“…the zone where the force is in the process of striking”:
Talk at USW, October 2024

This talk was given at the University of South Wales in Cardiff on 18th October 2024. It coincided with a selfie exhibition, also hosted on USW’s campus, which I curated from over 200 submissions. Both events came about at the invitation of my former lecturers, who taught me from 2010-13 when I was a BA(hons) Photographic Art student at the University of Wales, Newport.

It was surreal and bittersweet to be back in Cardiff, a decade since I lived there and some seven or eight years since I visited to work as a technician as part of what was then called Diffusion Festival. I had not missed the rain, but my friends there are a delight. It was a further pleasure to be a part of Ffoto Cymru’s festival programme.

The talk below was delivered predominantly to current students at USW, but was also open to the public. Thanks to those who came from further afield and said hi afterwards. It was a talk I thoroughly enjoyed delivering. Unfortunately, the recording of the lecture was unsuccessful, so here is the full text below, including some of my presentation slides.


Hello. Thank you all for being here. It is really wonderful to be back in Cardiff and to see so many familiar faces. It’s quite emotional actually. I was last here in 2017, busy working behind the scenes of what was then Diffusion Festival, running all over town in a van with Oliver Norcott, probably trying to find a drill. It was a long and intense nine days, but we all went to Popworld when it was all over to have a cathartically weird time. Here’s a selfie!

I came over from London then, when I should have really been writing my Master’s dissertation, which eventually became my first book. Now I’m back again, seven years later, to talk to you about my second one.

Firstly, I’d like to thank Peter Bobby for the invitation, or maybe I should say invitations plural, as it was Peter who first asked me to write something for one of the BA Photography degree show publications back in 2014 – yes, Peter, ten years ago – which was the first essay I had published anywhere as a then-still-recent graduate stepping out from under the photography department’s tutelage. Peter, but also Magali Nougarède, Matt White, Eileen Little, and various other people no longer here were the most supportive tutors anyone could ask for, and I remain hugely indebted to each of you.

South Wales really was where everything started for me, and I think about my time here a lot. When beginning to write this talk, it felt like coming full circle, as I was also thinking about my time in Wales when beginning to write this book. In particular, I vividly remembered a lecture that Magali gave during my first year as a student in nearby Newport, suggesting to us undergraduates that it was likely we’d only ever have one interesting idea, but that we’d find so many ways to explore it. I’m paraphrasing, in a way that probably sounds a little glib – sorry, Magali – but it was important advice; advice that I still often think about because, for me at least, it has born true. I do firmly believe that each of us, in whatever we hope to do, is fated to a problem, a problem that stays with us through an infinite number of permutations, and what I’d like to do today, drawing a line from then to now, is tell you a little about mine.

I first started thinking about narcissism and its relationship to the self back when I was a student. I was taking quite a few selfies back then. This is one I took on Tenby beach in 2010, which I’m showing you for no other reason except that I’ve always liked it. But this is the one that really started it all. It’s a double exposure – the first photo was taken of my face whilst stood in the kitchen of my Newport student house in 2011, and I am merged with a sad-looking bush outside the kitchen door in our backyard. A few years later, in 2015, I took another one, which you may have already seen, as it is included at the start of my new book.

What’s notable, for me at least, is that these photos weren’t really about me at all – or at least not entirely. When I looked back them, whilst starting to write Narcissus in Bloom in lockdown, what I felt they were about or trying to achieve was a way of placing myself quite literally in the world, finding a place within it that felt ‘natural’ maybe, or consciously blurred a nature-culture distinction; not a person standing around things, but melded with them. I wanted to really be a part of something, in a quite deep and entangled way.

On looking them, I also thought back to a project that I made in my first year at uni, which Magali and I were also talking about last night. I don’t have any of the photos anymore — they were taken on negatives I no longer have digital scans of — but I took a series of pictures of myself in various outfits and wigs. I’m an adoptee, and just before I arrived at Newport, I came into possession of a portrait of my birth mum, who I’d never seen before. She was 18 in the photo, just a year younger than I was when I arrived in South Wales, and looked strikingly a lot like I did. That may not come as any surprise to most people looking at photographs of their relatives, but it did to me. Before that moment, I’d never seen anyone who looked like me before, and so what I wrestled with, initially, in a lot of my naïve student work, was a way of making sense of myself, in a way that probably went a little bit further than the average adolescent confusion about the world we live in.

