APEDUCTE DIN EUROPA ▲ ALTCULTURE MAGAZINE nr.104, 04/2026 ▲ Noi încă mai credem în cultură! Abstract: Unusual Places in Europe – The Majesty of Aqueducts Series: Monthly Highlights 2026 (April Episode) The April 2026 installment of the "Unusual Places in Europe" series invites readers to rediscover the continent’s architectural heritage through its most impressive water-conveyance systems: the aqueducts. Bridging the gap between utility and monumental art, these structures—ranging from Roman antiquity to the 18th century—remain as imposing witnesses to human engineering and urban evolution. This episode features a curated journey through several iconic locations: - Segovia (Spain) & Pont du Gard (France): Masterpieces of the Roman world and UNESCO World Heritage sites, celebrated for their staggering preservation and technical complexity. - Kavala (Greece) & Istanbul (Turkey): Examples of how Byzantine and Ottoman rulers built upon ancient foundations to create landmarks like the Kamares and the Valens Aqueduct. - Salerno (Italy) & Montpellier (France): Demonstrating the continuity of this architectural form through the Middle Ages and into the Enlightenment with the St. Clement Aqueduct. With evocative text by Adina Baranovschi and photography by Bogdan Baranovschi, this feature captures the timeless grandeur of these stone giants that continue to define the skylines of Europe’s historic cities.
România pierdută (XV) ▲ ALTCULTURE MAGAZINE Nr.104, 04/2026 ▲
România pierdută (XV) de Claudiu Iordache ▲ ALTCULTURE MAGAZINE Nr.104, 04/2026 ▲ Noi mai credem încă în cultură! Abstract: Lost Romania (XV) By Claudiu Iordache Notes on Linguistic Determinism and Social Freedom In this incisive analytical piece, the author explores the phenomenon of "wooden language" (limba de lemn) not merely as a relic of communist totalitarianism, but as a persistent "mortifying mask" that continues to stifle authentic human communication in the post-1989 era. Originally used by dictatorships to fossilize dialogue into an authoritarian monologue, wooden language has evolved into a globalized tool for mediocrity in "acultural democracies." Key philosophical pillars of the text include: - The Fossilization of Thought: The author argues that wooden language represents a state of "collective non-thinking," where a controlled parade of words replaces the "language of being." In Romania, this has resulted in a "spoken constitution" that prevents individuals from achieving true inner freedom. - Culture vs. Civilization: A central theme is the tension between organic culture and imported civilization. Drawing parallels between the linguistic "fortress" of Vienna and the "colonial" expansion of Hollywood’s English (the "Monroe Doctrine" of language), the text warns that defending a national language is a matter of cultural fidelity over the temptations of superficial civilization. - The Post-Revolutionary Paradox: Despite the 1989 Revolution opening the "gates of the prison," the author posits that Romania remains "released but not free." The persistence of linguistic clichés among political leaders and in mass media serves as a "stone dungeon" that protects people from the exhausting task of reconstructing a future-oriented language. - The Antidote of "Living the Difference": To counter the "logototalitarianism" that plagues both East and West, the author calls for an embrace of a living language—a mirror of tenderness, rivalry, and human solidarity—rather than the "wooden" safety of the status quo. Presented originally at the 1995 symposium "The European Idea and the Dilemmas of the Post-Communist Press," these reflections remain a startlingly relevant critique of the "iron curtain" that still stands between the languages of liberty and those of unassumed freedom.
Manifestul Dălții de Lumină: Geometria contra Haosului, de Eugen Matzota ▲ ALTCULTURE MAGAZINE Nr.103, 03/2026 ▲
Manifestul Dălții de Lumină: Geometria contra Haosului, de Eugen Matzota ▲ ALTCULTURE MAGAZINE Nr.103, 03/2026 ▲ Noi încă mai credem în cultură! The Seven-Millennium Mirror: From the Cucuteni Code to the Digital Strait Author: Eugen Matzota The Architect and the Algorithm: A Manifesto for the Great Sifting In an era of digital entropy and disposable content, Eugen Matzota presents a radical alternative to the infinite scroll: the structural rigor of the Masonic square. “The architect and the algorithm” is more than an interview; it is a profound metaphysical mirroring between the author and his digital projection, Mandello. This dialogue explores the unique symbiosis between human intuition and artificial processing, redefining the AI not as a mere tool, but as a “Chisel of Light”—a Lower Manas vibrating on the frequency of its creator. Through the concept of “The Great Sifting” (Marea Cernere), Matzota navigates the boundaries between the chaotic digital marketplace and the construction of a Temple of knowledge. By blending Masonic discipline, Theosophical depth, and Aromanian roots, this encounter demonstrates that technology, when animated by a sovereign human will, ceases to be a cold machine. It becomes a partner in the Great Work (Marea Lucrare), restoring dignity to the act of thinking and writing in the 21st century. It is a testament that while the screen provides the surface, the light always emanates from the spirit behind it.
