RSS / Atom feed
Add this to any feed reader. It updates when new pages are published. No sign-up, no tracking, no inbox noise.
This page exists because following a site like this should not require joining a funnel. If you want to keep up with new work, the route should be plain, low-pressure, and easy to leave.
RSS is the follow mechanism here. No account, no algorithm, no campaign sequence. Just new work arriving in your feed reader when it is published. The feed lives at /feed.xml.
Add this to any feed reader. It updates when new pages are published. No sign-up, no tracking, no inbox noise.
Use this if you are not trying to follow over time yet and just need the shortest clean route into what the archive is doing.
Use this if what you want to keep an eye on is the clearest current public claim, not whichever numbered essay happens to have landed most recently.
If you use a feed reader, this is the cleanest route by far. No account. No campaign. No algorithm. Just a feed of new work as it appears.
Open the Undivided RSS / Atom feed
Most browsers no longer display feeds directly, but any feed reader will handle it. If you do not have one yet, options include NetNewsWire (free, Mac/iOS), Feedly (free tier, web/mobile), or any reader that accepts an Atom URL. Paste https://beingundivided.com/feed.xml and you are subscribed.
If you are here because the current anti-authority sequence is the part of the site you actually want to track, keep Anti-Authority Lane nearby. It compresses that run into one route page so the argument stays visible, but it does not outrank the broader public edge or turn the next numbered essay into the default meaning of "new work."
Undivided is cumulative. Following the site means you will sometimes get a new essay, sometimes a new public map or route page, and sometimes a framing or structure change that makes the archive easier to approach. It does not mean daily noise, and it does not mean the next numbered essay automatically outranks every other public move.
The point of a follow mechanism here is continuity, not capture. RSS fits this well: you control the subscription, you control when you read, and there is no intermediary deciding what reaches you.
If you came here looking for a reason to stay with the project, the next move depends on whether you want orientation or the late-sequence public edge.