I turned away from selfies when it came to my own degree show, instead affirming a kind of child-like wonder at the world, still something of a goth dressed in all-black, but mostly being enthusiastic about colour and vibrancy in the mundane, finding the silly joy everything, like an alien to this planet, not of terrestrial origin, who hadn’t yet been initiated into the state of things. I think I was still trying to find my way around, as an adoptee with a complicated origin story, but I pointed my camera elsewhere.

Still, one thing I remember from the various degree shows I attended, both as a student and as a graduate, is that there was always at least one selfie project on display, and you could always count on overhearing some disparaging comments made about them. You’d have various other projects, maybe someone using mummy and daddy’s money to photograph a warzone during reading week, or some other grand and arduous adventure into the post-colonial, documented no less beautifully or provocatively, and when I was student, as might still be apparent, it was those sorts of project that I personally had more of a problem with. I think I resented work that performed a kind of certainty about one’s place in the world, and so it seemed wrong to me that so much more cynicism was applied to any student who simply made use of what was most readily available to them, which was themselves.

I’ll also add that this sort of project was often made by a young woman, maybe exploring a nascent feminist politics, or problematising the beauty standards that a medium like photography is so often used to uphold. Perhaps some of the cynicism came precisely from the fact that these projects always carried an uncertainty or sense of doubt within them – an uncertainty that some photographers could probably do with having more of.

In feeling this kind of insecurity, the neat delineation between an individual and the society they are apart of soon becomes more blurred, and for me, as a young photography student indebted a wider community active in this part of the world, it was an understanding of an problematising embeddedness that really interested me. Beyond our various lectures on individual photographers and their influence, what I came away with wasn’t a sense of individual “genius”, as a young artist wanting to strike out on their own like any other acclaimed individual before them, but rather a sense of what Brian Eno famously calls “scenius” – that is, the understanding that any piece of work, no matter the individual name it is published under, is always, in truth, the product of a wider community in which one finds themselves.

For me, as an undergraduate, I found this living with two wonderful housemates, Michael Fitzsimmons and Sara Rejaie. We’ve all gone on to do very different things, not all of them related to photography, but back then, we were inseparable; a veritable bubble of energy. We fed off each other, sharing initial interests, diverging in outcomes. And we drew our energy from a wider community in Newport, the teaching staff at the university, the talks and exhibitions given by visitors who passed through this particularly nurturing matrix of people and places. I remember when my time here was coming to a close, I had my final university assessment at the start of summer in 2013, and when it was over, I cried for a whole day. I didn’t want it to end. It is an experience I still treasure and have hoped to repeat again and again.

But that particular Welsh configuration did end, and though I stuck around here for a little while afterwards, eventually spending a year working as the exhibitions officer at Ffotogallery, I knew I wanted to have that kind of university experience again. Wales was only the beginning, so I took myself off to Goldsmiths in south London, in order to think too much, but knowing that what I really wanted was to think and write more, and in so doing, insert myself into a new community.

I’d been reading the work of Mark Fisher and Kodwo Eshun at the time, on modernism, dance music, the black radical tradition, the futureshock of jungle, the death of rave. Their work often dealt with this feeling that the time of cultural movements, the continuum of sceniuses that defined the twentieth century, was over. We don’t have scenes anymore, not really, or not in the same way; only a conveyor belt of exemplary individuals, who often only retread the ground of those that had come before them. We were on the other side of the end of art history, and it felt more difficult, in the twenty-first century, to collectively birth the new.

When I returned to university in 2016 as a postgraduate student, this was the fundamental question that we were introduced to by our lecturers. But almost in spite of their pronouncements, I found a nice community there, which nonetheless felt tethered to a peculiar art-world careerism, as if being an artist was enough. But when Mark Fisher died by suicide three months into my Master’s degree, everything changed. I felt a deep and powerful grief, which seemed to come from a contradiction I felt and which we were all suddenly living through together.

Shortly after Mark’s death, someone printed off a dozen copies of this poster and left them strewn around the university, featuring a quotation from Mark’s first book, 2009’s Capitalist Realism:

Emancipatory politics must always destroy the appearance of a ‘natural order’, must reveal what is presented as necessary and inevitable to be a mere contingency, just as it must make what was previously deemed to be impossible seem attainable.

This was a hard thing to swallow, especially when read here, on the door to Mark’s old office, as his absence now felt like the one thing we could never change, and for all our collective belief in his work, that was painful. But out of that grief grew a community of people who mourned not only Mark’s death but all of the lost futures that were scattered around us. It was possible, even necessary, to think through this new paradox at the heart of our lives, and it was necessary that we did so together.

