The Kubrickon
- 210 pages
- 8 hours of reading
Stanley Kubrick was up to something. But neither his fiercest admirers nor his harshest critics ever suspected what it was. His movies were the means. So what was the end?
Jasun Horsley is an author of books exploring popular culture, psychology, and high strangeness. He is a transmedia storyteller and independent scholar who uses his work to chart undiscovered territories of the mind and existence. Horsley views writing as an experiment in identity construction and deconstruction, a method for dissecting the self to understand its core. His creative output is characterized by a fascination with mainstream pop culture alongside phenomena from the fringes of perception, such as conspiracies and the paranormal. Ultimately, his writings map the mysterious overlap between the mainstream and the margins, the internal and the external, the seen and the unseen.




Stanley Kubrick was up to something. But neither his fiercest admirers nor his harshest critics ever suspected what it was. His movies were the means. So what was the end?
An investigation into the dark side of occultism and the shadowy secret at the heart of culture and society.
Social Engineering, Ufos, and the Psychology of Fragmentation
The book explores contemporary reports of UFO sightings, alien abductions, and psychic phenomena, revealing a century-long initiative aimed at psychological fragmentation and collective indoctrination. It delves into the covert cultural, social, and mythic manipulation that has shaped public perception and belief in these phenomena, offering a critical analysis of the underlying agendas at play.
If movies and popular culture shape us from an early age, how do we separate the real from the imaginary?