Editor-in-Chief
Our Authors
Distributed Authors
Archives
- January 2017 (22)
- December 2016 (53)
- November 2016 (68)
- October 2016 (61)
- September 2016 (63)
- August 2016 (52)
- July 2016 (64)
- June 2016 (76)
- May 2016 (63)
- April 2016 (65)
- March 2016 (75)
- February 2016 (82)
- January 2016 (83)
- December 2015 (100)
- November 2015 (100)
- October 2015 (76)
- September 2015 (80)
- August 2015 (74)
- July 2015 (67)
- June 2015 (72)
- May 2015 (64)
- April 2015 (73)
- March 2015 (70)
- February 2015 (70)
- January 2015 (82)
- December 2014 (61)
- November 2014 (64)
- October 2014 (80)
- September 2014 (61)
- August 2014 (55)
- July 2014 (76)
- June 2014 (53)
- May 2014 (43)
- April 2014 (53)
- March 2014 (51)
- February 2014 (57)
- January 2014 (65)
- December 2013 (59)
- November 2013 (76)
- October 2013 (67)
- September 2013 (60)
- August 2013 (64)
- July 2013 (54)
- June 2013 (70)
- May 2013 (76)
- April 2013 (79)
- March 2013 (66)
- February 2013 (71)
- January 2013 (83)
- December 2012 (66)
- November 2012 (88)
- October 2012 (78)
- September 2012 (72)
- August 2012 (92)
- July 2012 (71)
- June 2012 (78)
- May 2012 (78)
- April 2012 (79)
- March 2012 (69)
- February 2012 (58)
- January 2012 (75)
- December 2011 (71)
- November 2011 (68)
- October 2011 (98)
- September 2011 (61)
- August 2011 (77)
- July 2011 (67)
- June 2011 (61)
- May 2011 (63)
- April 2011 (66)
- March 2011 (65)
- February 2011 (65)
- January 2011 (88)
- December 2010 (90)
- November 2010 (75)
- October 2010 (77)
- September 2010 (75)
- August 2010 (57)
- July 2010 (71)
- June 2010 (43)
Online Texts
- Departments
- Articles
- Podcasts
- Book Excerpts
- Interviews
- English Translations
- Other Languages
- Bulgarian
- Croatian
- Czech
- Danish
- Dutch
- Estonian
- Finnish
- French
- German
- Greek
- Hungarian
- Italian
- Lithuanian
- Norwegian
- Polish
- Portuguese
- Romanian
- Russian
- Slovak
- Spanish
- Swedish
- Ukrainian
- Book Reviews
- Movie News & Reviews
- TV Reviews
- Music Reviews
- Art Criticism
- Graphic Novels & Comics
- Video Game Reviews
- Fiction
- Poems
- Commemorations
- Why We Write
- C-C Originals
- Reprints
-
Contemporary Authors
- Michael Bell
- Alain de Benoist
- Kerry Bolton
- Jonathan Bowden
- Aedon Cassiel
- Collin Cleary
- Jef Costello
- F. Roger Devlin
- Bain Dewitt
- Jack Donovan
- Émile Durand
- Guillaume Durocher
- Mark Dyal
- Guillaume Faye
- Tom Goodrich
- Dara Halley-James
- Andrew Hamilton
- Derek Hawthorne
- Gregory Hood
- Juleigh Howard-Hobson
- Greg Johnson
- Ruuben Kaalep
- Patrick Le Brun
- Colin Liddell
- Trevor Lynch
- Kevin MacDonald
- G. A. Malvicini
- John Michael McCloughlin
- Margot Metroland
- Millennial Woes
- John Morgan
- James J. O'Meara
- Michael O'Meara
- Christopher Pankhurst
- Matt Parrott
- Michael Polignano
- J. J. Przybylski
- Spencer Quinn
- Edouard Rix
- C. F. Robinson
- Hervé Ryssen
- Ted Sallis
- Ann Sterzinger
- Robert Steuckers
- Tomislav Sunić
- Donald Thoresen
- Marian Van Court
- Dominique Venner
- Irmin Vinson
- Leo Yankevich
- David Yorkshire
-
Classic Authors
- Maurice Bardèche
- Julius Evola
- Ernst Jünger
- D. H. Lawrence
- Charles Lindbergh
- Jack London
- H. P. Lovecraft
- Anthony M. Ludovici
- Sir Oswald Mosley
- National Vanguard
- Friedrich Nietzsche
- Revilo Oliver
- William Pierce
- Ezra Pound
- Saint-Loup
- Savitri Devi
- Carl Schmitt
- Miguel Serrano
- Oswald Spengler
- P. R. Stephensen
- Jean Thiriart
- John Tyndall
- Francis Parker Yockey
RSS Feeds
Recent Comments
- Gunnar Tyrsson on Zombies & the Decline of the West:
A Review of Brian Patrick’s Zombology - tom goodrich on Unintentionally Great:
A Review of American History X - FrankC on Remembering Robinson Jeffers:
January 10, 1887–January 20, 1962 - Pilleater on Remembering Robinson Jeffers:
January 10, 1887–January 20, 1962 - JH on Remembering Anthony M. Ludovici:
January 8, 1882–April 3, 1971 - rhondda on How Many “Genders” Are There? Zero.
