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Generation Hex
Generation Hex

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Creator: Jason Louv
Publisher: The Disinformation Company
Category: Book

List Price: $14.95
Buy New: $7.51
You Save: $7.44 (50%)



New (36) Used (21) from $2.70

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 17 reviews
Sales Rank: 458847

Media: Paperback
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 288
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.09999990463
Dimensions (in): 8.79999923706 x 6.5 x 0.899999904633

ISBN: 1932857206
Dewey Decimal Number: 133.43
EAN: 9781932857207
ASIN: 1932857206

Publication Date: September 1, 2005
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: Paperback, paperback, minor shelf wear. Ships promptly w/notification emailed after shipping.

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description

If the modern world is crumbling, then magic is what's growing up between the cracks. In Generation Hex, editor Jason Louv assembles a collection of dispatches from the edge-a generation of young adults who are inventing and imagining radically new directions for spirituality and human evolution.

Arising from the magical and occult underground of the early twenty-first century, the authors, artists, thinkers, and magicians assembled in Generation Hex collectively point the way to a future in which fanaticism and dogma have disappeared, in which human beings are free to realize their own destinies, and where the theory and practical applications of magic-the psychic ability of all human beings to engage and participate with the creative energy of the universe itself--saturate and regenerate this troubled planet.

Through critical essays and practical demonstrations of how a positive interaction with the occult, esoteric, and psychic undercurrents of human life can radically alter one's existence, the young magicians collected here provide a collective snapshot of a dramatically new way forward for global culture as it emerges from the fringes and into the mainstream, from counterculture to ultraculture.

Generation Hex offers the reader an excursion into the lives and practices of real-life Harry Potters, young men and women who practice real magic, here stripped of its sinister trappings and revealed to be what it truly is-the key to human evolution. Generation Hex provides a blueprint for escaping the suicidal rut of modern life and the radical redesign of the very essence of what it means to be human.

Jason Louv is a New York-based writer and editor. He has spent the last six years researching and practicing magic, being initiated into various questionable secret societies, traveling around the Near East, and learning how to cloud minds. This is his first book.




Customer Reviews:   Read 12 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars Is this really the voice of the next generation of the occult?   October 5, 2005
 23 out of 35 found this review helpful

The hype for this book adverts it as the voices of the next generation of magic...

Well it is and isn't. As one of the voices of the so-called next generation of magic, I can't really say this anthology speaks for me or represents my views on magic. I can't even say I agree with the direction that some writers in this anthology feel occultism, as a culture, should go in...And while I find the personal narratives fascinating as to why some of these people got into magic, again, it's not representative of all the reasons why a person gets into magic.

All of that being said I did enjoy reading this book. It gave me some perspectives and thoughts, that while I didn't agree with, I did find invaluable for considering where magic as a culture is going. And I think people should read it, if only to see if they agree or disagree with the earnest young voices of a "new" generation. A lot of the ideas presented are intriguing and will definitely have you thinking and practicing magic in new directions. Kudos to all the writers of this anthology for promoting that.

It's also refreshing to see actual sources cited as opposed to a presentation of ideas as if the authors had never read anything about magic and had come up with it all on their own. With this anthology you know where the authors got their ideas from and that's good scholarship which is definitely needed in the occult scene.

I only have two complaints when it comes to this book. The one section of the book focuses the majority of the articles on drug use and magic, which is hardly new and seems rather old hat. I'd have liked to have seen other alternative ways of altering your reality advocated beyond just the traditional drug use. In other words, what is the new generation doing to alter reality that hasn't been done before?

And I'd have liked to have heard from more voices of the next generation that were representative of a wider diversity of views.

Regardless check out the book...because whether you agree or disagree with the views advocated in it, it will get you thinking about the direction that occultism as a cultural movement is going in.

Four stars out of five



3 out of 5 stars Post-Chaos Magic(k)   December 22, 2005
 18 out of 20 found this review helpful

As a kind of post-chaos magic text this book works well. Stephen Grasso's essays in particular are oustanding, documenting the dynamic progession of someone from within the chaos scene towards something both more pragmatically effective and personally fulfilling.

That being said, there is an equal amount of nonsense in GH. Practically every essay contains a reference to drug use as a magical tool. There's no doubt certain substances have their place in occult works, but if you read this book cold you'd tend to think they were necessary - no thanks!

Jason Louv clearly has some very noble ideals - much required in present occulture - however, there is an obvious question mark over some of the contributors in this text and their ability to inspire the next generation.

All things considered, this is a book that should be part of the contemporary magician's library, if only as a reference point to the real 'movers and shakers' in the selected reading section. Not that there isn't some vibrant magical creatures in this book - there are - but this tends to be balanced by the odd delusionary LSD tract expressing some ill-defined magical endowment.

I seriously look forward to the release of Grasso's forthcoming book.



5 out of 5 stars State of the Art   September 26, 2005
 15 out of 26 found this review helpful

Magick = Marketing, when done from the heart it is kind, when done for the profit, it can be sociopathic.

"It was Occult study that first led me to major in Marketing. The way I see it, it's just magick by another name... I think that Marketing is simply the legitimate face of occult study - the last socially acceptable way to understand magic theory. If more occultists got involved in it, I think there would be a lot of growth in the way we interpret, present, and understand ideas." --Jedediah Walls, Chicago AdBusters

If you want to learn the technology of effectiveness and see a variety of perspectives, read this selection of voices.

Enjoy with milk.



4 out of 5 stars Inspiration in difficult times   November 22, 2005
 12 out of 14 found this review helpful

If you're looking for a book with a mind shattering new magical paradigm, this is not that book. It is also not a handbook for beginning magicians. This is the book you're looking for if you're a magician in need of fresh inspiration in a bleak and self-destructive society.

If you've established a magical practice but are wondering "OK, I'm a magician, now what?" or feel there's just "something" missing from your practice, this book is for you. If these essays have an overarching theme, it's what it feels like to be a magician.

One of the criticisms leveled at this book is that there is a lack of diversity in voices. I have to agree. Despite many of the contributors saying "I'm not a chaos magician," most of the essays in this book come from a Western, chaos-influenced perspective. The majority of the contributors are male, and all but one lives in North America.

The problem with anthologies is always consistency. There were a few articles that I just did not like. But Stephen Grasso's essays, and Chris Arkenberg's article "My Love War with Fox News" are worth the price of admission on their own.

I'm hesitant to recommend this book to beginners, though I think with some work even the most basic beginner would take something away from this book. I recommend this book to all practicing magicians. Even if you think your practice is fine the way it is, I suspect you'll find something of value in this collection.



5 out of 5 stars blew my mind   November 6, 2005
 9 out of 11 found this review helpful

if you don't know anything about magic, read this book. if you do know a thing or two, read this book. if the whole idea makes you laugh, or freaks you out, please read this book! i have been around these ideas for awhile but reading this actually was the catalyst that inspired me to pick up this path on my own. i like some essays more than others, but all in all, it is a profound, exciting, beautiful collection, that leaves me feeling very hopeful about this generation.

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