My first book, Egress: On Mourning, Melancholy and Mark Fisher, grew out of my Master’s dissertation, which I wrote about the trajectory of Mark’s thought at the time of his death; the ideas he was exploring with us, his students; but also a diary I kept in the aftermath, documenting the communal efforts to actualise new futures under the shadow of Mark’s death in 2017, but also Jeremy Corbyn’s electoral defeat, the Grenfell Tower fire, and the pervasive mental health crisis that seemed to be consuming all of us. I was still taking a lot of photos then too, continuing to give in to a documentary impulse to record everything. On the book’s cover, for example, is a photograph of my friends, walking back from a club night we organised in Peckham to celebrate Mark’s life and interest in music on the first anniversary of his death.

When that book was eventually published in March 2020, a week before we all went into lockdown, its reception was admittedly mixed. The version of Fisher that I wrote about was quite different to the one that had installed itself in popular consciousness – immortalised reductively on Wikipedia, as so many things are – and it took a couple more years of work on my part to further rectify his reputation, to unveil not the person he was thought to be but the person he was becoming – something demonstrated by a further collection of Mark’s final lectures, which I put together shortly after Egress came out.

What struck me, however, was that Egress was criticised by some for being too narcissistic, due to the fact that I had written it in the first person, narrating my personal experiences of a collective moment, which felt like the only way to address what had happened at the time. The central point was missed by some; although the book began from personal experience, it was nonetheless oriented towards community, towards a kind of scenius, which was struggling to sustain itself in the face of so much death and devastation.

This is a tension that a lot of my work has explored ever since – arguably the same tension that interested me whilst I was an undergraduate – and it was partly in response to this criticism that I wrote my second book, Narcissus in Bloom. Here the perspective is inverted. If Egress was a book about community written in the first person, this is a book about the individual written in the third person. It is a book that considers how the self, the “I” that we all are to ourselves, is often the starting point from which we set out to explore all that is around us. But it is only ever that: a starting point. When we enter into community, it is the self itself that is so often radically disturbed. When we try to situate ourselves in community with others, we necessarily grow, change, adapt, and become things other to what we once were. It is the greatest and most quotidian experience available to all of us. It is something I first found when I arrived here in South Wales in 2010; it is something I felt when working at Ffotogallery; it is something I found again in London; it is something I am continuing to wrestle with in my PhD, as I consider my personal experiences as an adoptee alongside a politics of family abolition, and the ways in which our families, understood as a kind of biological community, too often limit our imagination with regards to the sorts of community and communal care we can otherwise cultivate and inhabit. In this regard, I have long since accepted that I am fated to a problem, a single idea, that I hope to explore from as many angles as possible – that is, the always-incomplete and fractious co-development of the individual and the collective.

So what does any of this have to do with self-portraits? Fundamentally, I think selfies are interesting precisely because they are images located in this in-between space between self and other, individual and collective, person and culture. This might seem counter-intuitive, since to take a photograph of yourself hardly suggests that you’re thinking about everything else around you, but I think that is only because we’ve gotten used to relying on a kind of faux-intellectual shorthand, borrowed superficially from psychoanalysis and used to represent other received ideas from art history, which don’t actually hold up to much scrutiny, in my opinion. And so, in preparing for this talk, I did find another example of something that activated my pedantic sensibilities on this topic, which was the other exhibition of self-portraits currently on display in this city.

At the National Museum, there is currently an exhibition on display called “The Art of the Selfie”, and at the risk of picking a fight with it, I would like to challenge the way it contextualises itself, if only to suggest that there is another way in which we can think (and maybe should think) about this mode of self-expression.

The explanatory text that accompanies the exhibition at the museum asks a question that is also central to my book: “Is a self-portrait the original selfie?” The text reads:

Throughout history, many artists have used self-portraits as ways to explore their identities and express themselves to the world. Van Gogh painted no fewer than thirty-five self-portraits and so became arguably one of the most recognizable faces in Western art.

But “[s]elf-portraits and selfies are two different things,” they argue, even if “they do have something in common”, which is that

both are used to show who you are as a person. Out of all the ways we document our lives, selfies have become a popular method of self-expression and individualism.

It is this same history of the selfie / self-portrait that I explore in my book, but I take issue with the assumption that selfies and self-portraits are fundamentally different, and even that they are predominantly used to show us who we are as individuals, to the extent that they are primarily a way of expressing individualism as an ideology. This suggests that, when an artist (or anyone) has endeavoured to answer the question of who they are, they have always been certain as to the answer, even that art might itself supply it. But when we actually look at art history, I don’t think this has ever been the case.