- Spencer Quinn on Unintentionally Great:
A Review of American History X - Mark Broadgate on How Many “Genders” Are There? Zero.
- R_Moreland on Assassin’s Creed:
A Review - Cornelius Xanadu on Unintentionally Great:
A Review of American History X
- Gunnar Tyrsson on Zombies & the Decline of the West:
What is a Rune? & Other Essays
Collin Cleary
What is a Rune? & Other Essays
Edited by Greg Johnson
San Francisco: Counter-Currents, 2015
256 pages
Hardcover: $35
Paperback: $20
In these nine remarkable essays, Collin Cleary expands upon the ideas of his path-breaking book Summoning the Gods and ventures into entirely new territory:
Contents
Introduction by Greg Johnson: The Philosophy of Collin Cleary
Author’s Preface
1. What is a Rune?
2. The Fourfold
3. The Ninefold
4. The Gifts of Odin & His Brothers
5. The Stones Cry Out: Cave Art & the Origin
of the Human Spirit
6. Ásatrú & the Political
7. Are We Free?
8. Heidegger: An Introduction for Anti-Modernists
9. “All or Nothing”: The Prisoner & Ibsen’s Brand
Index (Print edition only)
Praise for Collin Cleary
“The writings of Collin Cleary are an excellent example of the way in which old European paganism continues to question our contemporaries in a thought-provoking way. Written with elegance, his work abounds in original points of view.”
—Alain de Benoist, author of On Being a Pagan
“In What is a Rune? and Other Essays, Collin Cleary delves headlong into the world of Mystery in a way that brings clarity and light. An inspired mind linked to the vehicle of rational thought and profound memory for the mythic past leads the reader to deep insight. Cleary has done his homework on all levels, and with this book gives us a port of entry into a fascinating world of ideas.”
—Edred Thorsson, author of Runelore
“With his second book, What is a Rune?, Collin Cleary makes another powerful contribution to the intellectual foundations of modern Heathenry. Cleary approaches a wide range of topics, from the theological to the political, through his well-developed and cogently argued Heideggerian brand of Radical Traditionalism. Given the depth of Cleary’s penetrating analysis of so many topics relevant to modern Heathenry, What is a Rune? belongs in the library of every thinking Heathen.”
—Christopher Plaisance, editor of The Journal of Contemporary Heathen Thought
Collin Cleary, Ph.D. is an independent scholar living in Sandpoint, Idaho. He is the author of Summoning the Gods: Essays on Paganism in a God-Forsaken World (San Francisco: Counter-Currents, 2011). Cleary is one of the founders of TYR: Myth-Culture-Tradition, the first volume of which he co-edited. His essays have appeared in TYR, Rûna, and at Counter-Currents/North American New Right. A Master in the Rune-Gild, his work has been translated into Czech, Danish, French, Portuguese, Russian, and Swedish.
Hardcover: $35
Paperback: $20