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Burrough's Cut Up Method and CCRU

Posted: Mon Sep 01, 2025 2:39 pm
by atreestump
Language, Control, and the Lemurian Time War
William S. Burroughs, Cut-Ups, and Hyperstition

Introduction
William S. Burroughs, one of the most radical experimental writers of the 20th century, transformed literature by treating language itself as a battlefield.
What began in 1959 as an accidental discovery in Paris — the cut-up method, pioneered alongside Brion Gysin — became, for Burroughs, a weapon in a far deeper struggle: a war over language, time, and control.

Later, the Cybernetic Culture Research Unit (CCRU) would interpret Burroughs’ work within its own framework of hyperstition — “fictions that make themselves real.”
Through this lens, Burroughs’ experiments can be seen as part of the ongoing Lemurian Time War, a conflict between dominant reality-programs and insurgent forces resisting control.

[hr]

The Cut-Up Method: Collage as Weapon
Burroughs described his cut-up method simply:
"Pages of text are cut and rearranged to form new combinations of word and image…
The best writing seems to be done almost by accident, but writers until the cut-up method was made explicit had no way to produce the accident of spontaneity."
Originally inspired by collage techniques in visual art, Burroughs’ cut-ups were not mere aesthetic tricks.
They were tactical interventions: ways of breaking the linear flow of language, forcing it to produce new, unexpected meanings.

Later, Burroughs extended this into the fold-in method, where one page is folded into another so that two texts can be read simultaneously.
This created intentional disruptions in narrative continuity — "flashes forward" and "flashes back" in time — transforming writing into a form of temporal technology.

[hr]

Language as a Virus
Burroughs is famous for saying:
"Language is a virus from outer space."
For him, human consciousness was programmed by linguistic structures — "word and image locks" — which determine how we perceive, think, and act.
Language, like a virus, hijacks the host: it replicates itself through us, shaping reality while concealing its artificiality.

Cut-ups were designed to disrupt this programming, exposing the hidden control codes embedded within everyday speech.
By scrambling language, Burroughs sought to free the mind from pre-scripted thought patterns.

[hr]

Hyperstition and the Lemurian Time War
The CCRU extended Burroughs’ insights into a wider cosmology of control and resistance.
Their text Lemurian Time War interprets Burroughs’ writings as acts of hyperstition: fictions that don’t just describe reality but create it.
"Writing operates not as a passive representation but as an active agent of transformation —
a gateway through which entities can emerge.
By writing a universe, the writer makes such a universe possible."
Within this framework, Burroughs’ cut-up method becomes a weapon in an occult conflict against the One God Universe (OGU),
a dominant "reality program" that binds humanity into a pre-recorded timeline.
His work aimed to break these “word lines” — the scripts that lock us into a single future — and open pathways to alternative realities.

[hr]

Control, Time, and Escape
Central to Burroughs’ worldview was the link between control and time.
The OGU maintains dominance by binding consciousness into linear temporality, scripting reality in advance.

As Burroughs put it:
"Control needs time.
Control needs human time.
Control needs your shit, piss, pain, orgasm, death."
To escape control, one must escape time itself.
Burroughs saw cut-ups, fold-ins, and nonlinear writing as tools to unbind time, opening cracks in the pre-recorded universe — portals to what he called Space, zones of unbound potential.

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Conclusion
Burroughs’ experiments began as literary techniques but evolved into something far greater:
a theory of language, consciousness, and reality itself.

Through the CCRU’s lens, his cut-ups become more than avant-garde art — they are technologies for altering reality, weapons in the Lemurian Time War against control.
For Burroughs, writing was never neutral:
"Cut the word lines…
Make out lines to Space."
In an age where narratives define reality, Burroughs’ methods remain urgent.
His work invites us to question: Whose story are we living in — and how do we cut ourselves free?

Re: Burrough's Cut Up Method and CCRU

Posted: Tue Sep 02, 2025 5:07 am
by kFoyauextlH
I posted my possibly similar and related writing here, which combined into some earlier posts, but the song lyrics in those are fully relevant and part of it all as well as all that ended up combining and the rest that appears in that thread which refers to my writing in general as I've been writing online and offline since the 90s:

viewtopic.php?p=3116#p3116

I even used to hand out hard disks where there were these kinds of things abd interactive missions lol. I've had a fascinating literary history and history of using writing in very unusual ways since childhood, since I was born in 1986 but started using writing very early on.

Added in 2 days 22 hours 7 minutes 11 seconds:


If you don't mind, and hopefully you won't mind, I'm applying this to what is written above.