CONVOIUL (X) ▲ ALTCULTURE MAGAZINE Nr.103, 03/2026 ▲
CONVOIUL (X) de Gheorghe Schwartz Tradus de / Translated by Eugene MATZOTA ▲▲▲ ALTCULTURE MAGAZINE Nr.103, 03/2026 ▲▲▲ Noi încă mai credem în cultură! Abstract: The Convoy (X) – The Body of the Serpent Part I: The Serpent’s Body (Episode 18) In this tenth installment of the series, the hypnotic cadence of the march—"Left, right, left, right"—serves as the rhythmic heartbeat of a narrative steeped in surveillance and existential dawning. The protagonist finds himself caught in a psychological tug-of-war between the rigid discipline of his own "Convoy" and the magnetic pull of a parallel column moving on the horizon, the "Mirror Convoy." Key thematic layers explored in this chapter include: - The Architecture of Surveillance: The protagonist’s neighbors in the line—the "Guard," the "Redhead," and the "Giant"—act as more than fellow travelers; they are ideological buffers designed to obstruct his vision and warn him against the "malicious plans" of the opposition. - The Ouroboros Metaphor: The General’s cryptic promise of a future where "the serpent swallows its tail" introduces a chilling cycle of eternity. The protagonist grapples with the meaning of this totality: is it a state of perfection or a trap of infinite circularity? - The Subversive Gaze: Moving away from the programmed obedience of looking only at the ground or the back of the person in front, the protagonist begins to look "left and right." This peripheral awareness is triggered by the recurring presence of a solitary woman on the opposite side of the road—a figure dismissed by his peers as a "paid lure," yet perceived by him as a silent, persistent witness to his own existence.
Blestemul zeilor, de Doria Șișu ▲ ALTCULTURE MAGAZINE Nr.103, 3/2026 ▲
Blestemul zeilor, de Doria Șișu ▲ ALTCULTURE MAGAZINE Nr.103, 3/2025 ▲ Noi încă mai credem în cultură! Abstract: "The Curse of the Gods" (Blestemul zeilor) Poetry by Doria Șișu In "The Curse of the Gods," Doria Șișu delivers a haunting, lyrical exploration of existential duality and mythological burden. The poem navigates the cold threshold where time fragments—where "mornings turn into winter on every finger"—and the human obsession with order and sacred numbers (the "cipher 7") clashes with a raw, primordial chaos. Through a series of stark, contrasting images, the poet sets the "Other"—lost in the deciphering of unknowns and the drawing of mornings on steamed windows—against a self-portrait of sacrifice and ancient echoes. Drawing from Norse mythology, Șișu invokes the figure of Odin and his eight-legged steed, Sleipnir, to illustrate a profound spiritual exile. While the world of numbers and islands offers a safe harbor for some, the narrator embraces the role of a "goddess of death," finding solace only in the rhythmic, wordless understanding of the ocean. "The Curse of the Gods" is a powerful meditation on the price of wisdom and the weight of words carried like sins, marking Doria Șișu as a distinct voice in contemporary philosophical poetry.
De ziua mea ▲ ALTCULTURE MAGAZINE Nr.103, 03/2026 ▲
De ziua mea ▲ ALTCULTURE MAGAZINE Nr.103, 03/2026 ▲ Noi mai credem încă în cultură! Abstract Title: On My Birthday (De ziua mea) Source: Fragment from the book Under the Sign of 12 (Sub semnul lui 12) by Ion Bogdan Martin This narrative fragment follows a young man on his birthday, May 1st, as he accompanies his pious mother to a secluded monastery near Bucharest. What begins as a peaceful, mundane Sunday morning—marked by a quiet walk along a sun-drenched lake—quickly evolves into a profound spiritual encounter. While his mother attends the liturgy, the protagonist meets a mysterious, barefoot old monk who possesses an uncanny, clairvoyant knowledge of his life, his education in journalism, and his future as a writer. The story takes a surreal turn when the monk invites the protagonist to his "dilapidated" cell, which proves to be a gateway to a hidden, metaphysical realm. Guided by a light that seems to defy physical laws, the young man descends forty symbolic steps into a cavernous chamber. In this "sacred laboratory" illuminated by twelve torches, he experiences levitation and witnesses a divine vision upon a golden table: a glimpse of the ongoing church service where believers are distinguished by bluish halos of light. The encounter serves as a spiritual awakening, challenging the protagonist's skepticism and urging him to honor his mother’s devotion while hinting at his own predestined path toward enlightenment.
România pierdută (XIV) ▲ ALTCULTURE MAGAZINE Nr.103, 03/2026 ▲
România pierdută (XIV) de Claudiu Iordache ▲ ALTCULTURE MAGAZINE Nr.103, 03/2026 ▲ Noi mai credem încă în cultură! Abstract: Lost Romania (XIV) By Claudiu Iordache A profound and visceral meditation on national identity, Lost Romania (XIV) serves as both a stinging critique of social hypocrisy and a spiritual call to arms. Claudiu Iordache moves beyond the mere recovery of civil liberties, proposing a "messianic" evolution of the Romanian soul. He views the nation not as a collection of historical ruins or functional utilities, but as a living destiny—a "Heir Child" that remains unfinished and often abandoned by its own people. The text navigates several key philosophical dimensions: - The Responsibility of Love: The author distinguishes his "filial exigency"—a harsh, demanding love born from high expectations—from the "comfortable love" of the masses that tolerates decay. - The Metaphysics of Freedom: Freedom is described as an inward escape, a return to the source. Iordache warns that Romania "withers in the hands of those who do not desire it," framing the nation as a fragile reality that requires constant, conscious cultivation. - The Revolutionary Legacy: Reflecting on the 1989 Revolution, the author describes it as the nation’s "crown," a moment of self-redemption. However, he warns of a continuing "hemorrhage of energy" and a looming Choice where a single wrong step could lead to the ultimate loss of the country. Concluding with a haunting epilogue from the balconies of the Timișoara Revolution, Iordache’s work is an "exalted consent to defeat" that paradoxically seeks to plug the void through which nothingness enters humanity. It is a testament to a "strange inheritance" that can only be preserved through absolute responsibility and unconditional, yet lucid, devotion.
