Mystery School in Hyperspace, Graham St John
Mystery School in Hyperspace, Graham St John
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Mystery School in Hyperspace
A Cultural History of DMT

Author: Graham St John, Dennis McKenna

Narrator: David de Vries

Unabridged: 17 hr 44 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 12/31/2021


Synopsis

Since the mid-1950s, the psychoactive compound DMT has attracted the attention of experimentalists, prohibitionists, scientists, artists, alchemists, and hyperspace emissaries. Mystery School in Hyperspace is the first book to delve into the history of this substance, the discovery of its properties, and the impact it has had on poets, artists, and musicians.

DMT has appeared at crucial junctures in countercultural history. William Burroughs was jacking the spice in Tangier at the turn of the 1960s. It was present at the meeting between Ken Kesey's Merry Pranksters and Tim Leary's associates. It guided the inception of the Grateful Dead in 1965. It showed up in Berkeley in the same year, falling into the hands of Terence McKenna, who would eventually become its champion in the post-rave neo-psychedelic movement of the 1990s. Its indole vapor drifted through Portugal's Boom Festival and has been evident at Nevada's Burning Man, where DMT has been adopted as spiritual technology supplying shape, color, and depth to a visionary art movement. The growing prevalence of use is evident in a vast networked independent research culture, and in its impact on fiction, film, music, and metaphysics. As this book traces the effect of DMT's release into the cultural bloodstream, the results should be of great interest to contemporary audiences.

About Graham St John

Graham St John is an Australian cultural anthropologist specializing in event-cultural movements and entheogens. Among his eight books are Mystery School in Hyperspace: A Cultural History of DMT, Global Tribe: Technology, Spirituality and Psytrance, Technomad: Global Raving Countercultures, and the collections Weekend Societies: Electronic Dance Music Festivals and Event-Cultures and Rave Culture and Religion. He is currently senior research fellow in the Department of Social Science at the University of Fribourg, Switzerland, for the SNSF project Burning Progeny: The European Efflorescence of Burning Man and executive editor of Dancecult: Journal of Electronic Dance Music Culture.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Tim on April 29, 2016

I thoroughly enjoyed reading this book. As the title says, it's about the cultural history of DMT. Starting in the 1950s when it seemed to first hit western civilisation through the writings of William Burroughs through to Terence McKenna and Timothy Leary upto the clinical research by Rick Strassma......more

Goodreads review by Ard on February 06, 2017

Rarely have I come across a book about a subject so interesting that I just couldn't bear to finish. The writing of this book is not bad, it's just bloody annoying. Sentences that run for lines and lines, way too many sentences inside other sentences and an endless variety of words I never heard or......more

Goodreads review by Pat on July 25, 2017

The author has written the definitive cultural history of DMT. The book is a wonder of information relating the historical context, people, and general lore surrounding DMT. I leave the details to be enjoyed, but I have a good baseline of reading on the subject and am comfortable saying this is the......more

Goodreads review by Sara on December 31, 2017

Meticulously researched and annotated, this history can veer towards the overly academic at times, but overall, it presents a great history and lineage of DMT usage in the western world. Most surprising to me was its heavy use in Australia, and the huge influence this substance has had on modern mus......more

Goodreads review by Stefan on August 21, 2021

Genial......more