{"id":189664,"date":"2017-04-27T01:59:13","date_gmt":"2017-04-27T05:59:13","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/vanishing-where-is-the-music-of-the-impending-apocalypse-the-quietus\/"},"modified":"2017-04-27T01:59:13","modified_gmt":"2017-04-27T05:59:13","slug":"vanishing-where-is-the-music-of-the-impending-apocalypse-the-quietus","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/survivalism\/vanishing-where-is-the-music-of-the-impending-apocalypse-the-quietus\/","title":{"rendered":"Vanishing: Where Is The Music Of The Impending Apocalypse? &#8211; The Quietus"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><p>    Do you catch yourself thinking about the end of the world? What    prompts these thoughts? And are they all they seem? The idea    pops into my head from time to time and I try and dismiss it    quickly but it wasnt until writing this feature that I    realised how these unwelcome imaginings manifest themselves.    I've now worked out that, shamefully, what Im actually doing    is playing a few frames worth of tsunami from the end of    2012 or running a mental GIF, culled from some other    half-remembered CGI-blockbuster of skyscrapers falling down. On    other occasions Im conjuring up a stark image from the    television of my childhood: the usual suspects are    Threads or a Protect And Survive public    information film (and the latter image is probably remembered    via the secondary medium of the 1980s pop music video).  <\/p>\n<p>    In reality (if you discount certain religious or cosmological    predictions) the fall of man is too big a concept for us to    envisage with any great clarity. When the end comes for our    species it will probably happen in so many different and    complex stages that it is all but impossible to second guess.    (As much as the tabloids during the Cretaceous were probably    constantly full of comet-based scaremongering, I bet none of    them predicted a post-impact future where dinosaur survivors    slowly morphed into birds who got smaller and smaller until the    monkeys took over.) The (entertaining and lively) Homo Deus:    A Brief History Of Tomorrow by Yuval Noah Harari is the    latest product turned out by a publishing industry that caters    to our still unquenchable millenarian thirst. Admittedly this    book is unusual in that it actually has a relatively upbeat    prognosis for us - homo sapiens is giving way to the god-like    homo deus who will make war obsolete, conquer disease and    achieve amortality - but like the rest of the literature    dealing with the end of mankind as we know it, its no less    far-fetched than most fantastical works of science fiction.    Mapping out the future of man is like predicting the weather:    experts can give us reasonable suggestions for the very near    future but anything mid to long term is a fools errand due to    the complexity of the model were talking about.  <\/p>\n<p>    This publishing trend - a facet of a larger cultural obsession    taking in TV series, magazines, films and comic books -    services a large and amorphous client group of tens of millions    who either believe that the world is about to end or fear that    it could. These are the people who dont push the thought out    of their minds immediately but rather spend a lot of their    waking time grappling with it. But if the end of our species is    essentially unfathomable, what are they actually thinking    about? In 2012, when talking about religious predictions of the    end, the neuroscientist Shmuel Lissek suggested that large    numbers of people found comfort and validation in the fearful    ancient bias provoked by the idea of doomsday. This would be    the ultimate example of misery loving company, or, as Robert    Smith of The Cure summed it up succinctly in 100 Years: It    doesnt matter if we all die. Counterintuitively there is also    responsibility absolving relief to be had in knowing when    ones time is due. It can seem bewildering to outsiders that    many people under the sway of apocalyptic religions and cults    are willing to believe the very precise warnings of the end of    the world (down to exact dates and times) when literally all of    these predictions so far have come to absolutely nothing. But    perhaps its not hard to see the attraction in knowing exactly    when you are going to die. For some people the sheer    existential exhaustion they suffer comes from not having    this knowledge. The complete failure of Earth to crash into the    non-existent planet Nibiru on December 21 2012, will not stop    people from getting in a flap over Sir Isaac Newtons predictions of Armageddon    when 2060 rolls around.  <\/p>\n<p>    Eschatological and apocalyptic thinking is not just the sole    provenance of followers of certain religious cults though.    