Take Vincent Van Gogh, whose centrality within the exhibition is intriguing, as surely there is no artist inaugurated into the Western canon of art history who was less sure of himself. In truth, Van Gogh who is remembered today as an artist misunderstood in his lifetime, precisely because his particular style of representation tears at the fabric of reality as it supposedly appears to us.

When we recognise Van Gogh today as a singular genius with an equally singular vision, we conveniently forget how this is only because of his cultural displacement and malignment. Although he had many peers and a handful of close supporters, he was broadly rejected by an artistic community that had a more rigid view of how the world should be presented to others. Van Gogh’s individualism, in this regard, only emerges from his apparent lack of community.

That most famous self-portrait with the bandaged ear, for example, depicts a man who has torn at his own flesh following a confrontation with a close friend. Here we have an artist who struggled to maintain relationships with those around him, in art and life, and whose sense of himself was so traumatically unsettled and uncertain. Tales of his struggles with mental illness also predominate in his biography, as he spent a lot of time in psychiatric institutions, and what is mental illness, most generally understood, if not an umbrella term for the myriad ways in which we can come to think against ourselves.

Elsewhere in the exhibition, we find Rembrandt, who documented himself more frequently than any other artist before him, painting almost 100 self-portraits during his lifetime. I also write about Rembrandt in my book, and collect postcard reproductions of his selfies as a hobby, following Hervé Guibert, another subject of my book, who did the same. In his earliest self-portraits, Rembrandt captures himself with all the vanity of youth, perhaps making himself a little bit more handsome than he was in reality, but as he grows older, his self-portraits change, with Rembrandt paying far more attention to his mottled flesh, as if he is consulting himself primarily as a piece of meat. These later self-portraits are not personal testaments to the self that he is, but are rather far more impersonal; the self is not so much the subject of these paintings but rather their object.

We also find Francis Bacon, who similarly does not paint his own or other people’s bodies as personal subjects, but rather as objects that endure and are mutated by all kinds of exterior forces. The self is arguably the least important part of Bacon’s paintings in this regard. We might consider how the French philosopher Gilles Deleuze discusses his work in this regard, describing the painter’s interests as a kind of body horror most beautiful. He notes, for example, the “extraordinary agitation” that affects the heads in Bacon’s paintings – an agitation

derived … from the forces of pressure, dilation, contraction, flattening, and elongation that are exerted on the immobile head. They are like the forces of the cosmos confronting an intergalactic traveller immobile in his capsule. It is as if invisible forces were striking the head from many different angles. The wiped and swept parts of the face here take on a new meaning, because they mark the zone where the force is in the process of striking.

Deleuze also makes reference to Rembrandt and Van Gogh, and what he finds in each of their works is not a depiction of any individual self, but rather a series of investigations into the self’s deformation. It is in part for this reason that Deleuze, elsewhere in his other work, eventually takes particular interest in the word “individual”, which he sees as totally inapposite for the sense of self imposed on us by modernity.

An individual, as the word’s etymology suggests, is that which is indivisible. It is the One, the unitary thing that cannot be divided. But what I find interesting in the work of each of these artists, as well as so many of the photographs included in our exhibition out in the hall, is that they instead show us how our sense of ourselves as individuals – or rather, following Deleuze, as simply dividuals – is fragmented, under threat, split, never truly whole, always on the cusp of changing.

And beyond both of these exhibitions, who isn’t aware of all the other ways in which we are divided. The selfies we post on social media are taken to give form to a particular online version of ourselves, but today we are divided up between so many other social worlds. We are different people at home, online, at work, with our friends, with our loved ones; we are also divided politically from each other. We are subsumed under an ideology of individualism that is entirely unfit for purpose, that only covers over our dividuated nature. This was the intention behind Margaret Thatcher’s infamous declaration that there is no such thing as society. “There are individual men and women”, she argued, “and there are families, and no government can do anything except through people and people look to themselves first.”

We might well ask, “What would Margaret Thatcher have made of Francis Bacon?” In fact, we know the answer to that question. She called him “the man who paints those dreadful pictures.” In this self-portrait, Bacon is certainly a person looking at himself first, but this is not a portrait born of a Thatcherite individualism. Quite the opposite. Bacon’s paintings are dreadful because they dramatize the very thing Thatcher denied – the ways in which we are affected by material forces outside of ourselves, that shape and even deform all that we are. Bacon’s dividuals are, in this sense, strange products of their environment, of society, battered and bruised and deformed by all that assaults a convenient and reductive sense of ourselves. What we are looking at is not a portrait of Francis Bacon, then, but a kind of dynamic cartography of a person impacted by other forces. Do these forces thus become a part of Bacon’s self? Or is the self instead disturbed and distorted? Who or what is actually in this picture? These are the questions the painting asks but does not necessarily answer.

