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David Woodard References | Navigation menu"In Concert at a Killer's Death""Rebuilding a Home in the Jungle"David Woodard"Feraliminal Lycanthropizer""Décor by Timothy Leary"Five Years

1964 birthsLiving peopleWriters from CaliforniaAmerican conductorsPeople from Santa Barbara, CaliforniaAmerican artists


Santa Barbara, CaliforniaAmericanpostmodernwriterconductorinventedconceptportmanteau wordmusical compositionbeneficiarylay dyingpsychoactive20th centurysettlementParaguayGermanSwisshumanitarian work












David Woodard




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David Woodard in Seattle (2013)

David Woodard (born April 6, 1964 in Santa Barbara, California) is an American postmodern writer and conductor.[1][2] He invented the concept and portmanteau word prequiem, which designates a musical composition to be rendered as its beneficiary lay dying.[1][3]


Woodard invented a fictional psychoactive machine called the Feraliminal Lycanthropizer.[4] At the end of the 20th century he fabricated replicas of an actual psychoactive device called the Dreamachine.[5]


Woodard is also known for his work with Nueva Germania, a settlement in Paraguay.[2] His German book of correspondence Five Years, coauthored by Swiss novelist Christian Kracht, describes some of the humanitarian work performed there.[6][7]



References |




  1. 1.01.1 Carpenter, S., "In Concert at a Killer's Death", Los Angeles Times, May 9, 2001.


  2. 2.02.1 Epstein, J., "Rebuilding a Home in the Jungle", San Francisco Chronicle, Mar 13, 2005.


  3. Rapping, A., David Woodard (Seattle: Getty Images, 2001).


  4. Woodard, D., "Feraliminal Lycanthropizer" (San Francisco: Plecid Foundation, 1990).


  5. Allen, M., "Décor by Timothy Leary", The New York Times, Jan 20, 2005.


  6. Kracht, C., & Woodard, Five Years (Hanover: Wehrhahn Verlag, 2011).


  7. Riniker, C., "Autorschaftsinszenierung und Diskursstörungen in Christian Krachts und David Woodards Five Years (2011)," in J. Bolton, et al., eds., German Monitor 79 (Leiden: Brill Publishers, 2016).










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