The Terence McKenna Archives…Back in Action

Welcome back to the Terence McKenna Archives!

For those who have wondered about the lack of updates over the past three years: my time has been consumed by the final stages of my PhD program, culminating in the completion of a 660-page dissertation. I’m very happy to share that it has now been approved by my doctoral committee, and that the University of California, Santa Barbara has awarded my degree in Religious Studies.

After such a long period of tight focus, it’s exciting to feel like my time—and my options—are opening up again. I’m now looking out at the job market and keeping my eye out for compelling opportunities to expand my work and the work of the archives. A range of stimulating projects are already on the horizon, which I’ll share updates on as they take shape.

In the meantime, I wanted to announce the good news and signal that substantial updates are on the way in the days, weeks, and months ahead. While the blog has been quiet, the archival work itself has continued to grow steadily behind the scenes. The collection has expanded significantly, and there are many new acquisitions from the past several years that I’m looking forward to sharing.

I’m also looking forward to rebuilding community around this project. Please feel free to get in touch—I’d be very interested to hear what kinds of materials, features, or directions you’d like to see develop moving forward.

Keep an eye on this space!

Below is the long version of my dissertation abstract, for those curious about what I’ve been working on. The dissertation itself will be available for free in the coming months on ProQuest.

Until the next post—take it easy…but take it.

Networks of Heterodoxy: Shared Dissent and the Dynamics of Counter-Discourse

by

Kevin Whitesides

This dissertation examines how formations of stigmatized, rejected, or alternative knowledge arise in relation to established social authorities—elite and popular—and circulate through society. Ideas dismissed as “deviant”—hereafter referred to as heterodox—recur across cultures and historical periods, repeatedly forming communities organized around shared dissent against dominant institutions of knowledge and power. In the contemporary global media environment, such counter-discourses have become especially visible as they spread rapidly across digital networks—from QAnon, anti-vaccination activism, and Flat Earth cosmology to movements such as MAGA, antifa, Anonymous, and global “color revolutions.” Although these milieus often differ profoundly in political orientation, epistemology, and goals, they participate in shared, recognizable practices rooted in challenging established authority. More broadly, counter-discourses emerge across all domains of culture, including religion, science, medicine, politics, economics, diet, fashion, music, and art. Because heterodoxy is always relational, its contents depend on social context: vegetarianism functions as an alternative practice in a meat-eating society—and vice versa—just as anti-vaccination counter-discourse can only emerge where vaccination is promoted by cultural authorities.

To analyze these dynamics, this dissertation develops a theoretical framework called networked heterodoxy, which expands Colin Campbell’s concept of the cultic milieu. Rather than treating heterodox ideas as simply marginal or decentralized, the framework demonstrates how they travel through networks that may include institutions, prominent media platforms, major religions, and other cultural producers across scales. Within these networks, recurrent narrative elements—here termed tropes—are continually adapted, recombined, and deployed in new contexts. The project introduces a three-tier analytical vocabulary distinguishing strategies (general counter-authority approaches), tropes (specific narrative elements), and applications (particular deployments of these tropes). These distinctions permit systemic analysis of how recurrent heterodox ideas are transmitted, adopted, and transformed across contexts.

The dissertation integrates qualitative, quantitative, and computational methods drawn from diverse approaches to intellectual history and from the digital humanities. These include archival research, digitization, large-scale corpus construction, trope tagging, co-occurrence mapping, topic modeling, similarity metrics, and network visualization. These techniques allow both close reading of individual “texts” (broadly conceived) and large-scale analysis of recurring patterns across discourse networks. (The dissertation is accompanied by a GitHub repository containing scripts that were created for computational data modeling.)

The theoretical model is introduced through a series of comparative vignettes that span from 1st century India to 21st century meme wars. These examples include the Lotus Sutra in early Buddhist discourse, the Protestant Reformation and the Inquisition, national anthems and counter-anthems, Charles Fort’s early twentieth-century counter-skepticism, Robert Anton Wilson and Discordianism, scientific paradigm renovation, the post-punk cult film Repo Man, Occupy Wall Street, the Burning Man festival, the Church of Stop Shopping, and the Standing Rock / #NODAPL protests.

