"This Black Metal Theory Symposium invites speculations, commentaries, reflections, archivizations, reconceptualizations and interventions on pestilence, decay, plague, decomposition, putrefaction, rot, corpses, infestation, consumption, perversion, cannibalism, necrophilia, flesh, feeding, worms, insects, rats, rationalism, plants, ecology, swarms, maggots, fever, vampirism, waste ... among other things."
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P.E.S.T. (Philial Epidemic Strategy Tryst)
… affirmation (acting as companion) of a non-survival-supporting life whose tentacles crack death open merely as a collective perversion, a philia, which progressively disterminalizes as the end of all becomings or the terminus ad quem of  becomings; and is transmuted to a collapsing expanse exhumed,  deflowered and scavenged by life (non-survivalist life: unlife), its  netting, mazing and bonding philia: a space of becomings, so contagious and epidemic, which as Nick Land puts it, is a “Pest”,  a “meltdown plague ... Death as a terminal expanse of coldness and a  part of desiring-machine is messed up through the pestilential and  wasteful (exorbitant) bonds of epidemic life (philia) which  frantically composes new strategies of 'openness to everything' – by  means of its ungrounding strategies, bonds of philia and affirmation –  not merely openness as the plane of being open but rather being lacerated, cracked, butchered and laid open ...  then, sewing and scavenging what have been opened through the bonds of  philia and the interphyletic labyrinths of life through which becoming  runs as a vermiculating, mazing machine or an engineer of labyrinthine  inter-dimensionalities.
– Reza Negarestani “Death as a Perversion: Openness and Germinal Death”
 Christ  on the cross appeared to me ... then summoned me to place my mouth to  the wound in his side. It seemed to me that I saw and drank the blood,  which was freshly flowing from his side … At times it seems to my soul  that it enters into Christ’s side, and this is a source of great joy and  delight. … [W]e washed the feet of the  women and the hands of the men, and especially those of one of the  lepers which were festering and in an advanced stage of decomposition.  Then we drank the very water with which we had washed him. And the drink  was so sweet that, all the way home, we tasted its sweetness and it was  as if we had received Holy Communion.
– Angela of Foligno, Memorial
 To be this much in love is to be sick (and I love to be sick).
– Georges Bataille, The Impossible
Pest: any deadly epidemic disease; plague (now rare); anything destructive; any insect, fungus, etc that destroys cultivated plants; a troublesome person or thing. Pestilent: deadly; producing pestilence; hurtful to health and life; pernicious; mischievous, vexatious [Fr peste and pestilence, from L pestis, pestilential, related to perdo, to destroy, ruin, lose; cf. perditus, lost, ruined by love]. 
Black  Metal and Theory meet in a place of mutual pestering, a dark  star-crossed extra-section of their individual para-sites, a rendezvous  for conspiratorial communication; unnatural and extra-natural  participation. The pestilential bonding of the equally sick pair exposes  and releases to the air an epidemic of openness, “not merely openness as the plane of being open but rather being lacerated, cracked, butchered and laid open”  (Negarestani). Black Metal and Theory have proven to be mutually  antagonistic, vexatious, and their conjoining has occasioned much  annoyance on both sides: from fans of Black Metal and from ivory tower  theorists. Black Metal Theory is a pest and Black Metal theorists are  mischievous pesterers. It is little wonder, then, that Black Metal  theory is para-academic, simultaneously beside, outside and inside the academy: “Meeting, communicating or touching the true pestilential bonds of  Empedocles' philia or the contagious plateau of interphylum or epidemic  openness, the resistance, any isolationist struggle, uncommunicative  reaction or opposition to, remains unchanged (unmutated) becomes  impossible (but appreciated as a strategy intensifying the mess, the  waste of the process and engineering the exorbitant). Through the  expanse of philia, everything should participate and participation has  no end, nor beginning, nor horizon, nor a certain objective of  participation. Infested by the epidemic (contagious and wasteful) bonds  of philia, openness is triggered on all levels of its communicative  lines but more on the plane of ‘being opened’ than ‘being open’ or  ‘being open to’” (Negarestani, “Death as a Perversion”). Black Metal  Theory perverts, infests, and invents strategies for philial deviation,  cross-breeding philosophy with the love of black metal, mating orcs and  elves.
Pester: to infest (archaic); annoy persistently. [Apparently from Ofr empestrer (FR empêtrer), to entangle, from L in in, and LL pāstōrium a foot-shackle, from L pāstus, pa p of pāscere to feed]
The  space or plane where Black Metal and Theory feed upon each other and  are shackled together is one of mutual pestering, a cascade of  parasitisms where it is impossible to tell which is guest and which is  host, to discern what is living and what is dead, what is natural and  what is not. A philial epidemic strategy for the two-fold event of  infestation necessitates a “pact with putrefaction”, the “moment of nucleation with nigredo” (Negarestani). Nothing beats the supreme intimacy of inter-laceration and mutual rot. It is the only way of being anywhere: “Infinite universe as silent as death / In this coffin I lay to rest” (Inquisition, “Astral Path to Supreme Majesties,” Ominous Doctrines of the Perpetual Mystical Macrocosm).