These ideas are often linked to those with poor mental health.    Im not talking so much about paranoid schizophrenics here.    While its not unknown for the unhappy souls blighted by this    condition to develop delusions - some of which may be    apocalyptic in nature - in nearly all cases these beliefs are    clearly irrational and in-all likelihood not persuasive to    anyone other than the sufferer themselves. More relevant here    are the paranoid, who have relatively more rationalised fears,    which are often easily expressed and shared, especially via the    internet. (It is a common belief among hardcore conspiracy    theorists for example that their government has information    about an immanent disaster and are purposefully keeping the    population in the dark so as not to cause panic.) And then    there are the traumatised. There is evidence that people    suffering from post traumatic stress disorder - especially    those who have first hand experience of war itself - can buy    into the mindset of apocalyptic survivalism becoming    preppers. These characters are now so prevalent in American    society that they have become a stock archetype of pop culture,    with prominent examples such as John Goodmans survivalist    character Howard in the smart sci-fi movie 10 Cloverfield    Lane and the Indiana doomsday cult leader the Reverend    Richard Wayne Gary Wayne from the Netflix comedy Unbreakable    Kimmy Schmidt. In the States, bookstore shelves are heaving    with titles on the subject of ultimate survivalism and there    are even several popular magazines designed to help people with    their preparations.  <\/p>\n<p>    And all of this is before we get onto the beliefs of some folk    who are simply very very depressed or fatalistic.  <\/p>\n<p>    In some of these cases the standard pop-psychiatric explanation    of apocalyptic thinking would be something along these lines:    the damaged mind is unable to process its own collapse and    projects its own chaos outwards onto the world. But - to    paraphrase Tom Waits - just because youre crazy and thinking    about the apocalypse doesnt mean the end isnt actually nigh  <\/p>\n<p>    It was reported in the news recently that the notional big hand    on the Doomsday Clock, a symbol which represents the likelihood    of a human-caused global catastrophe, has been moved to two and    a half minutes to midnight. It had previously been at three    minutes to midnight for two years which was the closest it had    been to 12 since the height of the American\/Russian nuclear    standoff in 1982. If youre having trouble interpreting what    this recent change means, the Science And Security Board of The    Doomsday Clock had this to say last year: The probability of    global catastrophe is very high, and the actions needed to    reduce the risks of disaster must be taken very soon. They    have amended this statement thus: In 2017, we find the danger    to be even greater, the need for action more urgent. It is two    and half minutes to midnight, the clock is ticking, global    danger looms.  <\/p>\n<p>    As their name suggests, the Science And Security Board are not    so much concerned with religious predictions as they are    manmade disaster. But some these scientific scenarios are no    less baroque when you read about them...  <\/p>\n<p>    Phil Torres, author of The End: What Science And Religion    Tell Us About The Apocalypse, lists a dizzying number of    ways in which we may shuffle off the coil en masse. There is    the threat of super-intelligence, grey goo nanotechnology    run amok and the appalling idea of catastrophic vacuum decay    (if youre excessively existentially nervous and dont already    know what CVD is, I really wouldnt google it). And then we    have the only slightly less bleak but all too tangible climate    change and nuclear war scenarios - which rather than    threatening to wipe everyone out in one fell swoop would light    a long and complex touch paper on the process.  <\/p>\n<p>    So, given this looming danger, Ive found myself wondering    recently, why isnt more music being released in 2017 about the    apocalypse or the idea of post apocalypse?  <\/p>\n<p>    Now, this being the internet I have to explain very carefully    what I mean here. First of all, I dont mean that no music at    all currently deals with the idea that the world is ending.    There have been quite a few examples of musicians indulging in    apocalyptic thinking recently. Ed Harcourts album    Furnaces may use the concept as a metaphor to explore    the transcendent salvation offered by love but his vision is    still mired in fire and brimstone. His manager, the critic Sean    Adams, says that despite offering the listener the possibility    of salvation Harcourt still imagines a world of terminal    pollution and dissolution. And last November ANOHNI released '4    Degrees' as the lead single from her latest album    Hopelessness a stark and lacerating ecological warning.    