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Title: Otherworlds Review #3: Masks
Author: The Otherworlds Review
Date: November 9, 2017
Language: en
Topics: spirituality, magic, Occult
Source: https://itsgoingdown.org/otherworlds-review-3-masks/

The Otherworlds Review

Otherworlds Review #3: Masks

November 2017 · Sun in Scorpio · Full moon in Taurus

We might describe the lunar month leading to this moment, when the moon

radiates in the company of the starry bull, as the time of the mask.

Children disguise themselves as faeries and goblins and show up on

doorsteps demanding tricks and treats; descendants paint skulls upon

their faces in honor of the ancestors; faces are carved into fruit and

left at thresholds as offerings for the restless trouping spirits;

nocturnal mischief and masses are held in the streets. Masquerade,

carnivalesque processions, fantasies and grotesqueries.

And also the death throes of empire persist. Toxic waters brewed from a

century of industrial abuse continues to drown those lives left behind

in poisons. Hellfire eviscerates vineyards and trailer parks. The

accumulated capital and cheap commodities of thousands turns to ash and

smoke blanketing entire regions in generational miasma. The apocalypse

now takes the form of an interruptive cacophony settling back into an

amnesiac status quo ever more nauseating, ever more dizzying, ever more

malignant. The sun burns red in the hazy skyline – a rose tinted light

falls on each selfie and the palette shifts on a collective moment in

the timelines – and yet the carcinogens remain after the attention has

shifted to next week’s unimaginable catastrophe. In all of this, the

mask becomes more potent and necessary: to breathe, to venture into the

world, to respond to each crisis.

The social crises necessitate the mask too. Our enemies use “less

lethal” toxins and cameras against us, fill the streets with teargas and

livestreamers. A slight error and a single picture can be weaponized,

used to mobilize years of self-promotion and self-surveillance into a

case or some other tragedy. We anonymize ourselves as harm reduction so

that we can act regardless. To be known, named, doxxed, is to be

captured. In the cybernetic swamp, the mask generates the possibility of

action and evasion.

Masks have always been among the most powerful psychological and

spiritual tools at our disposal. They figure into our rituals and our

devotions, our revelry and our warfare. Even in the anthropomorphized

iconographic age of classical antiquity we can locate the specific

exceptions where the mask persisted as representation of the divine. In

the case of ancient Greece, according to Vernant and Vidal-Naquet, three

entities alone were primarily associated with masks:

The first is a power who is nothing but a mask, and who operates in and

through it: Gorgo, the gorgon. The second is a goddess who is never

herself represented by a mask but in whose cult masks and disguises are

particularly important: Artemis. The third is the deity whose

relationship with the mask is so close that in the Greek pantheon he is

known as the god of masks: Dionysos.

Gorgo demonstrates the apotropaic potential of the mask. The gorgon,

whether depicted on a doorway or shield, neutralizes her enemy. “Exposed

to the Gorgon’s gaze, man faces the powers of the beyond in their most

radical and alien form, that of death, night, and nothingness.” The

Gorgon disrupts the binaries of young-old, beautiful-ugly,

masculine-feminine, human-beast, mortal-immortal. Her queer disruption

adds force to our attacks, cloaks us in the protection afforded by her

onlooking gaze. We strengthen our relation to monstrosity while the

fascists call each other gay on the internet and debate about which

class segment of ‘normal, white, americans’ they assimilate into. If we

must be monsters, which kind will we choose to become?

Artemis stalks the liminal places, the zones in between, the shorelines

and boundary-lands. Into her domain we venture wearing masks in

initiatory ceremonies. This practice survived into christendom as pacts

made under the moon at the crossroads with the dread-queen of witches.

Her name continues to hold protective and guiding force for those

crossing between identities and worlds. The mask continues its

initiatory agreement with humanity; continues to reveal the mysteries

which only become visible in carnivalesque co-mingling of extremes.

Dionysos, the god of the mask, is also the one who “exerts his powers,

introducing the unpredictable dimension of the elsewhere into the very

heart of daily life.” He is the stranger, the other, xenos perpetually

arriving from beyond the sea. Like Gorgo, we encounter him face to face.

Or as Euripides put it: “I saw him see me.” The mask functions as a

focal point, an attempt to fix the elusive presence into time and space.

The mask, the crown of flowers and vines, the pinecone-tipped spear,

each a tool for achieving immediate contact with otherness, for becoming

other ourselves.

What the mask rendered possible through what was brought to life when

the actor donned it, was an eruption into the heart of public life of a

dimension of existence totally alien to the quotidian world […]

Possession afforded access to a world of joy where the confining

limitations of the human condition disappeared. […] Dionysos introduces

into the heart of human life an otherness so complete that it has the

power, as does Gorgo, to propel its enemies toward horror, chaos, and

death, just as it can also raise its devotees to a state of ecstasy, a

full and joyous communion.

The state of emergency has become the norm. The outside has come in.

Each day is painted with liminal stripes. Consensus reality is no longer

consensed upon. To do more than survive we’ll need to don disguises into

which all three functions – apotropaic, initiatory, communizing – are

woven. There is no need for hope or despair, only for new masks.

