Adam Parfrey

Adam Parfrey
Born New York
Known for Feral House
Parents Woodrow Parfrey, Rosa Ellovich

Adam Parfrey (born 1957) is an American journalist, editor, and the publisher of Feral House books,[1] whose work in all three capacities frequently centers on unusual, extreme, or "forbidden" areas of knowledge.

Contents

Life

He was born in New York the son of actor Woodrow Parfrey (his mother, Rosa Ellovich, was Jewish, his father was not). He moved to Los Angeles, California in 1962. Upon graduating from Santa Monica High School, the young Parfrey enrolled at UCLA before transferring to UC, Santa Cruz where he studied theater and history without graduating. While at UCLA, he wrote for the student newspaper, the Daily Bruin, and later became co-editor.[2]

He collaborated on George Petros' Exit magazine.

Following a stint at the tabloid newspaper Idea Magazine, Parfrey returned to New York. In 1989 he started Feral House with $5,000.

He now lives in Port Townsend, Washington. Parfrey also publishes through Process Media, an imprint he established in 2005.

Controversy

Parfrey has been targeted on several occasions by fundamentalist Christian activists and by "concerned" individuals, who dislike the published material coming from Feral House. However, one of his goals is not merely to educate or entertain, but to unsettle and perhaps upset certain segments of the population. Parfrey has said that "upsetting people is a beautiful thing. Because it gets people to think beyond their last visit to 7-Eleven. There's a lot about this world to be upset about."[3]

Works

Amok Press

Parfrey co-founded Amok Press with Kenneth Swezey in 1986 which released the cult classic "Apocalypse Culture".

Process Media

Apocalypse Culture

Apocalypse Culture is a collection of articles, interviews and documents that explore the various marginal aspects of culture edited by Adam Parfrey.[4] It explores aesthetic nihilism, destructive cults, extreme violence, sexual deviancy, conspiracy theory, extreme forms of nationalism, etc. First published in 1987, reprinted twice (1990, 2001), and in 2000 the sequel Apocalypse Culture II was released. The book has been widely campaigned against and has been banned in many countries.[5]

Recordings

Film

Writings

References

  1. ^ "About Us". Feral House Books. http://feralhouse.com/about/. Retrieved 8 may 2010. 
  2. ^ Mark Prindle, "Interview with Adam Parfrey" 2002
  3. ^ Reason.com "Publishing's Feral Child, November 2002
  4. ^ Apocalypse Culture, ed. A. Parfreya; - Ekaterinburg: Ultra.Kultura, 2005. - 600. ISBN 0-922915-05-9
  5. ^ http://www.streettech.com/bcp/BCPgraf/CyberCulture/apocalypse.htm

External links