About this item

With the appearance of the demonic Christmas character Krampus in contemporary Hollywood movies, television shows, advertisements, and greeting cards, medieval folklore has now been revisited in American culture. Krampus-related events and parades occur both in North America and Europe, and they are an ever-growing phenomenon.Though the Krampus figure has once again become iconic, not much can be found about its history and meaning, thus calling for a book like Al Ridenour's The Krampus: Roots and Rebirth of the Folkloric Devil. With Krampus's wild, graphic history, Feral House has hired the awarded designer Sean Tejaratchi to take on Ridenour's book about this ever-so-curious figure.Al Ridenour has lectured on Krampus at the Goethe Institutes in Los Angeles.



About the Author

Al Ridenour

Al Ridenour has written for Los Angeles Times, LA Weekly, Fortean Times, Maxim, Stuff, Saveur, and other periodicals as well as the websites Boing Boing, Laughing Squid, Atlas Obscura, and Morbid Anatomy.

He is author of Offbeat Food, Adventures in an Omnivorous World (Santa Monica Press, 2000) an exhaustive survey of culinary oddities and culture. Publishers Weekly described the book "a rollicking and at times mind-boggling crash course on exotic (read: weird) foods." Associated Press noted, "Behind the weirdness, is some truly interesting research about the ways and whys of what we eat."

Ridenour also contributed chapters on underground cultural activities to Tales of the San Francisco Cacophony Society (Last Gasp, 2013) and The Underground Guide to Los Angeles, 3rd Edition (Manic D Press, 1999)

In 2013, as co-founded Krampus Los Angeles, he helped gathered a troupe of Krampus performers, crafted suits and went on to organize an ongoing series of parades and themed shows known as LA Krampusfest. In 2014, Ridenour's group hosted the first Europeans visitors to appear stateside in traditional costumes, and in 2015 they hosted an entire 15-person troupe from the state of Salzburg. Ridenour also directs an annual production of a 19th-century Austrian Krampus play from a script of his own translation, lectures on the Krampus at the international Goethe-Institut, has exhibited his handcrafted suits at the University of Southern California's Doheny Museum, and provides Krampus suit rental for film and television and events.

From 1991-1999, he served as "Grand Instigator" of the Los Angeles lodge of the Cacophony Society, a national network of art- provocateurs and urban explorers responsible for founding the Burning Man festival and serving as prototype for "Project Mayhem" in Chuck Palahniuk's Fight Club. Ridenour was lead designer for a 2012 retrospective on the Cacophony Society at Grand Central Art Center, in Santa Ana, California, and contributed materials to the 2014 exhibition "Bose Clowns - Evil Clowns" at Dortmunder U - Zentrum für Kunst und Kreativität, in Dortmund, Germany. He is also featured in the 2012 documentary Into the Zone, the Story of the Cacophony Society.

From 2004-2008, Ridenour directed The Art of Bleeding Los Angeles-based multi-media performance troupe providing darkly comic faux-educational programs in first-aid and safety. Often staging shows from the group's ambulance, The Art of Bleeding's "paramedical funhouse" combined short original films and animation, repurposed vintage health and safety films, puppets, costumed kiddy show characters, and nurses in fetishistic uniform. The Art of Bleeding was also created various walk-through installations including "Pre-natal Emergency" with adult-sized fetuses, a "Ghost Clinic" installed in LA's abandoned Loma



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