North Carolina jails, from a report at the end of October, recovering

from blows made to the rigid and relentless walls of US prisons during

the September 2016 prison strike, are levying bureaucratic retaliations

against inmates. The “rebellious, conscious, and disruptive prisoners,

as well as mentally disabled prisoners … face many times the amount of

months in isolation than they would have before.” Prison rebels, so

unmasked as to be exclusively surveilled.

In a parallel and simultaneous universe, billionaires increased their

combined global wealth last year to a record of $6 trillion. “140 of the

world’s top sports teams are owned by just 109 billionaires, with

two-thirds of NBA and NFL teams owned by billionaires.” So few with so

much that they clamor to own teams of athletes, collections of stolen

art, stale museums. Last week, a certain billionaire took care to remind

the black players whose team he owns that he “can’t have the inmates

running the prison” when they refused to stand, hand over heart, for an

anthem crafted for the plight of the robber baron. The millionaires

beneath those billionaires, who aspire to that status, are the same in

wine country, in the background of relief efforts, when effort is only

exerted for their own. The millionaires who populate the san francisco

bay area at thirty percent.

There are emblematic enemies who we pass on the street now. The enemy

with the $60 ventilator mask, the casually violent landlords and

managers, proud boys of every tacky stripe. The wet-eyed, sappy

bourgeois fundraiser class of enemies appears on front lines and news

clips. Lamenting a precious commodity damaged here, silent about a

prisoner forced to work saving property she will never access otherwise

there.... As the structures fall away, the old terms on which enemies

were met go too. They burned to a crisp, blew away as ash. The landscape

is scorched, new earth raw and exposed. The clarity of the emergency

gives us new maps. Suddenly, there’s nobody in charge; suddenly, more

things are up for grabs.

Eduardo Galeano said “the fog is the ski mask of the jungle.” During the

first days of 1994, heartened and blessed rebels masked up, took cover

in the misty jungle, among the mountains. When members of the indigenous

autonomous militia and community of Zapatistas in Chiapas made their

global debut, they had been at work long before their unveiling, of

course. Developing and living their “extraordinary novel way of ‘subject

construction.’” They chose no longer to react, but to ask and live the

answer to their question: “My life, why should I want you if you are not

dignified?” They worked to recover the deep historical and spiritual

identity of rebellion and peaceful freedom (by any means necessary)

which wove its way into and through the emerging armed indigenous

population of the EZLN. “This was the recognition of the potential

existence of a new civilizing matrix out of an indigenous worldview and

in its interaction with the ‘rest of the world,’ a process that has

begun to define a planetary revolutionary proposal.”

The knot of the shifting veil loosens from over the painful collective

dysfunction of this reality. The masks of ego fall away from the sacred

ones who seek not the top of the mountain, but to become the valley of

the universe through affinity for freedom, through commitment to attack.

New masks come into the hands of those with a readiness for shifting

their construction of self to destruction of selves-separate. New

affinity arises, “being singular plural,” existence beyond laws,

commandments, borders. Always, a clear mirror is held up to the masked

ones. And the reflection remains constant as long as the seed smolders.

There is a power in the nature of proximity. Nearness to a catastrophe,

spacial closeness but material remoteness to the millions of dollars

funneled directly back to the richest people from their rich

counterparts in the corporate world of Managing Images. We were never

unaware of them, but they might be blissfully miscalculating the madness

of the desperate and righteous. The post-disaster situation bubbles

power and violence to the top. In Haiti an earthquake in 2010 has left

in its wake ongoing widespread corruption, cholera outbreak, and

enthusiastic resistance to the regimes that scramble to replace chaos

with disorder of another color. In October, a Haitian protester

forecasted “The revolution has just started … this is a warning because

the next phase can be very violent.” Rebels the world over, the galaxy

over, enter bravely into these new meetings with the next class of

police and presidents. “My life, why should I want you if you are not

dignified?”

There is fresh ground and what takes root now will thrive later. When

the questions asked by western subjectivities are empty, there is no

filling them with meaning, let them desiccate. There is a moment to

move. Into the dense fogs, into the nights, into the deep beating heart

breathing hot into the black mask, in the segregation cell, up from

below. The galvanized commit to dignity, shedding every self from before

and cloaking every future self in a revolutionary planetarity.

• • •

The mask is one of the materia magica of our craft, the black clothing

another. There are those who would have us abandon our ability to act in

an anonymous mass, settling for mere personal concealment in the

so-called “gray block.” Individual disguises may be tactically useful at

times, but they are just that: individual rather than collective,

tactical rather than strategic. Whether they are motivated by the mirage

of a mass movement or just by fear of success, those who consistently

talk shit on attack are the same aspiring politicians who build

coalitions with leftists and liberals, who have entered the popular

front once again, who worry about “optics.” Let them leave the black

flags for us and wave the gray flag instead, half-white with surrender,

a fitting compromise.

