False Flag Jack The Ripper - Hardcover

Senise, Stephen

 
9781912145867: False Flag Jack The Ripper

Synopsis

Did Jack The Ripper flee London for the colony of New South Wales at the height of the world's most notorious serial-murder rampage? Was the deadly attack on Alice McKenzie in 1889 his last bid in pursuit of what was, not just a brazen killing spree, but a macabre, politically motivated publicity stunt? Is it conceivable that a maniac took it upon himself to try and shut down the flow of Jewish refugees spilling into London's East End, just as the area was being thrust into the political spotlight?

Journalist Stephen Senise, explores these questions and the neighbourhoods of old Whitechapel to discover that by February 1888 community tensions were so high that two parliamentary select committees of investigation were dispatched to advise Westminster on the social and industrial tensions tearing a community apart. Enter an opportunist hell-bent on broadcasting a hateful message... a madman, ready to unleash an 'Autumn of Terror'.

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About the Author

When freelance journalist Stephen Senise isn't chasing the ponies he is a keen amateur psephologist. His political analysis has featured in capital city dailies across Australia, the Brisbane Institute's The Brisbane Line, and on ABC radio. He has worked as a researcher and media advisor for members of parliament in Sydney and Canberra; and as a union organiser based on-campus at Southern Cross University. He lives in northern New South Wales where his articles and photography have appeared in most local and regional newspapers over the course of the past decade or more. He is an English literature honours graduate from the University of Western Sydney and a member of the Australian Crime Writers Association.

From the Back Cover

Anyone new to the subject of Jack The Ripper might spend countless hours going over a near endless list of theories on this perplexing case. Most describe a killer's blind frenzy - like any of a spate of serial murders that he, the modern prototype, was to usher in.

This study is different. It proposes that conditions on the ground in Victorian East London were unique and that Jack The Ripper was a twisted expression of a moment in time and place. Delving into the political landscape that helped distinguish the East End in the late 1880s, a murderer's campaign is viewed through the lens of a tumultuous social-history.

That Jack The Ripper's crimes came to a halt as they did, also provides a window into his intrinsic connection to the setting of the tale - with new archival information presented, showing how he got away. Based on Victorian era records and media reports, this work offers fresh insights, a deeper understanding of events and a novel interpretation of the world's most infamous cold case.

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