Nada Se Opone A La Noche May 2026
The title itself is a thesis. “Nothing opposes the night.” In the Western esoteric tradition, night represents the nigredo —the blackening, the putrefaction, the stage of alchemy where light is absent and structure dissolves. Jodorowsky posits that to heal the self, one must stop opposing the night. One must descend, willingly, into the genetic abyss. The book’s narrative spine is the history of Jodorowsky’s parents—Jaime and Sara—and his grandparents in the saltpeter mines of Tocopilla, Chile. On the surface, it is a chronicle of Jewish-Ukrainian immigrants fleeing pogroms only to land in the purgatory of the Atacama Desert.
In the final pages, Jodorowsky writes that his ancestors are not dead. They are sitting in the room with him, watching him write. They are hungry. They want to be seen. By writing this book, he feeds them. He gives them the attention the real world never did. Nada Se Opone A La Noche
He introduces the concept of the “Phantom of the Family.” This is the un-lived life of the ancestors. The grandfather who wanted to be an artist but became a merchant creates a phantom that haunts the grandson. The grandmother who wanted to escape her marriage creates a phantom of claustrophobia. Jodorowsky’s artistic excess—his films, his comics, his performances—is not a choice. It is an obligation to live the lives his ancestors refused to live. How does one end a book called Nothing Opposes the Night ? One does not find a sunrise. Jodorowsky concludes not with redemption, but with transmutation . The title itself is a thesis


































