Tyr: Myth—Culture—Tradition is the name of an American Radical Traditionalist (anti-modern, neo-tribalist[1]) journal, edited by Joshua Buckley, Michael Moynihan, and (in the first issue) Collin Cleary.
It is an annual publication named after Tyr, the Germanic god. The magazine states that it "celebrates the traditional myths, culture, and social institutions of pre-Christian, pre-modern Europe." The first issue was published in 2002 under the ULTRA imprint in Atlanta, Georgia. The magazine largely focuses on topics relating to Germanic neopaganism and Germanic paganism with an amount of content regarding Celtic polytheism as well.
Three volumes have appeared so far; vol. 1 in 2002 and vol. 2 in 2004 and now vol. 3 2006 is available from the Tyr website or from Norway's Integral Publications. Contributors include Asatru Folk Assembly founder Stephen McNallen, Nouvelle Droite leader Alain de Benoist, an interview with noted French comparative philologist Georges Dumézil, British musicologist and translator Joscelyn Godwin, modern Germanic mysticist Nigel Pennick and scholar Stephen Flowers, besides translations of texts by "Traditionalist" author and occultist Julius Evola and völkisch poet and musician Hermann Löns. Volume 2 also includes a CD of music related to the subject matter or authors contributing.
Contents |
The editorial preface of Tyr, vol. 1 enumerates the following "radical traditionalist" ideals:
Thomas Wiloch states that:
"Tyr serves as a meeting place for those who see intriguing commonalities between the environmental, pagan, alternative music, and occult communities, and between certain political ideas of both the left and the right," further stating that the publication is "on the extreme edge of things".[2]
The reviewer for Northvegr identifies the philosophy behind Tyr as primarily "Odian" (Stephen Flowers' school of occult "Runosophy"), expressing concern that the magazine:
"..wraps into a round of praise and admiration for the likes of Julius Evola, Herman Lons, and the dark master of chaos himself, Karl Maria Wiligut."
Northvegr then requests "firm voices calling out from the side of right and order" to correct the impression that the occultist "Traditionalism" advocated by Tyr represents a mainstream position in Germanic neopaganism.[3]
The reviewer for Willamette Week identifies Tyr as a journal of "neo-pagan crypto-scholarship" (but does not elaborate further or give example) and an "artifact of modern Bohemia" aiming at the "creation of an alternative intellectual reality", and states further that:
"...a section of this issue's preface attempts to dismiss 'The Fascist Accusation' before the fact."[4]
The "attempt" the Willamette Week refers to is the preface to volume 2. It reads:
"Watching the impressive spectacle of thousands of black-clad storm troopers marching in lock-step formation, one is reminded of nothing so much as the regimentation of modern, industrial society. The Nazi's overarching emphasis on biological materialism, and the idea that human perfectibility could be achieved through eugenics, is mirrored in the modern obsession (albeit purged of the focus on "racial purity") with cloning, genetic engineering, and mood-controlling pharmaceuticals. That any of these unnatural and frightening panaceas could genuinely reverse the soul-sickness of our age seems highly unlikely. They will only make things worse."
The first issue was 286 pages (Ultra Publishing, 2002, ISBN 0-9720292-0-6).
Title | Author | Notes |
---|---|---|
Editorial Preface | The Editors | |
The Idea of Integral Culture: A Model for a Revolt Against the Modern World | Stephen Edred Flowers | |
Knowing the Gods | Collin Cleary | |
Priests, Warriors, and Cultivators: An Interview with Georges Dumézil | Alain de Benoist | |
From Lore-Giver to Law-Giver: The Tale of Woden | Steve Pollington | |
Indo-European Trifunctional Elements in Celtic Foundation Myths | Alby Stone | |
Divine Traces in the Nibelungenlied, or Whose Heart Beats in Hagen’s Chest? | Michael Moynihan | |
The Goddess Zisa | Nigel Pennick | |
The Dark Side of the Mountain | Annabel Lee | |
On the Spiritual Arts and Crafts | Nigel Pennick | |
Julius Evola: A Philosopher for the Age of the Titans | Joscelyn Godwin | |
Hermann Löns: An Introduction to His Life and Work | Markus Wolff | |
The Easter Fire | Hermann Löns | |
The Saxon Songwriter: An Interview with Fire + Ice’s Ian Read | Joshua Buckley | |
“Son of man, can these bones come to life?” Review Essay: The Prisoner | Collin Cleary | |
Reviews: Books | ||
Reviews: Music | ||
Resource Directory | ||
About the Editors | ||
About the Contributors |
Issue #2 has 432 pages (Ultra!, 2004, ISBN 0-9720292-1-4). This issue included a bonus CD sampler (see Tyr Bonus CD Sampler) featuring: Blood Axis, Les Joyaux de la Princesse, Fire + Ice, Coil, and 16 Horsepower among others.
