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Lecture

Kester Brewin: Getting High on Religion, Technology and the Afterlife


25 Jan 2018, 5:00pm - 7:00pm

LG02, Professor Stuart Hall Building

Event overview

Department Visual Cultures
Contact J.G.Andrews(@gold.ac.uk)

Lecture 3: A Fearless Look at the Unspeakable

The history of the human quest for flight is also a history of our quest to ‘storm the heavens.’ Fifty years ago, powered by cutting edge new technologies, this quest hit new highs with the Apollo missions and the inner trips of the LSD counterculture. Now, in the aftermath of both, comes AI, the high-tech revolution. But to what extent can these ‘highs’ be viewed through the lens of our ancient longing to reverse ‘the fall’?

Kester Brewin is a writer, broadcaster and teacher. He has twice presented at the UK's premier TEDx event, and his latest book, Getting High, has been praised as ‘fascinating and revelatory’ by Andrew Smith, author of Moondust.

The event is free and no booking is required. All are welcome!

Series convenors Jean-Paul Martinon & Jorella Andrews

A Fearless Look at the Unspeakable

During this five-week programme of talks, we will dare to address what is often considered either obsolete and therefore unworthy of philosophical and art-theoretical debate or, more radically, as anathema and therefore vigorously to be opposed: 'faith', not in the sense of a belief in the doctrines of a religion, but as an effort to persevere in the face of what cannot readily be verbalised. The aim for this series of talks is not to resuscitate and/or revisit old theological turns in western thought or return to a transcendental narrative against the prevailing materialist and immanentist status quo of today, but to hazard a look at how we interact with what stubbornly presents itself as already beyond words and is therefore consistently dismissed as unreal, fictitious, hypothetical, irrational, dangerous, or false. The argument for this series is that contemporary forms of incredulity with respect to faith are historically, culturally, and ideologically embedded within modern logocentric paradigms. We argue instead for the urgency of entering a broader field of awareness and endeavour in which 'faith' is understood as part of a number of perceptual, corporeal, and ritualistic ways of engaging with what knows no proper rationalization.

Dates & times

Date Time Add to calendar
25 Jan 2018 5:00pm - 7:00pm
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