Apocalypse Culture (Expanded and Revised)
by Adam Parfrey (Editor)
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An unorthodox sociological approach to contemporary apocalyptic thought.Tags
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Apocalypse Culture is a gritty look back at a time before the Internet and the explosion of the Information age when publishing houses like Feral House (and let's be fair, there were and still are very few publishing companies like Feral House) were the reading audience's main window into the more obscure deviant, bizarre, and downright disturbing counter/sub-cultures of the 80's. Much of this anthology is comprised of articles written for obscure counter-culture magazines, as well as hand-made zines and handwritten letters or flyers, and is highly reminiscent of a time when the small press and self publishing were almost a form of revolutionary guerrilla tactics.
Apocalypse Culture, which has seen two upgrades (including a 25th show more anniversary edition) and a sequel, is chock full of dark side of human nature that was not normally available to the general public, from necrophiliacs and masochists to schizophrenics and conspiracy theorists. Everything from Lycanthropy to Eugenics is touched upon, and there are enough iconic personalities represented - Full Force Frank (confessed psychopath and publisher of how-to mass murder newsletters), Antone LaVey (Founder of the Church of Satan), G.G. Allin (Punk Rock Singer), Joe Coleman (Artist/Performance Artist), Peter Sotos (Controversial Writer), to name just a few.
Some of the work in Apocalypse Culture may seem a bit mild compared to what one can scrounge up with a simple Google search these days, but there are still materials to be found that even today are somewhat taboo. But more importantly, this collection of taboo materials is a snapshot of a cultural component that many people are not even aware existed (and to an extent still exists), so for many reading this anthology will be like lifting a rock to see what's been lurking under the surface of the past. Not for the weak of heart, fragile souls, or the easily offended, but highly recommended to those who are unafraid to stare into the abyss. show less
Apocalypse Culture, which has seen two upgrades (including a 25th show more anniversary edition) and a sequel, is chock full of dark side of human nature that was not normally available to the general public, from necrophiliacs and masochists to schizophrenics and conspiracy theorists. Everything from Lycanthropy to Eugenics is touched upon, and there are enough iconic personalities represented - Full Force Frank (confessed psychopath and publisher of how-to mass murder newsletters), Antone LaVey (Founder of the Church of Satan), G.G. Allin (Punk Rock Singer), Joe Coleman (Artist/Performance Artist), Peter Sotos (Controversial Writer), to name just a few.
Some of the work in Apocalypse Culture may seem a bit mild compared to what one can scrounge up with a simple Google search these days, but there are still materials to be found that even today are somewhat taboo. But more importantly, this collection of taboo materials is a snapshot of a cultural component that many people are not even aware existed (and to an extent still exists), so for many reading this anthology will be like lifting a rock to see what's been lurking under the surface of the past. Not for the weak of heart, fragile souls, or the easily offended, but highly recommended to those who are unafraid to stare into the abyss. show less
Parfrey's book is an anthology of interviews and essays united by one question: what happens when the melting pot of humanity boils over to reveal all the grime, dirt, and poison of the race? Such a question preoccupied many underground 'zines of the late eighties and early nineties, and this is the summation of their ethos bound up in paper and glue. As is to be expected with any sort of anthology, some pieces are better written or more enticing than others. I found far more pleasure in reading Taylor's piece on The Process, or McEvilley's survey of subversive performance art, or the candid interview with the female necrophile than I did reading the unsourced tirades about Freemasonry and New World Order conspiracy, though they have show more their moments. This collection might shock, intrigue, or entertain potential readers. It is not for the prude or the squeamish, but that is obvious. Those who seek this book out will find the sort of material they expect, and it satisfies to varying degrees. show less
A frightening look at underground/counterculture politics, art and literature. These people are nuts!
One of those crazy unclassifiable anarcho-surrealist publications that came out in the 80s-90s.
Humans are gross and beautiful and i may be weird but maybe i'm not that weird.
A bit disturbing, but that's to be expected.
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Author Information

Adam Parfrey was born in Los Angeles, California on April 12, 1957. He co-founded Amok Press with Kenneth Swezey in 1986. Parfrey was also the founder and publisher of Feral House Press. He was the author or editor of several books including It's a Man's World: Men's Adventure Magazines, The Postwar Pulps; Citizen Keane: The Big Lies Behind the show more Big Eyes; Ritual America: Secret Brotherhoods and Their Influence on American Society; and Cult Rapture: Revelations of the Apocalyptic Mind. He was the co-editor of Exit magazine and appeared in and co-wrote Crispin Glover's controversial What Is It? Parfrey and his band, the Tards, recorded two CDs. He died on May 10, 2018 at the age of 61. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
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Is an expanded version of
Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- Apocalypse Culture (Expanded and Revised) (Expanded and Revised)
- People/Characters
- Karen Greenlee; Full Force Frank; G.G. Allin; Peter Sotos; Fakir Musafar; Mel Lyman (show all 9); John Whiteside Parsons; Ron J. Steele; Wilhelm Reich
- Epigraph
- Alike for those who for today prepare,
And those that after a tomorrow stare,
A Muezzín from the Tower of Darkness cries
"Fools! your Reward is neither Here nor There."
- Rubáiyat of Omar Khay... (show all)yám - Dedication
- Dedicated to Aimee Semple McPherson
- Blurbers
- Ballard, J.G.
- Original language
- English
- Disambiguation notice
- This work is the revised & expanded edition and is substantially different to the original. And do not combine with Apocalypse Culture II, which is a completely different work to both.
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- Members
- 523
- Popularity
- 57,357
- Reviews
- 6
- Rating
- (3.96)
- Languages
- English, Russian
- Media
- Paper, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 3
- ASINs
- 3






























