In light of these kinds of art-historical example, it is the contention of my book that we do not know who or what we are, at least not with any lasting certainty. We cannot – and should not – understand ourselves or others as unitary, contained beings. Yes, to invoke the meme, we live in a society… But ours is not a society of fixed identities – with identity again being an interesting word that rests on notions of being identical, of being the same. Ours is rather a society of differences, far from a utopia, but certainly a heterotopia. And I would argue that these are not differences that we need to be resolved, reduced to some sentimental humanism that suggests we are all alike deep down. We are infinitely different from each other, and this is our virtue. Again, somewhat counter-intuitively, it is not our differences that divide us, but rather a logic of individualism that cannot make peace with our divided nature, that rejects the hard work our differences announce to us, differences that make ethical demands upon us, as we seek a solidarity without similarity.

Thinking about all of this is the problem that I personally feel fated to, but again, it’s not just my problem, it’s a problem we all share. And I hope the exhibition outside will go some way towards demonstrating this, initiating certain conversations that I think we’re all eager to have – an eagerness demonstrated by the ubiquity of selfies themselves; a discussion that will only take place properly if we allow ourselves to ignore an ideology of individualism that doesn’t suit us.

Just as Mark Fisher argued that we “must always destroy the appearance of a ‘natural order’, must reveal what is presented as necessary and inevitable to be a mere contingency, just as it must make what was previously deemed to be impossible seem attainable”, it is possible for us to begin such a project by starting with ourselves, selves that appear to us so incessantly and so much more strangely than we care to acknowledge, selves that are not necessarily and inevitably one thing or another, but are rather in the progress of undergoing so many contingent becomings.

Change is not impossible, then, as we change every day, and I think our selfies are one way in which we attempt to come to terms with and even document these changes. We shouldn’t dismiss them as exercises in self-obsession, but as something quite other. Because ultimately, we still do not know who we are.

Thank you.

Did You Miss Me?

Hello. I missed you. This interruption in blogging activity (around six months!!) has been surprisingly painful; the longest I have gone without posting anything since the xenogothic blog was birthed six or seven years ago, perhaps even since I started blogging in general some 18 years ago… But rest assured, the writing has not stopped; my PhD thesis is still percolating in the background, and I have roughly 12 months left to finish it. It is quickly taking shape, and I am hoping to have a full draft ready by the summer (although I am sure god is already chuckling at my best laid plans…). Plenty else has been going on too, and so we have much to catch up on.

First things first, I have a few extra publications to share with you, the most recent being a new introduction to the Russian translation of Mark Fisher’s K-Punk. At the invitation of Victoria Peretitskaya, who has also written an afterword to the new edition, it’s a text I am particularly proud of. Just when I think I truly have nothing left to say about Mark, each new invitation to write something new results in a re-engagement with his work that brings about new resonances. It is always a pleasure, and I may share the English-language version of the text here in due course.

I’ve also been doing a few interviews, as Narcissus in Bloom has continued to come to the attention of new people, and I am grateful that people are still interested in talking about it with me.

I was interviewed by Beki Cowey for Art, Etc. magazine here, in which she reflects on her own selfie-taking practice before we chat about the contents of my book.

More recently, I was also interviewed by Arianna Caserta for Link magazine, on the occasion of Narcissus‘s translation into Italian, which has been published by long-time friends of the blog, Nero Editions.

Turning the tables momentarily, I conducted an interview with Gordon Chapman-Fox (aka The Warrington-Runcorn New Town Development Plan) late last year, at the invitation of the Walker Art Reader, for whom I wrote about Mark Fisher and ChatGPT a while back. You can read the interview here.

Keeping my interview hat on, I was also down in London speaking to Adam Jones at the launch of his new book The New Flesh at Housmans in November 2024. Thanks to everyone who attended. Adam has had a busy year, and we’ll be in conversation again in April to talk about Mark Fisher’s Flatline Constructs, which is finally getting an official print edition via Zer0 Books and for which Adam has written a fantastic foreword. This event is likely to sell out quick, so check here for tickets.

Returning to 2024, also in November, I travelled to Budapest at the invitation of the Eidolon Centre of Everyday Photography. Endre Cserna interviewed me for their website back in 2023, and it was nice to meet Endre, Róza and the rest of the Eidolon team in person for an event on Narcissus.