The theoretical model unfolds as a series of distinctions—between modes of heterodoxy (perceived vs. actual), representations of heterodoxy (implicit vs. explicit), and domains of heterodoxy (epistemic, political, economic, popular). Two extended case studies ground the theoretical model. The first examines the 2012 phenomenon, analyzing a corpus of more than two hundred books that predicted transformative global change associated with the Maya calendar and December 21, 2012. The study demonstrates how the date functioned less as a single prophecy than as a discursive attractor capable of organizing diverse forms of alternative knowledge, including New Age spirituality, alternative archaeology, conspiracy narratives, psychedelic epistemology, survival preparation, and transhumanist speculation.

The second case study analyzes Five Percenter–influenced lyricism in Hip Hop, drawing on a large corpus of rap lyrics tagged for recurring theological, historical, and political tropes. Network and semantic analyses map how esoteric teachings associated with the Nation of Gods and Earths circulate through musical production in Hip Hop culture, interacting with Afrocentric historiography, critiques of state power, and broader traditions of Black, American, and global heterodoxy. These interactions generate overlapping discourse communities in extended gradients that diffuse both within and beyond Hip Hop culture.

Across both cases, the dissertation argues that heterodox ideas propagate through the interstices of shared dissent—in contact zones where distinguishable counter-discourses encounter one another, hybridize, and recombine. By modeling these processes, networked heterodoxy provides a scalable framework for analyzing how alternative knowledge systems circulate across historical periods, cultural domains, and media environments. The project offers both a cross-disciplinary theoretical vocabulary and a replicable mixed-methods toolkit for studying the dynamics through which stigmatized or rejected knowledge persists, spreads, and reshapes cultural discourse by unhinging its audiences from normative cultural models.

Accessing Hyperdimensions in Santa Fe: Terence McKenna invades Meow Wolf!

Last summer (2016), I had the pleasure of attending an event called Earth Consciousness & Lore of the Amazon at the Synergia Ranch in Santa Fe. Presenters included Dennis McKenna, Rick Doblin, Allan Badiner, Ralph Metzner, Valerie Plame Wilson, Michael Garfield, and Gay Dillingham (Don Lattin was also present). I had already been on a long road trip from Santa Barbara, stopping through the Blythe Intaglios on the way to present at the American Academy of Religion/Western Region conference in Tucson, then winding through Tombstone, Alamogordo, and Roswell on my way to Albuquerque to do archival research at the University of New Mexico in their Frank Waters collection…and would be headed onward through Chaco Canyon and Taos up toward Boulder where I would be doing further research at Naropa University, interviewing John Major Jenkins about his relationship with Terence McKenna, and, finally, heading back through Paonia (Terence’s and Dennis’ hometown) to familiarize myself with the feel of the place and to locate the places where various antics described in Brotherhood of the Screaming Abyss and many of Terence’s talks and writings took place (I will write a separate blog post about this trip rather than try to squeeze it in here). So, the Synergistics event was a nice midway point in the overall journey. It was also a great opportunity to finally connect with Dennis, Terence’s brother, in person after previous conversations by email and Skype. I was also able to score a late-night interview with Rick Doblin about his remembrances of Terence and perceptions about his legacy.

However, that event is not the focus of this post…it is only the proximal cause for the circumstances leading up to the topic of this particular blog post. Following the event, I was intending to head back to Albuquerque for more research in special collections at UNM the following day. It just so happened that one of the presenters needed a ride to Albuquerque in the morning to catch a flight, and so I stayed the night at the ranch near Santa Fe and made my way back to Albuquerque in the morning, recording another engaging dialogue during the car ride. After a day of successful document scanning (relating to Frank Waters’ role in the development of the ‘2012 Phenomenon’), I checked my Facebook and noticed that my wife had posted an article on my wall about a place in Santa Fe that had just opened called Meow Wolf.

