Texts
Start with normalized text-adjacent record pages.
Discovery palette
Search, jump, and utility routes
Curated record layer
Search and filter representative record pages by person, concept, section, source type, period, and collection. This page is user-accessible but intentionally excluded from the public search index.
Treat this as the stable crawlable catalog layer: a place to browse, sort, and triangulate without the semantic backend.
These are crawlable HTML entry points into the record layer. Use the filters for refinement, but treat these as the main browse routes.
Start with normalized text-adjacent record pages.
Browse talks, lectures, and spoken material.
Follow preserved sites and internet-native surfaces.
See the record layer around Nick Land.
Pull together the core hyperstition material.
Move through the Fisher afterlife cluster.
Nick Land's short introduction frames accelerationism as historical time-pressure rather than a settled doctrine, manifesto, or party line.
Mackay's anthology introduction maps accelerationism as a contested editorial field, separating lineages and political stakes that raw archive fragments often blur together.
Siegel's essay explains accelerationism as a response to perceived historical stasis, making the movement readable as a public narrative rather than an insider code.
This lecture is one of the clearest beginner routes into the CCRU because it narrates the group's formation, membership, and legacy in plain explanatory prose.
Ray Brassier's talk re-reads Nick Land and accelerationism through conceptual critique rather than blog-era legend.
This later interpretive episode is one of the clearest routes into CCRU hyperstition because it links the archive's weird style to nonlinear time, spectral residues, and failed evolutionary pathways.
A lecture introduction that explains why Land is still studied, distinguishing early philosophical promise from later controversy and myth.
This lecture clarifies hyperstition by tying it to storytelling, genre, and world-building rather than leaving it as an abstract slogan.
This collected volume anchors Land's wider corpus, showing the spread from academic philosophy into theory-fiction, cyberculture writing, and occulted conceptual experiment.
Cybergothic condenses a key CCRU style: philosophical claims arrive fused to science fiction, vampiric imagery, and arguments about capital's inhuman machinery.
This course text presents the CCRU as a legacy problem, explaining why the archive became mythic and why it still attracts philosophical and aesthetic interest.
The archived xenosystems homepage captures Nick Land's later public framing, where serial posting, reactionary politics, and the Outside sit side by side.
The archived ccru.net homepage shows the CCRU presenting itself as a designed cultural system rather than a neutral repository of documents.
The archived k-punk homepage shows how Fisher translated CCRU-adjacent motifs into a public critical culture organized around politics, pedagogy, and serial blogging.
This project note shows the corpus becoming a research instrument, with transcript scoring used to sort Land-related and AI-related material for later curation.
This session note documents an early attempt to identify the most useful introductory material on accelerationism across a large text corpus.
This text-scoring note makes the archive's introductory pathway explicit by ranking candidate readings for clarity, breadth, and explanatory value.
JavaScript refines this page in place, but the browse layer now works as ordinary linked HTML without it.