The morning after the talk, I sat down with Nagy Gergely in the hotel breakfast bar to chat photography, the place of narcissism in our contemporary political landscape, and the argument the book puts forward about how we should think about it less moralistically. If you speak Hungarian (or want to Google translate it), you can read that here.

Here are a couple of photos from the trip, with one featuring my lovely friend Ged, who came along as my travel twink:

Before heading to Budapest, I was in Cardiff in October 2024, returning to my old university – sort of; the University of Wales, Newport, where I studied for a Bachelor’s degree in Photographic Art, has since been absorbed into the conglomerate University of South Wales. It was one of the best talks I’ve done in a while, if I do say so myself, and I may share the text in due course. Above all, it served as an affirming reminder of what it is I love to do and why I set about doing a PhD (which I may have admittedly forgotten somewhere along the line)…

I have always wanted to teach. As soon as I finished my undergraduate degree – an experience I truly loved – I knew I wanted to have a role in enabling others to have a similar kind of experience of arts education. But I knew I wasn’t yet qualified (literally and more generally), so after a couple of years working in arts administration, I went to Goldsmiths to do an MA in Contemporary Art Theory, believing (perhaps falsely) that I hadn’t been that successful as a budding artist because I simply wasn’t very good at communicating my ideas.

What happened whilst I was there has, of course, been very well-documented… And although I never fully left art and photography behind, I am more reticent these days to identify myself as an artist or photographer. Goldsmiths was an event that completely changed the trajectory of my life. Now I’m a writer, and I guess that’s fine… But despite having spent a number of years distracted by theory and the history of ideas, and now no longer resembling much of an ‘artist’ in any quasi-professional sense, I would still like to think that I am primarily interested in what certain forms of cultural production can do. Writing is one such form, and a form not that different from the book-form that I have always treasured. Ten years ago, I hoped to end up making art books and photo books; I have written more traditional readerly books instead. Narcissus in Bloom was nonetheless a book about philosophy and art history, and it was a conscious attempt to write a fairly straight-forward book of art theory. But now I feel the itch to get back into making things, to experiment more with the book form, and once again take a more ‘artistic’ (rather than strictly writerly) approach to what books can do.

(Whether any of this will culminate in an expansive, perhaps even pedagogical practice, remains to be seen… The current state of the university sector does not inspire much hope that this is on the cards for me… We’ll see…)

To that end, a very nice opportunity arrived at the end of last year to write a short, poetic text for Dexter Barker-Glenn’s recent exhibition at Espace Maurice in Montreal. Titled “In the Garden of Saint Anthony”, it is a text that tries to draw out some of the themes of Barker-Glenn’s project, inspired by Mark Fisher’s “Acid Communism”, which considers Saint Anthony’s Fire as a kind of pharmakon.

In other tentative news, I also have a text forthcoming in a new edition of Edinburgh University Press’s Deleuze and Guattari Studies reader (more on which at a later date). It has been such an integral text for me, which I wrote as a short draft of the conclusion to by PhD thesis, and in writing it over Christmas 2024, it has given me so much energy to finally finish this bastard academic project, allowing me to finally see the end point I am aiming to reach and expand upon by the end of 2025. In fact, it’s given me a new working title for the thesis as a whole: The Bastard Path: Post-structuralism as Orphaned Philosophy. Keep your eyes peeled for a less academic and more approachable version of its argument in book form in a couple of years (I hope).

There are so many other things I wish I’d written for the blog during this time of offline convalescence, which I may still get round to. One thing that I suspect will rear its head again — in fact, it did on the day I started writing this post — was the return of Daniel Tutt’s attacks on Acid Horizon and the general gathering of authors associated with Repeater Books. Ironically, he (and others) seem to think I am Acid Horizon, or generally overstate my involvement in various enterprises, despite my professional links being freelance and tenuous. (I am always speaking in a personal capacity, so more fool them for having no idea who they’re talking to or about…)

Similar to the disgruntlement Tutt expressed when his (planned) platforming of transphobe Nina Power was called into question back in 2023 (which hardly went well for him), Tutt took responses to his general idiocy to be censorious and seemed prepared to mount a crusade against Repeater, Acid Horizon, and anyone else he views to be a part of the ‘Nietzschean-Deleuzian left’.

The main irritant was a laughable email Tutt sent to Repeater, demanding the deletion of all tweets posted in disagreement with him, simultaneously threatening the publication of a report into Repeater’s censorious practices – including my own censoriousness in my capacity as a freelance proofreader (lol). A statement – that would have appeared here if the space was active – was posted on Twitter, highlighting how ridiculous it all was, which seemed to pour cold water on Tutt’s spurious claims. You can read that here.

