
Claire Cronin The English Heretic Collection: Ritual Histories, Magickal. From Eric Cantona to Wile E Coyote, Bruno Latour to Paula Rego, forgotten legends and anonymous family members, this compendium of extraordinary human behaviour is essential reading for anyone who has ever thought that, despite what Jean-Paul Sartre said, heaven is other people. Repeater Books Blue Light of the Screen: On Horror, Ghosts, and God. With James, Acid Horizon delves into the works several concepts and philosophical mediators that appear in the first sections of the book. But isn’t one of the problems with the modern world that we no longer have any real sense of what heroism is? What if we recovered heroism from the hands of the fascists and the neoliberal ideologues, and proclaimed that – despite everything – a hero can and should be something to be? In these personal, provocative essays, the authors behind the uncompromising project that is Repeater Books come together to redefine the idea of the hero for a twenty-first-century public which desperately needs something to believe in. We speak with James from Zer0/Repeaters current reading group, which is tackling Mark Fishers dissertation entitled Flatline Constructs. Submitters can edit the information at any time. As a spokesperson of sorts for the punk generation, Lydon was giving voice to a nihilistic, deconstructive impulse which, for better or worse, would go on to dominate the next half-century or so of intellectual, cultural and political life. Books shelved as repeater-books: Postcapitalist Desire: The Final Lectures by Mark Fisher, K-punk: The Collected and Unpublished Writings of Mark Fisher. Artsci Books's Repeater Mapbook Edition The newest edition is using the repeater database at Repeater owners, users and fellow amateur radio operators from around the country have submitted detail information about their local repeaters. "I don’t have any heroes, they’re all useless", opined John Lydon in 1976.


In these impactful first-person essays, a selection of Repeater authors come together to write about what heroism means to them, trying to imagine a new kind of hero figure for the twenty-first century.