Pestle: an instrument for pounding or grinding.
To  find strategies, or schizotrategies, which would allow for the  contagious tryst between Black Metal and theory, one needs to pound  reason, to grind out a pestilential rationalism. “Intelligibility  is the epiphenomenon of a necrophilic intimacy ... reason reanimates  the dead rather than bestowing life upon it ... intelligibility is the  reanimation of the dead according to an external agency. Reason grounds  the universe not only on a necrophilic intimacy but also in conformity  with an undead machine imbued with the chemistry of putrefaction and nigredo”  (Negarestani). One strategy for grounding the mathesis of decay is the  Etruscan torture ritual where a living man or woman was tied to a  rotting corpse, “shackled to their rotting double” and “left to decay.”  What the Etruscan practice demonstrates is that the decay which is  normally associated with the outside is always already internal to the  body, to the flesh. The binding of the putrefying corpse and the living  body is a strategy for necrophilic intimacy. This necroeroticism also  reveals that the living are always already-dead and that the dead are  always-already reanimatable. Black Metal, which is often “characterized  among its followers and opponents by its ambivalent relationship with  death and decay to such an extent that it is often said that the only  protagonists in Black Metal are festering corpses” (Negarestani and  Masciandaro “Black Metal Commentary”), is in an ambivalently necromantic  relationship, a philial relationship between the living and the dead.  The strategic philial tryst between the immoderate commentator, “the one  who loves thinking” and “the loved one (black metal)” (Nicola  Masciandaro, “Anti-Cosmosis: Black Mahapralaya”) is necrological, an  erotic rotting open of the object that exceeds the correlational  parameters of exegesis and interpretation. “It is the ambivalent  relationship of Black Metal with death that gives rise to the most  criticized aspect of Black Metal, namely, necromanticism. As a part of  vitalistic investment in death, necromanticism involves a liberalist or  hedonistic openness toward death in the form of a simultaneously  econonomical and libidinal synthesis between desire and death ... Black  Metal can also be approached from a more twisted and colder intimacy  with death, an impersonal realm where the already-dead finds its voice  in the living” (Masciandaro and Negarestani). This twisted nest of  relations is an inescapable yet reversible catena, a black chain of being or necrophilic link of perverse (non)relations: “Love (philia) in all its forms entangles openness with closure, and ultimately closure with the radical exteriority of the outside” (Reza Negarestani, Cyclonopedia: Complicity with Anonymous Materials).
Parasite: an  organism that lives in or on another living organism and derives  subsistence from it without rendering it any service in return. 
Black  Metal and Theory are parasites and sites of para-kinesis: para-sites.  For Michel Serres parasitism is a nest of relations in a chain of  feeding on, a perpetual or persistent movement where the host and guest  make a good meal for the other. Serres’ parasitic relation reverses the  usual notion of semiconduction, a unidirectional arrow where one thing  feeds on another and gives nothing in return. It is a multi-vorous,  vociferous exchange: a reciprocal interference.  Parasitism produces  disharmony; it engineers noise in the system. Black Metal Theory as  Philial Epidemic Strategy Tryst (P.E.S.T.) creates such a site for  parasitic static, interference, black noise. 
This  Black Metal Theory Symposium invites speculations, commentaries,  reflections, archivizations, reconceptualizations and interventions on  pestilence, decay, plague, decomposition, putrefaction, rot, corpses,  infestation, consumption, perversion, cannibalism, necrophilia, flesh,  feeding, worms, insects, rats, rationalism, plants, ecology, swarms,  maggots, fever, vampirism, waste ... among other things. “Let’s gather  our contagious diseases and make love” (Negarestani, Cyclonopedia). 
Keynote Speaker:
Reza Negarestani (via video link)
Live Acts:
Eternal Helcaraxe http://eternalhelcaraxe.net/
Wound Upon Wound http://www.myspace.com/wounduponwound08
Confirmed Participants:
Paul Ennis
Diarmuid Hester
Jan Los 
Nicola Masciandaro
Nicola Masciandaro
Michael O’ Rourke
Zachary Price
Karin Sellberg
Steven Shakespeare
Aspasia Stephanou
Zachary Price
Karin Sellberg
Steven Shakespeare
Aspasia Stephanou
Scott Wilson
Ben Woodard
Ben Woodard
Confirmed Artists:
Vincent Como
[Image: Vincent Como, Hexe 001. Carbon paper, graphite, and invocation on paper, from a series of 23 works based on ancient defixiones, or curse tablets.]
 

 
 
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