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by postmodern tectonics ™
Collector #49
a rumination on why small things need to make a big comeback
by Becoming Press
Collector #1
“To quote Alessandro Sbordoni: ‘as the end gets nearer, more is yet to come'. So maybe we already live (in) the end of the world, an end which stretches on endlessly, with no possible resolution." — Slavoj Žižek
by Elle Griffin, Étienne Fortier-Dubois, and 5 more
Collector #51
Six writers explore the future of our planet.
by Severin Matusek, Alice Smith, and 2 more
Collector #135
New World Order: The Return of Hard Power and Soft Beliefs is a 35-page research memo about what happens when power, infrastructure and ideology collide. A manual for anyone trying to make sense of the present, New World Order contains ideas, context and language to participate in shaping the world that emerges in front of our eyes.
by Yancey Strickler, Peter Limberger, and 9 more
Collector #178
A book about how to survive on the internet. It’s about the cozy web, the dark web, the dark forest, the clear net, the dark net, and a new social world emerging around us. This is the Dark Forest Anthology of the Internet.
Collector #14
A diary from a biocentric future city. Where governance grows like ecosystems, and charters are co-written with birds, storms and neighbours.
by Rayna, IY, and 4 more
Collector #130
Where are we now as creative people? Where are we going? What do we vision for the future? 75 creative people anonymously share the dreams, concerns, and joys grounding their creative thinking for the year ahead.
by Nadia Asparouhova, and Leïth Benkhedda
Collector #305
Why do some ideas spread like wildfire, while others resist being seen — despite their importance? A new book by Nadia Asparouhova explores the emerging phenomenon of antimemetics. Published by the Dark Forest Collective.
by Nadia Piet, Gustavo Nogueira de Menezes, and 1 more
Collector #3
How can ancient wisdom shape the future of AI? In the zine Pasts, Presents, Futures: A Zine About Ancestral AI, we take a step back to reflect and reimagine. What if we used lessons from the past seven generations to create AI that helps us build a world worthy of the next seven?