Have they forgotten Spain, the uncontrollables of the Iron Column, our

eternal shame when supposed anarchists became ministers in the

republican State? Our battle-standard is black for the Dead, for our

refusal of surrender, for our refusal of politics. We are more than

autonomous, more than self-managed, we antinomians bring the destruction

of all Law. That is what the black flag embodies and carries with it.

There is a secret pact between the generations of the past and that of

our own. For we have been expected upon this earth. For it has been

given us to know, just like every generation before us, a weak messianic

power, on which the past has a claim. This claim is not to be settled

lightly.

There have always been two currents within anarchism: when accused of

participating in the Haymarket bombing, Louis Lingg was perfectly candid

that his apartment was full of bombs, simply clarifying that he had not

made the ones thrown at Haymarket.

I am in favor of using force. I have told Captain Schaack, and I stand

by it, “if you cannonade us, we shall dynamite you.” You laugh! Perhaps

you think, “you’ll throw no more bombs;” but let me assure you I die

happy on the gallows, so confident am I that the hundreds and thousands

to whom I have spoken will remember my words; and when you shall have

hanged us, then – mark my words – they will do the bombthrowing! In this

hope do I say to you: I despise you. I despise your order, your laws,

your force-propped authority. Hang me for it!

Committing jailbreak-suicide by means of a blasting cap, he inscribed

“hoch die anarchie!” in his own blood on the cell wall.

Our current has always been the minority, but its black flame burns

bright and pure, emitting refreshing air instead of suffocating smoke.

August Spies, too, spoke prophecy before he ascended: “We are the birds

of the coming storm.” A mob of crows attacking the eagle, a whirlwind of

black wings and beaks and talons, a conspiracy of ravens. Some say that

“color coordination is not conspiracy.” We say that it is, in both the

colloquial and the original senses of the word: our black masks allow us

to breathe together.

One of the first black blocs in north america was in san francisco in

1992, against the 500 year commemoration of columbus. Our lineage

demands that our presence upon this stolen continent be anti-colonial,

not just in rhetoric, but as a spiritual orientation. We must reject the

insidious logic of our enemies, embracing the irrational and ecstatic

core of our tradition, our magic, our holy communion. Those who decry

the black bloc as “ritual” and “tradition” reveal their eurocentric

enlightenment biases, for it is precisely the ritual and the tradition

that are our source of strength. All that said, the outward appearances

may very well change. But the inner essence must become ever more

dangerous, more distilled, more beautiful.

• • •

The Black Mask

First published in the 2^(nd) issue of the journal Baedan

The black mask is the most visible symbol of the anarchist. Its

existence is known to the novice even before he is contacted, but its

ritual symbolism is unknown to him until his initiation.

At the time of the initiation, a time unrecognized until it has

happened, the novice finds himself alone with a bag. He has found

himself here by a strange and forgotten path, a series of subtle

maneuvers and unmemorable gestures. In truth, he has been brought here,

led along by an unshakable sense of discomfort with the social game.

There are ways this discomfort is manifested: talking about it, doing it

differently, doing it wrong, sometimes refusing to do it at all. And

these little refusals, with the scorn they earn from most and the

interest they elicit in others, draw him into a band. The band has its

own social games, its bad manners and inverted fashions, its parodies of

social norms. It is when he has tired of these, when he contemplates

with a similar sense of cynicism the macrocosm and microcosm; the verse,

inverse, reverse, and perverse; the loyal subjects and the loyal

opposition; it is then that he turns from the company and finds himself

alone. Alone, that is, but for the bag.

Novice and bag are alone in a place. The place is a room, or it is a

car, or a patch of earth or some other spot. The bag is unremarkable but

familiar, and seems to vaguely offer relief of the present circumstance.

The novice opens the bag with an anticipation diluted by cynicism: he

half expects to find some secret message, and half to uncover nothing of

interest. In the bag there is a small bundle of cloth, neatly folded,

black as night. He withdraws it and he recognizes it as the mask of the

anarchist.

He feels almost as if he could laugh. Faced with the fabric, he wonders

that he has never before contemplated why the black mask is the face of

anarchy. He has worn the mask before, thinking only of the practical

imperative of anonymity. Now it has come to him as a strange answer to

his question, not at all what he was looking for, but an answer

nonetheless. The mask is a gift given by no one and carrying, like all

gifts, its silent question. The anonymity it offers is not the cold

anonymity of social nicety, but a warm embrace from something that cares

about him not at all. It is not the nicest gift. It does not affirm. All

it offers is a reminder to relax because, to the universe, he is nothing

but a kink of its unfolding. With a deep sigh and a feeling strangely

like being tickled, he accepts the gift.

As he walks back from the place where he was alone to the place where

the group is, his steps seem only the fulfillment of inevitability, as

if pulled by no force other than time’s weird passage.

The initiate does not speak of the ritual. The mark of the initiation

may be witnessed in how he wears the social mask (a bit less rigid, a

little less important, as if seeking to amuse and be amused). He can

still feel, with a certain sadness, its weight, and remember, with a

certain nostalgia, how it disappeared into the black cotton. But he

hears someone calling, and, recognizing an invitation to pass the time,

he joins in.