Synopses & Reviews
Following World War II, there has been a subtle but constant drip-feed of Nazi-related material coming onto the market. Ranging from the first published concentration camp memoirs to appear in the aftermath of war, and banned 1990s computer games in which players become the Kommandants of their own death-camps, to sexploitation films of the '60s and '70s, records and comics.
Kamp Kulture brings a wide range of material together for the first time to formulate a study of this unique and repulsive phenomenon: Nazi and Holocaust exploitation.
Simon Whitechapelwas born in Madagascar, where he had an agnostic upbringing. Previous publications include Crossing to Kill (Virgin, 2000), and Flesh Inferno (Creation, April 2003).
About the Author
Simon Whitechapel was born in Madagascar, where he had an agnostic upbringing. Previous publications include 'Crossing to Kill', a study of serial killing in the Mexican border city of Ciudad Juarez (Virgin, 2000), 'Flesh Inferno: Atrocities of Torquemada &the Spanish Inquisition' (Creation, April '03), and he regularly contributes to Headpress journal (Critical Vision). He thinks that asteroids are a much greater threat to the human race than Al-Qaeda.