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The article made it seem like the ultimate psychedelic, interactive, mystery play house… walk into the refrigerator of a two-story family home and exit into a crystalline hyperdimension (as one example). It would take too much space for me to express how impressive the full-scale virtual reality that the creators of Meow Wolf have built actually is. I would recommend that you read articles such as this one (and this brand new windfall) to get a clearer sense of what this installation, funded by George R. R. Martin, in a refurbished and extended bowling alley in Santa Fe consists of. But, more importantly, if you’re ever in Santa Fe, you should just go!! Even the bathroom is a trip…

One of the features of the storyline at The House of Eternal Return (the name of the world that you enter) is that some of the family members have learned how to use a combination of drugs and sound to get access to travel between dimensions. You have access to their entire house, including the individual rooms and offices of the family members, a living room, a kitchen, etc. They actually built an entire house that you can walk around and inspect every detail of–you can read their mail, watch their videos, pull books off of their shelves, read diaries, check the files on their computers, root around in their medicine cabinets…and, more significantly, find the hidden portals into other worlds even more expansive than the house which is the entry point.

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Once you arrive at the house, it’s entirely up to you what you explore and where you end up–it would take days (maybe weeks) to find everything. But, it’s definitely a case of “the further in you go, the bigger it gets.” (Apologies for the poor quality of the photos–I took most of them with my phone)

The soundtrack throughout is spectacular, by the way, and there are several areas that are delightful chill spaces that one could easily just kick back for a while (including a fog-and-light-filled room with a laser-harp).

To finally come closer to the point of the blog post, there is definitely an aspect of the cultic milieu spread throughout the experience even beyond the general “trippy” nature of the whole thing (much more so than I can get across here). One of the most obvious places where this shows up (for those capable of noticing) is in the personal libraries of the family members. One office in particular has a metaphysical and conspiratorial bent (you can see that I spent some time rooting through the desk drawers).

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And, on the bookshelves were a couple of familiar friends…Food of the Gods and (though it may be difficult to read the spine in the photo), a first edition (1975) of The Invisible Landscape. Terence McKenna is part of the set decoration at Meow Wolf, and, in fact, his work definitely thematically ties into the story.

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Food of the Gods (to the left)

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1st edition of The Invisible Landscape (middle-ish)

And, in the bedroom, near the device that creates the tones that, in concert with drugs, one uses to enter other worlds, there are even more subtle hints at what we are to understand is on the minds of our protagonists in the House of Eternal Return… Solomon Snyder’s Drugs and the Brain is out on the desk and on the bookshelf is a 2nd edition of The Invisible Landscape adjacent to Jim Fadiman‘s Psychedelic Explorer’s Guide and near Tim Leary‘s Your Brain is God, among other evocative titles.

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After having spent hours wandering through the alternate reality of Meow Wolf and realizing that I had only just scratched the surface of a fully-interactive creation chock-full of ‘easter eggs’ for someone with an eye for the esoteric, I suddenly found myself back in the dining room of the house staring at its large fireplace when suddenly I noticed someone crawling out of it from the inside. To my complete shock, this emerging fireplace gnome suddenly stood up and turned into Ralph Metzner. I had already succumbed to the strangeness of the world I was inhabiting, but for 1960s psychedelic pioneers to suddenly and unexpectedly manifest out of the interiors of fireplaces seemed somehow beyond incredulous. I came to find out, as I greeted Ralph and made my own way into the bowels of the hearth, that the house was now crawling with psychedelic luminaries who had, unbeknownst to me, also made their way down from the Synergia Ranch to check out the new local feature. It was a surreal experience that I will not soon forget, that I’m eager to repeat (there’s so much that I missed/didn’t find), and that I recommend to anyone of any age. And, as I made my way through the House of Eternal Return, it was a great pleasure to find that Terence was already there waiting to greet me.