But for the most part these sentiments are conspicuous by their    absence in the mainstream - especially when TV channels,    cinemas, computer game stores and bookshops are so replete with    apocalyptic and post apocalyptic fiction and entertainment.  <\/p>\n<p>    We also need to recognise the few hardy souls who have been    proclaiming the end of the world for decades now. As such we    should pause here momentarily and doff our caps towards Jaz    Coleman of Killing Joke. This year marks the 35th anniversary    of his departure from these shores for Iceland convinced of the    coming apocalypse. Much mocked in the music press at the time,    Coleman now lives in a jerry built house on an island in the    relatively remote Hauraki Gulf of northern New Zealand    (mythologised as Cythera by Coleman). His attitude of wishing    to live as remotely from major cities as possible seems a bit    more sensible in 2017 than it used to, not the least now that    the idea of relocating the family to Canada, Patagonia or, yes,    Reykjavik has supplanted house prices as the number one subject    at dinner parties all over the UK. But it should be said that    by their own standards at least, Colemans lyrics seem slightly    less apocalyptic than they used to be and recently, in a Q and    A after a screening of The Death And Resurrection Show    Killing Joke documentary, when the subject of his initial stay    in Iceland was mentioned, he brought up a life-long struggle    with depression suggesting that there is perhaps a mental    health aspect to at least some of the bands end time concerns.  <\/p>\n<p>    For the sake of brevity we're going to have to give heavy metal    a free pass here. The subject of the genre's obsession with the    fall of man is enough to generate several volumes of scholarly    work and cannot be generalised upon to any useful degree. There    has been more amazing metal concerned with the end of days than    from all other genres combined. From Black Sabbath's 'Electric    Funeral', recorded in 1970, onwards, it has seen many towering    peaks of achievement such as the foundational Viking metal    album and poetic 1991 masterpiece Twilight Of The Gods    by Bathory (named by Stephen O'Malley as one of his favourite    meditations on the subject).  <\/p>\n<p>    However, it is worth pointing out to the non-partisan and    metalphobic that apocalypse doesn't always mean apocalypse when    it comes to metal. Even after skipping over the heavily    metaphorical nature of this music, things are not always as    they seem. For example, the mushroom clouds on the cover of a    neo-thrash LP by Reign Of Fury or Havok might seem in poor    taste to someone with little interest in this genre, but to a    metalhead of my age (mid-40s) this is primarily a nostalgic,    comforting image, more redolent of a carefree adolescence lit    golden coloured by rite of passage first beers and enjoyment of    records by Megadeth, Nuclear Assault, Iron Maiden and The    Cro-Mags, than it is symbol of imminent global destruction.  <\/p>\n<p>    And its also worth bearing in mind that there can often be a    disconnect between lyrical content in extreme metal and the art    the album comes in. Take Texan thrashers Power Trip for    example. The sleeve of this year's Nightmare Logic on    Southern Lord is all demonic soldiers marching through a post    nuclear cityscape with a deathly face surveying the carnage but    the lyrics of singer Riley Gale - who has a sophisticated line    in identity politics - are mainly about the effects of    globalisation and neo-liberalism and what can be done to    resist, inspired in part by UK second wave punk. Nothing is    necessarily what it seems when it comes to metal.  <\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>    One recent metal act that has really stood out to me because    its entire aesthetic over several releases seemed to be    exclusively and persistently about the end of the world was the    Botanist. Even by black metal standards, the Californian who    goes by the name of Otrebor and plays drums and hammered    dulcimer while singing, is a complete outlier. He has released    six albums proper as the Botanist - a character who represents    the nemesis of mankind, his work: allowing plants to regain    control of the planet after humanity has died. The intense    lyrical devotion to this messianic eco-terrorist character,    married to the transcendent blur of music, wrenched from    non-standard instrumentation, marks this music out as totally    unique.  <\/p>\n<p>    Most other modern genres pale in comparison to metal in the    apocalypse stakes. Some producers of noise, techno and dark    ambient talk a good Omega game but the lack of lyrical content    makes this little more than a colouring agent in my book.    Elsewhere, I can detect a subtle millenarian undercurrent to    hauntology - probably because of the shaded section on the Venn    Diagram that crosses over into Protect And Survive    booklets, public information films, Threads and so on. I    asked Simon Reynolds if he believed these hauntological    fetishes were totally removed from modern day worries about    nuclear war: I dont think its to do with apocalypse or    nostalgia for nuclear war or anything daft like that, its an    aesthetic thing  [people] love of the look and sound of those    Public Information Films as little capsules from another time.    Theres also a sense of wonder that such creepy, unnerving    things were shown to children.  <\/p>\n<p>    And even then, when we put our heads together my initial    assumption that there would be untold numbers of hauntological    recordings about impending doom seem to be somewhat fanciful.    There is the Civil Defence Is Common Sense track on The    Advisory Circles Other Channels album and the nuclear    war inspired Tomorrows Harvest by Boards Of Canada    (again, as much as an instrumental album can be said to be    about anything).  <\/p>\n<p>    A recent album he was keen to mention was A Year In The Countrys The Quietened    Bunker, before adding: But again that is more about    the bygone long-ago vibes of Britain at a certain time in    post-War history than anything to do with current concerns.  <\/p>\n<p>    So actual sonic hauntological artefacts dealing tangibly with    apocalypse as we might fear it today are quite the rarity. A    notable example would be the Radiophonic play,    Eschatology, which the Langham Research Centre and Peter    Blegvad performed on BBC Radio 3 in 2014. The full play is    fantastic - like the shipping forecast broadcast from a vessel    scuttled at the lip of oblivion, and mixes spoken word drama,    musique concrete, vintage synth-scaping and tape    experimentation.  <\/p>\n<p>    When listening to this play again recently, the idea of a story    told from the POV of the last people on Earth after an    apocalyptic event, set to non-standard musical backing put me    in mind of one of the jewels in the crown of American rock    group Shellac - The End Of Radio. Over a tense solo snare    beat that inexorably creeps up to double time and then beyond    into a puncturing drum roll over a rigid, metronomic bassline,    Steve Albini barks out the story of the final broadcast of a    Modern Lovers-obsessed radio DJ who finds himself the last man    on Earth broadcasting his final show to no-one. Is it really    broadcasting if theres no one there to receive? asks Albini    plaintively before eventually unleashing the riff of all riffs,    which sounds like Link Wray on the deck of Event Horizon. As    different as they are, the power of both pieces can be found in    specific effects achieved by the combination of (non-standard)    music and spoken word, but more on this later.  <\/p>\n<p>    Now, anyone reading this article would be well within their    rights to ask, why should people even want be reminded of the    parlous state of international affairs or impending ecological    destruction when theyre listening to music? Why shouldnt they    be allowed to enjoy pure escapism - an attitude I have a lot of    time for. But one only has to look back 35 years to when the    Doomsday Clock was as perilously close to its terminal    engagement as it is now to see how much things have changed. In    the 1980s - when Russia and America seemed likely to engage in    nuclear warfare, it wasnt just the thrash metallers, goths and    punks who were obsessed with doomsday - it was everyone from    Frankie Goes To Hollywood to Heaven 17 to Ultravox to Morrissey    to David Bowie to Blondie to Queen to Nik Kershaw to Sting to    Prince to Genesis to Nena to OMD... Name a top ten single from    1983 - theres a fighting chance the theme was nuclear    annihilation.  <\/p>\n<p>    So something has changed but what?  <\/p>\n<p>    Recently, after the untimely passing of the theorist and music    critic Mark Fisher, I had reason to go back and re-read his    essential text Capitalist Realism: Is There No    Alternative? In his opening gambit he claims the idea that    it is easier to picture the end of the world than it is the end    of capitalism (attributed to both the erratic Slovenian    philosopher Slavoj Zizek and the postmodernist Frederic    Jameson) as the essential motto for Capitalist Realism.  <\/p>\n<p>    There is a difference between 1982 and 2017 according to    Fishers book and that is now there is simply no alternative    economic system we can imagine to the one we're saddled with.    