Epstein: The Villain of Postmodernity is a powerful moral and scholarly indictment of one of the most disturbing criminal figures of the contemporary era. Moving beyond sensationalism, conspiracy, or celebrity scandal, this book positions Jeffrey Epstein as a structural symbol of postmodern evil?an embodiment of how wealth, privilege, institutional failure, and moral collapse can enable systematic exploitation.
Rather than treating Epstein as an isolated predator, Prof. Dr. Milton Biswas argues that Epstein represents the darkest outcome of late-capitalist impunity: a world in which power shields crime, surveillance sustains control, and human bodies are reduced to commodities within elite networks of abuse. Through a rigorous ethical lens, the book examines the mechanisms of recruitment, collaboration, secrecy, and institutional complicity that allowed Epstein's criminal empire to endure for decades.
The volume explores the geography of exploitation?private islands, mansions, jets, and hidden spaces of privilege?where violence was normalized beneath the appearance of respectability. It also critiques the repeated failures of legal systems, media cultures, and political institutions that hesitated to protect victims while allowing the predator's influence to persist.
With particular emphasis on survivor-centered justice, the book confronts the postmodern paradox of "transparency," showing how the public consumption of files, images, and scandal can retraumatize victims rather than deliver accountability. Ultimately, this work insists on a necessary ethical conclusion: Epstein must be culturally rejected forever, and history must condemn not only the villain, but also the enablers and silences that sustained him.
Written as both an academic study and a moral document, Epstein: The Villain of Postmodernity stands as a warning to modern civilization: when power transcends conscience, monsters thrive at the heart of respectability.