Collection of essays written between 1988 and 1995 on the practice of magical evocation, including work with constructed entities and servitors. Draws on Spare, the Abra-Melin system, and the industrial art movement. Full text on the Internet Archive.
Chaos Current / Topic
Evocation
Calling forth entities or aspects of self
A 2013 post on Red War Magick, a term Dave Lee uses for offensive magical practice. Uses the UK anti-fracking campaign against Cuadrilla as a worked example.
Alexander Eth's Western esoterica podcast. Primary focus is ceremonial and grimoire magic, with chaos magicians appearing as guests alongside Solomonic practitioners, scholars, and spirit workers. Long form interview format.
Part III of Magick (Liber ABA). Covers ritual technique in depth: banishings, invocations, the construction and use of magical instruments, the Mass of the Phoenix, and Crowley's theory of magical energy. An upstream reference for anyone working with structured ritual. Full text on the Internet Archive.
Hine's companion to Condensed Chaos, published around the same time. Covers ritual structures, evocation, group work, and possession in greater depth. Foreword by Grant Morrison. Full text on the Internet Archive.
A handbook drawing from chaos magic, animism, and folk practice. Covers sigils, servitors, candle work, talismans, and spirit ecology.
Darragh Mason's podcast on folklore, esoterica, and spirit work. Mason is co-creator of the Sigil Engine; the show's guest list regularly includes chaos magic and chaos-adjacent practitioners. Distributed via Spotify.
Douglas Batchelor's topic-based show on magic, the occult, and the weird. Batchelor self-identifies as a chaos magician turned necromantic ritualist; episodes mix interviews and solo treatments of practice.