Title | Author | Notes |
---|---|---|
Editorial Preface | The Editors | |
The Traditional Doctrine of Battle and Victory | Julius Evola | |
Summoning the Gods: The Phenomenology of Divine Presence | Collin Cleary | |
Thoughts on God | Alain de Benoist | |
On Being a Pagan: Ten Years Later, An Interview with Alain de Benoist | Charles Champetier | |
Reflections on Disparate Myths of Divine Sacrifice | Michael Moynihan | |
Origins of the Germanic Warband | Steve Pollington | |
Heathen Holy Places in Northern Europe: A Cultural Overview | Nigel Pennick | |
There Were Giants in Those Times: The Guardians of Albion | John Matthews | |
The Sacred Plants of Our Ancestors | Christian Rätsch | |
The First Northern Renaissance: The Reawakening of the Germanic Spirit in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries in Germany, Sweden, and England | Stephen Flowers | |
Three Decades of the Ásatrú Revival in America | Stephen McNallen | |
Ludwig Fahrenkrog and the Germanic Faith-Community: Wodan Triumphant | Markus Wolff | |
The Friedrich Hielscher Legend: The Founding of a Twentieth-Century Panentheistic "Church" and Its Subsequent Misinterpretations | Peter Bahn | |
Herman Wirth on Folksong | Joscelyn Godwin | |
Musical Ammunition: An Interview with Allerseelen's Gerhard | Joshua Buckley | |
Reviews: Books | ||
Sagaman and Storyteller: A Conversation with P. D. Brown | Joshua Buckley | |
Fermenting Moon Musick: A Conversation with John Balance of Coil | Michael Moynihan and Joshua Buckley | |
Reviews: Music | ||
About the Editors | ||
About the Contributors | ||
About the Cover Artist | Odin Wiesinger (1961- ) | |
Responses to the First Volume | ||
Appendix: Bonus CD Sampler | Summary description of Primordial, Blood Axis, 16 Horsepower, Changes, Allerseelen, Les Joyaux de la Princesse, Bigorna, In Gowan Ring, Fire + Ice, Steve Von Till, Sangre Cavallum, Waldteufel, Apoptose, Ô Paradis, Jay Munly, Coil and The Spectral Light and Moonshine Firefly Snakeoil Jamboree. |
Binding: Softcover, 530 pages, Publisher: ULTRA (2006), Language: English, ISBN 0-9720292-3-0
Title | Author | Notes |
---|---|---|
Editorial Preface | The Editors | |
Cipherspace | Thomas Naylor | |
Catastrophe Pending | Annie Le Brun | |
Survival Theory | Pentti Linkola | |
On The Primordial and the Perennial | Michael O'Meara | |
Spiritual Authority and Temporal Power | Alain de Benoist | |
The Web of Wyrd | Nigel Pennick | |
The Abode of the Gods and the Great Beyond | Thierry Jolif | |
The Spear of Destiny | Stephen Flowers | |
on Philip Pullman’s His Dark Materials trilogy | Joscelyn Godwin | |
Humour in the Icelandic Sagas | Ian Read | |
on the Hávamál | Géza von Neményi | |
Children of the Sonne | Gordon Kennedy | |
Carl Larsson’s Greatest Sacrifice | Michael Moynihan | |
Iceland’s Pagan Renaissance | Christopher McIntosh | |
on Sveinbjörn Beinteinsson | Jónína Berg | |
Selected Poems | Sveinbjörn Beinteinsson | |
Baltic Lithuanian Religion | Vilius Rudra Dundzila | |
The End Times | James Reagan | |
Interviews | Andrew King and Roland Kroell | |
Paganism Without Gods | Collin Cleary | |
on Mark Sedgwick’s Against the Modern World | Róbert Horváth | |
Reviews: Books | ||
About the Editors | ||
About the Contributors | ||
About the Cover Artist |