But it wasn’t put to bed for long. Today, Tutt (sort of) actualised his threat and — along with “shamanic TERF gigakaren” (as someone hilariously referred to him) Rhyd Wildermuth — made claims that Repeater’s recent behind-the-scenes woes have been due to a cashflow problem. This seems to be an argument that Tutt has parroted from Etan Ilfield, head of Watkins Media and Repeater’s de facto owner; an Israeli venture capitalist who took a disliking to the fact that Repeater Books, as a collective entity, signed an open letter circulated by Verso in late 2023 under the heading “Publishers for Palestine” — an anonymous report on which I shared before this blog went dark back in September 2024.

Tutt and Wildermuth claims there is no truth to this. They are wrong. And it is very telling they will take the word of a duplicitous Zionist over that of the precarious workers at Repeater and Zer0 who are undoubtedly exhausted by the effective shutting-down of the former imprint and the various headaches produced by its inexplicable platforming of Compact / Sp!ked mag reactionaries, who we all assumed had been expelled from its operations when Watkins bought Zer0 Books back in 2021 (which I wrote about at length at the time). I unfortunately expect we’ll be hearing more from them, and that I’ll be writing about it here no doubt, over the next few months.

On a more positive note, I have been loving Ethel Cain’s new album, Perverts, and would like to write something on it as a counterpoint to last year’s most widely shared blogpost on Brat Summer… I recently signed a contract for this essay, which will appear in a TBA essay collection at some point in the future. I have a rough draft in the works, and it has also been a nice vehicle for processing my grief over David Lynch’s death, which hit me – as it did for so many – particularly hard. A few weeks ago, in fact, I was struck down by a horrible flu doing the rounds at the moment (probably just one rung below COVID in my estimation), and spent two weeks in bed watching almost all of Lynch’s output. It was wonderful, and an experience that I’m sad has come to its inevitable end.

Lynch has been in the background of everything I do, and most of my life up till this point. I’ve been reflecting a great deal on childhood viewings of The Elephant Man; a teenage Twin Peaks obsession (and the cringe Peaks tattoo I got when I was 19/20); Lynch’s undeniable influence on Phil Elverum of the Microphones / Mount Eerie (and the latest Mount Eerie album, Night Palace, has been on heavy rotation since the end of last year); the night I bought the DVD of Inland Empire, on the day it came out in 2006/07 from a shop in Hull, and the desire to watch it immediately, sticking it in the tiny combi TV in my bedroom with my headphones plugged in, bathing in its impeccable sound design late into the night, which is an experience I have never recovered from and may well have been one of the most significant cultural encounters of my adolescence; Mark Fisher’s writing on Lynch’s egresses and curtains in The Weird and the Eerie; Lynch’s industrial photography and its influence on my own photographic eye; the Inland Empire sample that opens Burial’s Untrue… I could go on…

Suffice it to say, I am deeply saddened to now be living in a world without him in it, and I’d like to quote a short Instagram caption written by Shumon Basar that I found particularly moving in the days immediately following his death, on the time Basar met Lynch in LA:

He was every bit as he seems: Mel Brooks once described him as ‘Jimmy Stewart from Mars.’ I thought of him as a suburban boy-scout who taught himself how to make Jungian fire. Fire was always present in his imagined worlds: The Air is on Fire, Fire Walk With Me, viscous smoke, Song to the Siren set in a burning stack, the Elephant Man’s head is the shape of the mushroom cloud violently birthed from Oppenheimer’s atom bomb.

It is, therefore, not insignificant that David’s fatal ailment – emphysema – was a product of his lifelong love of smoking, a sickness which necessitated he couldn’t leave his Lloyd Wright designed house starting five months ago. Was it a coincidence that he passed away as the most powerful wildfires in Los Angeles – his home for more than half a century – destroy so much of the city he attributed as the reason he became a filmmaker? (The morning light one summer in 1973).

An era comes to a close, its smoke plume signalling the fire has gone out, its carbonic particles dissipating into everything. But we live on. And so what comes next…?

When I returned from Budapest, I went back and read parts of Egress. In two weeks’ time, the book will be five years old. It is always strange to read yourself back in such a formal way, and this blog has often (perhaps too often) been a space where I’ve reflected back on my more formal printed output. It has been necessary for me though, precisely because the experience is usually quite torturous. I have long felt uncomfortable about what Egress ended up being, having internalised some of its more uncharitable critiques.

