Worlds That Remember Themselves

Worlds That Remember Themselves

When the Future Started Speaking Old LanguagesBy Chris A. Piazza | Antherra™
Michael Caine
Listen with Sir Michael Caine™ and 1,000+ voices
Length55m

About this audiobook

You've chased endless feeds promising progress, only to feel your roots unraveling in the rush. Worlds That Remember Themselves reframes futurism as ancestral recursion, turning non-Western cosmologies into civilization's new firmware—weaponizing memory against acceleration. It invites you to notice where your own innovations have forgotten their heritage.

Audiobook details

GenreHistory, Education and Learning
Length55 mins
Narrated byListen with 1,000+ voices
FormateBook with Audio
Publish dateOct 2, 2025
LanguageEnglish

Table of contents

1Introduction
34III. Bollywood’s Cosmic Circuit
2Chapter 1 — Prologue: The Silence Before the Orbit
35IV. Korea’s Digital Shamanism
3I. The Moment the Future Broke Accent
36V. The Dreaming Dragon
4II. Myth as Firmware
37VI. The Ethics of Devotion
5III. The Heritage–Platform Paradox
38VII. The Architecture of Faith
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6IV. The Ethics of Recollection
39VIII. The Digital Sutra
7V. The Return of Circular Time
40IX. The Silence of the Machine
8VI. How We’ll Move
41Signal Box — When Circuitry Became Shrine
9VII. Invocation
42Chapter 5 — Diasporic Design and Heritage as Code
10Signal Box — When the Future Remembered Its Ancestors
43I. The Architecture of Elsewhere
11Chapter 2 — Origins: The Post-Colonial Forge
44II. The Portable Myth
12I. Fire in the Archive
45III. Code-Switching as Design Language
13II. The Birth of Afrofuturism
46IV. The Server as Ancestral Home
14III. The Tools of Rememory
47V. Glitches of Belonging
15IV. The Global Sparks
48VI. Heritage as Source Code
16V. Myth as Counter-Algorithm
49VII. The Ethics of Remix
17VI. The Weight of Inheritance
50VIII. Design of the In-Between
18VII. The Metal Cools
51IX. Memory as Cloud Protocol
19Signal Box — When the Forge Started to Sing
52Signal Box — When Memory Learned to Travel Light
20Chapter 3 — Temporal Spirals and Circular Time
53Chapter 6 — The Planetary Narrative That Remembered Itself
21I. The Physics of Return
54I. The Planet as Protagonist
22II. The Calendar as Weapon
55II. Myth Returns as System Design
23III. Rhythm as Architecture
56III. The Polyphonic Archive
24IV. The Story as Orbit
57IV. When Technology Learned Humility
25V. The Politics of Tempo
58V. The Language of Ecology
26VI. Memory Loops in Code
59VI. The Return of Ceremony
27VII. The Spiral as Epistemology
60VII. The Aesthetic of Belonging
28VIII. Continuity as Discipline
61VIII. The Planet Writes Back
29IX. The Pulse and the Line
62IX. The Remembering World
30Signal Box — When Time Relearned to Breathe
63Chapter 7 — Epilogue: The Memory of Tomorrow: Signal Box — The Last Instruction
31Chapter 4 — Techno-Spiritualism and the Pan-Asian Dream
64Appendix A — Timeline (1900–2025): Non-Western & Post-Colonial Futurisms
32I. The Electric Kami
65Appendix B — Glossary
33II. Circuits of Compassion

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