RADICALS celebrates human sexuality on the eve of Folsom Fair 2015. The theories and fictions of this evening will bind you so tight that you’ll be begging for more. Featuring legendary writer and the founding San Francisco editor-in-chief of Drummer Magazine Jack Fritscher, along with Dossie Easton + Janet Hardy (The Ethical Slut, Radical Ecstasy), Mike Miksche (Paris Demands), Olivia Summersweet (Contributor to the Big Book of Domination) and Madison Young.
Hope to see you there!įrom the glory days of San Francisco’s leather scene to the glory holes of today, RADICALS is a journey through stories and ideas that define radical sexuality in the modern world. Here’s the blurb by Mike Miksche, the organizer of the event, who will read his story about the joys of being whipped. on September 26 (the night before Folsom) at Books Inc. I will be joining Janet Hardy and Dossie Easton (authors of “ The Ethical Slut,” the seminal treatise on polyamory), legendary leatherman and author Jack Fritscher, and others.ĮVENT DETAILS: 7 p.m. I’m thrilled to have been invited to read a story (this one unpublished) at RADICALS in the Castro the night before Folsom! The various passages chosen by the lesson-writer have one thing in. This book was released on 10 November 2021 with total page 268 pages.
Most notably, he had a vicious, acerbic wit that he was not at all hesitant to use on those who stirred his. 7 For a man ought not to cover his head, since he is the image and glory of God. Download or read book entitled Visions of Glory written by John Pontius and published by Cedar Fort online. Throughout his admittedly short life, he was perhaps best known for being ‘mad, bad, and dangerous to know’. I will be reading with some big names at “RADICALS”! Lord George Gordon Byron, poet to The Vision of Judgement, was no stranger to infamy. Liberty and Community in Medieval Switzerlandġ5.By entering this site, you understand that it may contain explicit sexual content. Visions of Reform between Empire and Territoryġ4.
The ‘Revolutionary of the Upper Rhine’ and Outer Austria. Alsace as an Economic Bridging Landscape in the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuriesġ3. The Territorial Policy of Freiburg im Breisgau in the Later Middle Agesġ2. Medium-sized and Small Towns on the Upper Rhine in the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries between Domination and Competitionġ1. Defining an Economic Region: The Southern Upper Rhine, 1450–1600ġ0. Town and Country in the German-speaking Lands, 1350–1600ĩ. South-West German Towns in the Peasants’ War: Alliances between Opportunism and SolidarityĨ. From the Bundschuh to the Peasants’ War: From Revolutionary Conspiracy to the Revolution of the Common ManĦ. The ‘Butzenkrieg’: The Rouffach Revolt of 1514ĥ. The Communal Reformation between Town and Countryģ. Reformation and Peasants’ War in Waldshut and Environs: A Structural AnalysisĢ. f Illustrations I The Cross of Muiredach in Monasterboice (Co. In: Martin McNamara (ed.), Apocalyptic and Eschatological Heritage: The Middle East and Celtic Realms, DublinPortland 2003, 144173. Kees Veelenturf, Visions of the End and Irish high crosses. TOWN AND COUNTRY BETWEEN REFORM AND REVOLTġ. Visions of the End and Irish high crosses. Springer, Institute for European History, Mainz, The following is a list of various book titles based on search results using the keyword the emperor s claims being a description of antwerp and the river schelde with a concise history of the austrian netherlands etc with a preface containing different views of the emperor s designs etc. (…) Overall there is rnuch to be gained by reading this collection Scott provides a compelling critique of Blickle's Communal Reformation thesis and, perhaps more importantly, the essays use excellent local histories to compare and contrast experiences, encouraging readers to reevaluate their understanding of this region in the late medieval and early modern periods.’ The author indeed achieves one of his stated goals for this collection: to offer a framework (or methodology) for understanding regional histories by providing opportunities to compare and contrast local experiences. In addition, they show the benefits that regional studies can offer scholars of the period. Together they demonstrate many factors that shaped interactions between burghers and peasants. This book offers superb regional histories exploring the often complex relationships between towns and their rural surroundings, as well as the role of the territories in the region.