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≫ [PDF] Archeofuturism 20 eBook Guillaume Faye

Archeofuturism 20 eBook Guillaume Faye



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Download PDF  Archeofuturism 20 eBook Guillaume Faye

In Archeofuturism, which became a cult classic in some circles, Guillaume Faye stipulated that the twenty-first century would not develop in line with the forecasts. We will soon live through — and it is already beginning — an explosive return of the archaic which will give the future the face of a dream — or of a nightmare, depending on one’s perspective.

In this book, Faye presents his ideas in the form of a series of eleven stories showing the trajectory of Western civilisation they begin in the summer of 1914, and they end long after your death.

Archeofuturism 2.0 is a thrilling work of science fiction that will haunt your dreams and awaken your unspoken desires.


‘June, 1914. Europe is at the height of her power, and summer enters proudly, ready to shine with all her fire. It’s the final summer of the Belle Epoque; the last beautiful days before the iron hurricane. And although international tensions continually unnerve the public mind, in high society, everyone is serene this crisis will surely blow over like the rest, like the one in 1910, won’t it? The Kaiser will never go for war. He’s not mad!’

—Episode One A Little Game of Fortune-Telling



‘To the men of the future My name is Jeanne Riquetout and I am witness to the very rapid end of a civilisation that was born thousands of years ago. This civilisation slowly expanded to cover nearly all of the Earth, which was populated by eight billion people.’


—Episode Two Apollo Will Return



‘The embers which had smouldered for a time in the far east and California, like exhausted fireflies, blinked out in turn. A fire never springs up again in the same hearth, and old firebrands always die. A new fire must be kindled. But that takes time . . . a great deal of time.’


—Episode Six The Republic of Flanders The Last Fires



‘They must have, during the brief period of their existence, dominated the Earth; their civilisation, like an ephemeral comet, was brilliant. One thing is certain they were related to the monkeys, who still exist, in the jungles in the south of your Empire. They must therefore have descended from an ancestor held in common with the monkeys, who for their part failed to evolve.’


—Episode Eleven The Lost Species


Archeofuturism 20 eBook Guillaume Faye

I read this book motivated to learn the author’s insights about the civilizational threat currently facing the people of the Western World. I was pleasantly surprised that it greatly exceeded my expectations. It is an enthralling, cannot put down, top rate piece of science fiction. Furthermore, it is top rate among fictional literature in general. Without spoilers: The story begins in 1914, postulated to be the peak of modern civilization. A bit more than a century later a catastrophe plunges humanity backward into a very primitive society. What follows then is the long struggle to recover civilization.

The sequence of stories poignantly demonstrates that traditional social customs, and particularly religious beliefs, that we may view as “primitive” in modern society, are necessary for survival in technologically and economically primitive circumstances. This raises the important question of whether the modern West is mistakenly abandoning these traditions and setting the stage for its own civilizational downfall.

The story is told through a sequence of chapters that form a plot arc of sorts and the whole could be considered a novel. In a sense it is a companion to the brilliant novel “The Camp of the Saints” by Raspail. Whereas “Camp” describes the mechanism and psychology of the destruction of Western Civilization over a very short time frame ofdays, weeks and months, “Archeofuturism 2.0” describes the fall and recovery of civilization over a millennial time scale, and even longer.

My fear is that just as the disaster Raspail described in 1973 appears to be happening today 45 years later, the complete collapse that Faye described in 2016 (apparently when this book was written??) will actually happen in the next few decades.

Product details

  • File Size 449 KB
  • Print Length 202 pages
  • Publisher Arktos Media Ltd.; 1 edition (March 14, 2017)
  • Publication Date March 14, 2017
  • Sold by  Digital Services LLC
  • Language English
  • ASIN B06XKZHQHT

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Archeofuturism 20 eBook Guillaume Faye Reviews


I didn't expect anything special, but the book nevertheless captured my focus from the first chapters and it was able to hold it intensively until the end.
After reading this are you depressed or resolute? Your reaction to this book will say more about you than it will be a comment on the work.
I started reading this a few days ago, couldn't put it down, very good lesson, we fight for our place in this world, or we cease to exist.
I read this book motivated to learn the author’s insights about the civilizational threat currently facing the people of the Western World. I was pleasantly surprised that it greatly exceeded my expectations. It is an enthralling, cannot put down, top rate piece of science fiction. Furthermore, it is top rate among fictional literature in general. Without spoilers The story begins in 1914, postulated to be the peak of modern civilization. A bit more than a century later a catastrophe plunges humanity backward into a very primitive society. What follows then is the long struggle to recover civilization.

The sequence of stories poignantly demonstrates that traditional social customs, and particularly religious beliefs, that we may view as “primitive” in modern society, are necessary for survival in technologically and economically primitive circumstances. This raises the important question of whether the modern West is mistakenly abandoning these traditions and setting the stage for its own civilizational downfall.

The story is told through a sequence of chapters that form a plot arc of sorts and the whole could be considered a novel. In a sense it is a companion to the brilliant novel “The Camp of the Saints” by Raspail. Whereas “Camp” describes the mechanism and psychology of the destruction of Western Civilization over a very short time frame ofdays, weeks and months, “Archeofuturism 2.0” describes the fall and recovery of civilization over a millennial time scale, and even longer.

My fear is that just as the disaster Raspail described in 1973 appears to be happening today 45 years later, the complete collapse that Faye described in 2016 (apparently when this book was written??) will actually happen in the next few decades.
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