

Tyler Cowen says that Scott Sumner is "the greatest movie critic in the world," and I enjoy Sumner's movie reviews, too. Sumner's all time favorite TV shows is Twin Peaks and I agree with many of his other opinions, too.

A couple of links:

Peak cinema in the late 1950s and early 1960s.

More film reviews. 

Overlooked films. 

More film reviews. 

The reviews are short; here are a couple of Sumner reviews of films by RAW favorite Orson Welles:

The Lady From Shanghai (US, 1947, CC) 3.9 Despite its leisurely pace, the first half of this film is near-perfect cinema. The second half is more fast paced and contains three famous set-pieces—including the hall of mirrors shootout—but it is actually the weaker half of the film. I enjoyed this more the second time around, as I no longer get frustrated when a film has an intricate and difficult to follow plot.

The Trial (US/Europe, 1962, CC) 3.7 Suppose you were a film buff who had never heard of Kafka, and you also knew nothing about Orson Welles. Also imagine that you were told that this film was produced by an obscure Eastern European filmmaker. How would you rate it? Clearly it would be viewed as an overlooked masterpiece. But you have heard of Kafka and Welles, and that undoubtedly explains why it received mixed reviews. For this sort of project, reviewers are naturally going to have extremely high standards. If someone felt that the film fell well short of expectations, I would not argue with them. The print has been beautifully restored.

Tom again: Sumner also blogs about other cultural topics, about economics (his actual academic specialty) and about politics. He is my favorite political blogger (libertarian, anti-Trump.) Here is an excellent essay on how pop music peaked in the mid-1960s.  And here are remarks on the U.S. becoming a banana republic (scroll to the end, the main post is about Trump's tariffs.)

Click the Scott Sumner tag on this post for more interesting stuff. 





Wednesday, August 20, 2025

Ben Graham on Julian Cope

 


Julian Cope in 2015 (Creative Commons photo, details here.)

As many Discordians, perhaps particularly in Britain, seem to be interested in musician Julian Cope, I thought I would share some of Ben Graham's latest Urban Spaceman newsletter:

I've got a piece in the next issue of Undefined Boundary: The Journal of Psychic Albion, published by Cormac Pentecost's Temporal Boundary Press. It's the first part of a long essay called 'The Transfiguration of Julian Cope, 1989-1991', and covers that period in Cope's career when he transformed himself from psychedelic pop star into visionary archdrude with his acclaimed Peggy Suicide album.

Those who know me will know of my long-standing enthusiasm for Julian Cope, and this is an attempt to explain it, to myself as much as anyone else, without just resorting to standard album reviews. It's about me as much as it is about Cope, and I think that if you like my autobiographical writing, or my writing on magic and culture generally, you'll probably enjoy this even if you're not particularly interested in Julian Cope’s music.

Part one is in Undefined Boundary Volume 4 issue 1, out in September. Part 2 follows in Volume 4 issue 2 later this year. More details and how to order can be found at https://temporalboundary.bigcartel.com/

If you are interested in Ben's music writing, see also another brand new newsletter, "C86 and all that."