From William Blake to Julian Cope, there have been innumerable seers who have engaged with their British locales in modes of hallucinatory intensity. These visionaries reassert a radical potentiality to the question of Albion which remains perpetually relevant. Undefined Boundary will explore this psychedelic and numinous underbelly of British culture with a view to keeping the sacred flame alive.
Contents:
Gog, Magog and the Stubborn Illusion: The enduring resonance of Andrew Sinclair’s ‘Albion Triptych’
by Andrew Hedgecock
Shadows: The Dark Streets of Kimballs Green
by Paul Bareham
A Lady on a White Horse
by Nigel Wilson
Ponderings Upon Paul Nash, The Ancient Soul With A Surrealist Heart
by Rebecca Lambert
The Magical Praxis and Politics of Penda’s Fen
by Duncan Barford
The Sick Rose: Magic/k is the Opium of the Middle-Classes
by Patrick Weir
Crab & Bee’s Provisional Demononology of Old Quarries and Suburban Woods
by Helen Billinghurst & Phil Smith
“…tomorrow will be beyond imagining.” - The solstice and Susan Cooper
by Karen F. Pierce
In A Remote County
by Mark Valentine
Alex Sanders: A Liminal Discography
by Stephen Canner