I'm engaging with these themes throughout the various threads, such as:

viewtopic.php?p=3162#p3162



"
Consider the impasse of a one-god universe
He is all-knowing and all-powerful
He can't go anywhere since he is already everywhere
He can't do anything since the act of doing presupposes opposition
His universe is irrevocably thermodynamic
Having no friction by definition
So he has to create friction
War, fear, sickness, death
To keep his dying show on the road
Sooner or later
"Look, boss, we don't have enough energy left
To fry an elderly woman in a fleabag hotel bar"
"Well, we'll have to start faking it"
Joe looks after him sourly and mixes a bicarbonate of soda
Sure, start faking it, sure, and leave the details to Joe
Now look, from a real disaster, you get a pig event
Sacrifice, heroism, grief, separation, fear, and violent death
And remember, one violent death yields more energy than a cancer ward
So, from an energy surplus, you can underwrite the next one
So, from an energy surplus, you can underwrite the next one
But the first one is a fake, you can't underwrite a shit house
Try to explain to God Almighty where his one-god universe is going
Asshole doesn't know what buttons to
Push or what happens when you push them
Man and ship, goddammit, every man for himself
Recollect Pope John XXIII saying
"Like a little soldier, I stand at
Attention in the presence of my captain"
The old army game from here to eternity
Get there firstest with the brownest nose
"

"
(transitive) To support, lend support to, guarantee the basis of.
"

https://www.etymonline.com/word/subscribe

http://www.vlib.us/beats/mrhartmcneill.jpg

https://internationaltimes.it/incidenta ... opposition.

https://ashejournal.com/2015/03/15/burr ... own-words/

https://realitysandwich.com/magical_uni ... burroughs/

http://www.ccru.net/archive/burroughs.htm

https://www.artsjournal.com/herman/2005 ... burro.html

https://realitystudio.org/images/covers ... iverse.pdf

https://www.rudyrucker.com/blog/2011/03 ... ern-lands/

"
101. These were troubled times. There was war in the heavens, as the One God attempted to exterminate or neutralize the Many Gods and establish a seat of absolute power.
"

https://www.themarginalian.org/2022/03/ ... upon-life/

https://wuwr.pl/awr/article/download/23 ... ure=shared



"
Dusk was falling and blue shadows gathered in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains to the east. Sangre de Cristo! Rivers of blood! Mountains of blood! Does Christ never get tired of bleeding?
"

Added in 41 minutes 25 seconds:
https://electronicbookreview.com/public ... ghs-lives/

"
William S. Burroughs held action in as high regard as subversion. The following review-essay requires “you” (the protagonist) to enter into the text’s hypertext metaphor, linking Burroughs’ iconic/popular image to the fixed visual image of the artist as “literary outlaw.” The tone will shift with the topic under discussion, and your position, in reference to Burroughs, may shift accordingly.
"

"
If William S. Burroughs’ multifarious fascinations could be represented pictographically in a poly-textual, poly-vocal new-media construction, in a way analogous to what his eventual transition from writing into visual art seemed to prophesy - in the way that such works as Ah Pook is Here and Other Texts (1979) or The Western Lands (1987) attempt to cleave the linguistic “is” of identity from the language virus - then the representation might be a website with enough visual hyperlinks to make you simultaneously dizzy and sick.

And if some enterprising young counter-culture collective indeed crafted a Web locus to mirror the spate of recent work by or about Burroughs since the advent of Timothy S. Murphy’s landmark critical work, Wising Up the Marks: The Amodern William Burroughs (1997), followed soon after by the James Grauerholz- and Ira Silverberg- edited Word Virus: The William S. Burroughs Reader (1998), the locus would still be adding information about the most recent titles: Naked Lunch: The Restored Text edited by Grauerholz and Barry Miles (March 2003), Oliver Harris’s William Burroughs and the Secret of Fascination from Southern Illinois University Press, and the Harris-edited 50th-anniversary edition of Burroughs’ first novel, Junky, from Viking Press (both April 2003) - in order to update the all-important meta-tags covering the familiar, if ethereal, territory of what you already know about Burroughs
"

https://www.artsjournal.com/herman/2020 ... harma.html

https://www.goodreads.com/work/quotes/2 ... tern-lands

Added in 3 minutes 13 seconds:
"
So he starts faking it. He is putting out human stock without the names. Literally Nameless Assholes, NAs. Their name is mud. Their name is shit. Without Angel, Heart, Double or Shadow. Nothing but remains, kept operational by borrowed power overdrawn on the Energy Bank... physical bodies animated by bum life checks.
"

https://forgottenrealms.fandom.com/wiki ... f_Troubles