๐๐ช๐จ๐ช๐ต๐ข๐ญ ๐๐ค๐ค๐ถ๐ญ๐ต๐ช๐ด๐ฎ by Sophie Publig & Mikkel Rรธrbo
Digital Occultism charts out the history of memetic circulation, situating it within a genealogy of occult logics. It operates as a constitutive force deeply embedded in technoculture and shapes how reality itself is produced. Tracing the emergence of fictions from early internet cultures to contemporary platform environments, it examines how they produce material realities, how politics operate as psychological warfare, and how desires are engineered through algorithmic feedback. In the afterword, ๐ญ๐ฎ๐ฐ๐ต ๐๐น๐ฎ๐ takes us in and spits us out through the inverted, heretical vision of CULTUS, into the underside, rendering visible occult epistemologies operative within it.
๐ฆ๐ผ๐ฝ๐ต๐ถ๐ฒ ๐ฃ๐๐ฏ๐น๐ถ๐ด is an internet archaeologist exploring digital ecosystems. Her research and teaching move across critical posthumanism, aesthetics and digital cultures. She analyses online artefacts, from meme ecologies to networked subjectivities to internet folklore.
๐ ๐ถ๐ธ๐ธ๐ฒ๐น ๐ฅรธ๐ฟ๐ฏ๐ผ is an interdisciplinary researcher and producer of cultural detritus. His work focuses on difference, desire and abstraction, in particular how these are instantiated in computation and agency both inside and outside of capital.
Both are based at the Weibel Institute for Digital Cultures, Vienna.
During the pre-order period, this item is available at a promotional price of โฌ10 (12 USD) instead of โฌ12 (14 USD). The offer is valid only until 5 May 2026.
J
Janez
Editor in Chief Co-editor of the issue
L
Lea Sande
Co-editor of the series Co-editor of the issue
E
Ema Maznik Antiฤ
Co-editor of the series Co-editor of the issue
A
Aksioma - Institute for Contemporary Art, Ljubljana
Publisher
F
Federico Antonini
Designer
S
Sophie Publig
Author
M
Marko Bauer
Co-editor of the issue
Z
Zach Blas
Author of the afterword
A history of memetic circulation, situated within a genealogy of occult logics...