Many people loved it nonetheless – particularly a Spanish readership, whom I adore. It’s always nice to hear from those people who particularly enjoyed it, but I accept that it was not the book many other people were expecting. I think I have since returned to it through their eyes and been more acutely aware of its flaws. It was a not-very-Fisherian book about Mark Fisher, that’s for sure. But I also didn’t want it to be a kind of cloying imitation. I wanted it to be an experimental project that, on the one hand, recounted personal experiences in a quite linear and diaristic way, but which also scrambled that linearity with tangents into other spaces and temporalities. I wanted it to feel like a journey through so many portals, reading my own experiences back through the egresses of other texts that I was reading at the time.

These were not texts that anyone associated with Mark Fisher himself – my reading of Bataille especially, who Fisher was not a fan of (and whom he also read inadequately) – but they are texts that were nonetheless put before me in the context of Mark’s Postcapitalist Desire course and Kodwo Eshun’s Geopoetics seminar. Given the interrupted nature of Mark’s final lectures, the book perhaps bears the mark of Kodwo’s teaching more explicitly than Mark’s in this regard. This is what is jarring about it, perhaps, and unexpected for those coming to it from outside of that immediate context.

Suffice it to say, the pendulum of self-reflection has swung back towards a generosity towards my younger and less experienced self, and whatever comes next from me, I would like write something that re-affirms this more experimental approach. This desire has, however, been complicating the process of writing my PhD. I have been attempting something quite ambitious, perhaps too ambitious, and the last two years have certainly constituted an unorthodox approach to a PhD thesis. But I am having to remind myself (through a persistent disgruntlement) that a PhD is not a book; it serves a quite particular institutional purpose, which is the acquisition of a kind of ‘researcher’s license’, like a driving life, to borrow an analogy I once heard from Pete Wolfendale (and similarly argued by Lacan in one of his seminars). As the end of the PhD looms on the horizon, I am making peace with the fact that I don’t want to make life any more difficult for myself than it need to be. I can write something more straight-forward and academic, but this can be the basis for something far more daring once I’m out the other side.

What comes next for me is, then, on my mind a lot at the moment. Will I stay in Newcastle? Will I try and get a teaching job, despite how awful a place academia is to be at present? One thing I am sure of: I don’t want to teach philosophy.

Even though I am now pursuing a PhD in Philosophy – something that has offered me some (institutional) teaching experience, as I lead undergraduate seminars every now and then, as well as over three years of research funding that has allowed me to get my life back on track after a (very public) mental breakdown in 2022 – after delivering my talk in Cardiff in October 2024, I had some time to kill before my train home, and decided to sit in on some third-year ‘crits’, looking at the work being produced by final-year students ahead of their degree show. I’m glad I did. It was an experience of university pedagogy so different to what I’ve gotten used to over the last ten years or so, during which time I’ve sporadically been a ‘postgraduate’ student, and it made me miss the excitement and free-flowing ideas of arts education specifically. I want to get back there, and I want to return to an approach to writing that is more creative and fulfilling than the stringent formality (and, if I’m honest, unimaginativeness) of contemporary academic philosophy.

A considerable influence on this change of heart or path has been another central experience of the last six months or so: I fell in love. Without a blog to witter away on, I have found someone to witter away with. It is, for the time being, a long-distance relationship, but this unfortunate circumstance has given rise to a truly writerly romance, which blossomed at the end of summer 2024, as I found myself wooed by someone with the confidence to write me poetry as I drudged away behind the bar at the Cumberland Arms in Newcastle’s Ouseburn valley.

Blogposts for an anonymous mass have been replaced, momentarily, by love letters for a particular individual. It has punctured the lingering claustrophobia of a postgraduate khâgne with a wholly new and distinctly other adventure in writing. We write for each other and we write together. I have never felt so inspired and so free to write so affectively and affectionately. Indeed, straddling a peculiar contradiction, as I write my PhD on the politics of family abolition and its implications for adoptees and the orphans of post-structuralism, I have found myself immersed in a new poetics of relation, an orphan (un)consciousness that has been coupled with a new opportunity to unorphan myself. It is terrifying and exciting and I have never felt more excited about what the future may hold.

Anyway, it’s nice to see you again. My thanks to Gray Leonard for helping me migrate my old site to a new host and for giving me a new platform for a new era. There’s still some tinkering to be done with the backend (ooo-err), so apologies for any ghosts in the machine. As ephemeral as blogs can seem, this place is truly a life-work to me. It is the most significant thing I have to hold onto, an online archive of stray thoughts and missives that can nonetheless be framed as the source of all else I’ve produced. Everything starts from here. Everything starts from now. Without it, I have felt without a limb. It’s good to be back.