In the 1970s and 1980s - no matter how naive, how unrealistic,    how compromised, alternatives in name still existed to    capitalism. Socialism existed as a genuine force, anarcho    collectivism existed as a genuine possibility etc. Now that the    after effects of Thatchers second and third terms have settled    in comfortably - so the argument goes - we simply cannot    imagine anything other than the system we have now. Fisher    described the state of inertia we find ourselves in: What we    are dealing with now... is a deeper far more pervasive sense of    exhaustion of cultural and political sterility For most people    under twenty in Europe and North America, the lack of    alternatives to capitalism is no longer even an issue.    Capitalism seamlessly occupies the horizons of the thinkable.  <\/p>\n<p>    World destruction, of one kind or another, is the inevitable    end product of capitalism. It is now a near global system    predicated on continual and aggressive expansion of markets by    any means necessary in a world of finite resources that has    only a limited capacity to cope with our core rapaciousness.    There is no other way things can pan out. So it struck me as    being quite funny that its now equally as hard (for musicians    at least) to imagine the end of the world as it is for the rest    of us to imagine the end of the system thats causing it.  <\/p>\n<p>    Im not sure what I think about the paucity of this kind of    music in the mainstream these days. After all, even if it was    widespread and popular, surely it would just be an example of    pre-corporation (the pre-emptive formatting and shaping of    desires, aspirations and hopes by capitalist culture). Just    another temporary trend. And by the way, this isnt some    semi-occluded old man cry about a so-called lack of protest    music in the 21st Century. There is enough of that stuff about    - Im aware that it doesnt look like it used to and most of it    is now guided by liberal humanism rather than a naive desire to    save the world from nuclear or ecological destruction.  <\/p>\n<p>    But popular or not, the more music struggles to get away from    the cultural exhaustion of late capitalism - the more it    resists mere revivalism and straight up pastiche - the more    effective I find it on several levels. I dont need music to be    sui generis, I just need it to fight its own fucking corner,    god damn it. And so it is with apocalyptic music. As with all    of the examples mentioned above, Ive found myself returning to    the self-titled debut album by Manchester based artist    Vanishing time and time again recently.  <\/p>\n<p>    Vanishing is a project led by Hull-born and Manchester-based    poet and musician Gareth Smith (who is, among other things, a    regular collaborator with LoneLady). His music isn't as overtly    obsessed with the coming collapse of civilisation as that of    the Botanist, say, but it has been riven by millennial angst.    (Smith has only talked in very general terms about how    Vanishing is concerned with \"alienation and claustrophobia\";    about \"this terrible feeling of dread\"; and \"the madness of the    current time\" but it seems to me that it could present a means    for him to articulate extreme sensitivity to modern life, as    this music jangles like a symptom of generalised anxiety    disorder.)  <\/p>\n<p>    On this debut album, released recently on Salford's Tombed    Visions, he has created a cast of characters such as The Forger    and The Cleaners, and to breathe life into them he does the    police in different voices. His words come flowing dynamically    out of him in an East Yorkshire accent as heavy and blunt as a    cosh; a necrotic black metal shriek; a granular baritone drawl;    a tremulous whisper that rises and rises towards an ever    ascending note of anxiety ringing clear like a struck bell. And    his words exit him like ten thousand cubic metres of silt,    suspended in the garbage rich, caramel brown waters of the    Humber flowing right out into the desalinated and mercury    poisoned North Sea.  <\/p>\n<p>    Its not a particularly easy listen. But it is thrilling.  <\/p>\n<p>    Vanishing by Vanishing, is on first listen heavily    portentous, achingly pompous, grindingly dour and massively out    of step with the current cultural times. Of the few who hear    it, no doubt more will be annoyed than pleased by it; certainly    more will find it wryly amusing rather than harrowing. It does    however despite all this reveal itself on subsequent listens to    be quite brilliant.  <\/p>\n<p>    Vanishing is not an exploration of something that has    already happened or something that is going to happen but    something we are currently enduring. It is a sonic metaphor for    how we are refusing to feel right now. The stab of panic late    at night when anxiety stalks the hallway outside the door, when    no amount of digital distraction will quell the thought, \"What    have we done?\" Smith isn't saying what we're all thinking, he's    saying what we're all desperately trying not to think.  <\/p>\n<p>    Musically, this is a muscular and psychedelic mix of post rock,    industrial, dark ambient, dub and other, less-easy to classify,    fractured and cosmic sounds, provided mainly by Smith with    Paddy Shine of GNOD. (Shine's bandmate Alex Macarte also turns    up on synths at one point while Julie Campbell and Elizabeth    Preston add a hint of Godspeed drama on cello here and there.)    The churchical organ drones of Brighton 84, the brittle    Suicide-beats of Night Vision, the nerve-jangling dub effects    of Fountain, the future spiritual of The Forger and the    reverberant, agonising power electronics of The Cleaners all    thrill... Bronze Misnomer is a quirky but threatening reboot    of Jack Kerouac, Al Cohn and Zoot Sims Blues And Haikus    from 1959. Behind all things is glitchy electronica like the    sound of the machines stuttering and failing for the last time.    Over all things is a scree of noise as long since abandoned    buildings eventually crumble, undermined by encroaching plant    life. If I have one major criticism of Vanishing it is    that, like TS Eliots Strawmen, it whimpers out of existence    instead of ending with a bang. On final track Glacier, the    guitars - bum notes and all - meander aimlessly about the track    and for once the music is not really a match for Smiths    simmering intensity. But perhaps this is an apt way to end    proceedings.  <\/p>\n<p>    Vanishing isn't going to change the way I vote. It's not    going to affect the way I do my recycling. It's not going to    make me join the Green Party. Listening to this album is not    going to make me go and live in an island shack near the    Hauraki Gulf. It isn't even going to make cross the room so I    can turn the light off that's currently switched on needlessly    in the hallway. But this album (along with the music mentioned    by Langham Research Centre, the Botanist, Shellac and The    Advisory Circle among many others) serves as a concrete    reminder that there is respite to the cultural malaise created    by late capitalism for those who are determined to seek it. It    makes me think there is a glossary of effects begging to be    written detailing how various literary techniques combine with    certain musical processes to create dramatic new sonic spaces.    And I'm not just talking about apocalypse music now, but songs    about love, death and birth as well. Songs about cars. Songs    about nightclubs. Songs about buildings. Songs about food. One    really only needs to feel the surging connective potential when    listening to something that doesn't sound quite like anything    one has heard before, related from an angle one hasn't    considered before - as infrequently as this may occur - to    realise there is still everything left to fight for. Those who    claim they've heard it all before? I lament their inability to    see anything but the broadest of brushstrokes when the rest of    us know the devil is in the detail. They say: \"We're doomed!    We're doomed!\" I say: \"Not a bit of it, there's enough hope    left yet.\"  <\/p>\n<p><!-- Auto Generated --><\/p>\n<p>Continue reading here: <\/p>\n<p><a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow\" href=\"http:\/\/thequietus.com\/articles\/22260-vanishing-apocalypse-end-of-the-world-shellac-botanist\" title=\"Vanishing: Where Is The Music Of The Impending Apocalypse? - The Quietus\">Vanishing: Where Is The Music Of The Impending Apocalypse? - The Quietus<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p> Do you catch yourself thinking about the end of the world? What prompts these thoughts?  <a href=\"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/survivalism\/vanishing-where-is-the-music-of-the-impending-apocalypse-the-quietus\/\">Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":5,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[187719],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-189664","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-survivalism"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/189664"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/5"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=189664"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/189664\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=189664"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=189664"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=189664"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}