Revision 7655988 of "David Woodard" on simplewiki

[[File:David Woodard in 2020.jpg|thumb|right|Woodard in 2020]] '''David Woodard''' ({{IPAc-en|audio=Pronunciation_of_the_English_surname_Woodard.ogg|ˈ|w|ʊ|d|ɑr|d}}; born April 6, 1964 in [[Santa Barbara, California]]) is an [[Americans|American]] [[Postmodernism|postmodern]] [[writer]] and [[Conducting|conductor]],<ref name="Carpenter">Carpenter, S., [https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2001-may-09-cl-60944-story.html "In Concert at a Killer's Death"], ''[[Los Angeles Times]]'', May 9, 2001.</ref><ref name="Epstein">Epstein, J., [http://www.sfgate.com/opinion/article/Rebuilding-a-pure-Aryan-home-in-the-Paraguayan-2723542.php "Rebuilding a Home in the Jungle"], ''[[San Francisco Chronicle]]'', March 13, 2005.</ref> and a [[wikt:descendant|descendant]] of prominent [[History_of_the_United_States#Colonial_America|colonial]] families.<ref>Finnell, A. L., ''The Order of Americans of Armorial Ancestry: Lineage of Members'' ([[Baltimore]]: Clearfield, 1997), p. 250.</ref>{{rp|250}} He [[Invention|invented]] the [[concept]] and [[portmanteau word]] prequiem, which designates a [[musical composition]] to be rendered as its [[beneficiary]] [[Death|lay dying]].<ref name="Carpenter" /><ref>Rapping, A., [http://www.gettyimages.in/license/569114761 David Woodard] (Seattle: Getty Images, 2001).</ref>

Woodard invented a fictional [[psychoactive]] machine called the Feraliminal Lycanthropizer.<ref>Woodard, D., [http://juniperhills.net/feraliminallycanthropizer.pdf "Feraliminal Lycanthropizer"] ([[San Francisco]]: Plecid Foundation, 1990).</ref> At the end of the [[20th century]] he fabricated replicas of an actual psychoactive device called the Dreamachine.<ref>Allen, M., [https://www.nytimes.com/2005/01/20/garden/20mach.html "Décor by Timothy Leary"], ''[[The New York Times]]'', January 20, 2005.</ref><ref>Stirt, J. A., [https://www.bookofjoe.com/2005/01/dream_machine.html "Brion Gysin's Dreamachine—still legal, but not for long"], ''bookofjoe'', January 28, 2005.</ref><ref>Bolles, D., [https://juniperhills.net/w.pdf "Dream Weaver"], ''LA Weekly'', July 26–August 1, 1996.</ref><ref>Chandarlapaty, R., "Woodard and Renewed Intellectual Possibilities", in ''Seeing the Beat Generation'' ([[Jefferson, North Carolina|Jefferson, NC]]: [[McFarland & Company]], 2019), [https://books.google.com/books?id=bzOXDwAAQBAJ&pg=PT98 pp. 98–101].</ref>{{rp|98–101}}

Woodard is also known for his work with Nueva Germania, a [[Human settlement|settlement]] in [[Paraguay]].<ref name="Epstein" /> His [[Germany|German]] book of correspondence ''Five Years'', coauthored by [[Swiss]] novelist Christian Kracht, describes some of the [[humanitarianism|humanitarian work]] performed there.<ref>Kracht, C., & Woodard, [https://wehrhahn-verlag.de/public/index.php?ID_Section=3&ID_Product=577 ''Five Years''] ([[Hanover]]: Wehrhahn Verlag, 2011).</ref>
== References ==
{{Reflist}}
== Other websites ==
{{Wikiquote}}
{{Commonscat-inline}}
*[https://kids.kiddle.co/David_Woodard David Woodard] at Kiddle
{{DEFAULTSORT:Woodard, David}}
[[Category:1964 births]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:Writers from California]]
[[Category:American conductors]]
[[Category:People from Santa Barbara, California]]
[[Category:American artists]]