Thursday, May 3, 2012
film harry potter and the deathly hollow - daniel radcliffe
harry ditinggal keluarga pamannya pindahan. hermione menyihir keluarganya agar melupakannya. sementara severus menghadiri pertemuan d rumah voldemort yg sdg menyiksa seorg dosen hogward dan akhirnya membunuhnya. semuanya menjemput harry. 6 org menyamar jd harry. mrk semua menuju rumah ron. dlm perjalanan mrk diserang voldemort dan pasukannya. george terluka. harry merASA berslah dan hendak pergi. ron mencegahnya. bil dan fleur menikah. minister dtg dan membagi warisan dumbledore utk harry, hermione, dan ron. malamnya saat pesta pernikahan, mrk diserang voldemort dan pasukannya. hermione ron harry berhasil melarikan diri k london. saat d cafe mrk mendpt serangan lagi. akhirnya mrk bersembunyi d secret house. kementerian dikuasai anak buah voldemort. d safehouse, harry menyuruh creature mencari kalung hocrux. creature dtg bersama dolby dan thief yg menceritakan bahwa hocruxnya dibawa menteri. harry dkk menyamar jd pegawai kementerian. mrk berhasil merebut kalung hocrux dr menteri wanita dan melarikan diri k hutan. namun ron terluka parah. harry gagal menghancurkan kalung hocrux. hermione melindungi mrk dg perisai invisible dan hampir ketahuan. harry dkk berpindah2 tempat utk menghindari pasukan voldemort. krn pengaruh kalung hocrux, ron marah2 dan pergi. harry dan hermione k lokasi pembunuhan ortunya. mrk diserang voldemort namun berhasil melarikan diri kembali k tengah hutan. harry bertemu rusa yg menuntunnya k sb danau tempat pedang grifindor. ron dtg dan membantu harry menghancurkan kalung hocrux. hermione menemukan petunjuk berikutnya yg mengarahkan mrk k rumah luna lovegood. mrk dikhianati ayah luna yg mengundang anak buah voldemort. mrk terkejar sampai hutan dan tertangkap dan dibawa k rumah lucius. hermione disiksa. ron dan harry dipenjara dan bertemu luna, dwarf dan dolby. dolby membantu mrk melarikan diri namun dolby mati tertusuk pedang.
mp: semua org tak bisa hidup sendiri. teman2 yg ada akan sll bisa mjd tempat minta bantuan, tempat curhat, tempat berbagi kesenangan, tempat mencurahkan kesedihan......
film munich - eric bana
pd olimpiadi 1972 d munich jerman, 11 atlet israel dibunuh pemberontak palestina. israel mengutus evner utk balas dendam dg membunuh 11 tokoh palestina yg tersebar di seluruh dunia. evner dibantu 4 prajurit lain. dr informan evner menemukan target pertama di italia. si target dibunuh saat akan naik lift. target kedua ditemukan di paris. dia dibunuh dg bom telepon. evner nyuri waktu utk mengunjungi istrinya d usa yg melahirkan. kmd evner kembali bertugas. target ketiga ditemukan d hotel olimpiade. dia dibunuh dg bom kasur. pejabat israel mendatangi evner dan meminta info ttg informan. namun evner tak mau mengaku. target keempat ditemukan di beirut lebanon. dia dibunuh dg tembakan membabi buta. evner menemui informan louis. louis membawa evner menemui big boss. target kelima ditemukan d athena yunani. rencananya dia dibunuh dg bom tv, namun gagal. akhirnya saah satu anak buah evner nekat mengebom dg granat. target keenam (salami/target utama) ditemukan d london. namun mrk gagal membuhuhnya krn salami dilindungi cia. salah satu anak buah evner ditemukan meninggal d kamar hotel oleh pembunuh bayaran wanita carla. salahsatu anak buah evner (bomber) mengundurkan diri. evner dkk menemui louis dan mendpt info bahwa karla ada d jerman? evner dkk membunuh carla. malamnya salahsatu anak buah evner bunuhdiri d pinggir sungai. evner mendpt kabar bahwa bomber meninggal dlm edakan bom. evner jd paranoid dan tidur d kloset. evner menemui informan dan pul k israel. dia disambut dua prajurit dan diantar menghadap pejabat. evner hanya diberi pelukan selamat oleh seorg jendral. evner mengunjungi ibunya dan pergi k usa utk menemui anak dan istrinya. evner tdk bs tidur dan jd paranoid. evner menelpon informan big boss dan mendatangi kedutaan israel dg marah2 krn merasa keluarganya akan dibunuh. mantan bosnya mengunjuungi evner utk menenangkannya.
mp: bagaimana bisa para penjahat itu punya ketenangan dlm hidupnya setelah melakukan hal2 yg tdk manusiawi????
film dokumenter: horison the missing link
katanya manusia adalah keturunan ikan. berarti bener kalo ada legenda ttg putri duyung. tapi kok masih ada manusia yg ga bisa renang. klo emang manusia keturunan ikan kan harusnya semuanya bisa renang.
kamis 3 5 12
pg k wrg-
k ikip-
ngajar-
rapat-
thx u lord-
siang maksi w putu-
thx u lord-
sore k wrg-
thx u lord-
rabu 2 5 12
pg k wrg-
k ikip-
thx u lord-
siang nyuci-
k laundry-
k wrg-
putu-
lppm-
b yuni-
ngajar ikip-
thx u lord-
sore k budi-
k wrg-
thx u lord-
mlm k samp galih-
thx u lord-
SELASA 1 5 12
pg k wrg-
k unaki-
thx u lord-
siang k ikip-
ngajar-
duhur-
ngajar-
asar-
ngajar-
thx u lord-
sore k wrg-
thx u lord-
mlm atm cimb n bni dr cipto (eror)-
atm bpd ikip-
pom-
atm bni undip-
prima lestari-
budi (stempel blm jd gara2 salah pengertian)-
atm cimb gajahmada-
thx u lord-
senen 30 4 12
PG K WRG-
K unaki-
thx u lord-
siang k kfc - gagal kencan-
k undip - ambil seritifkat-
thx u lord-
sore k prima lestari-
k remote-
k alfa-
k wrg-
thx u lord-
mlm k budi-
budi n martin k kos-
thx u lord-
minggu 29 4 12
pg k wrg-
thx u lord-
siang k kfc meet onil-
thx u lord-
sore pekojan zufry k kos-
thx u lord-
mlm k sk-
thx u lord-
sabtu 28 4 12
pg k wrg-
k unaki-
k ikip-
putu-
brosur-
soal-
absen-
k aha-
k laundry-
thx u lord-
siang ke pom-
k pedurungan-
k andy-
thx u lord-
mlm k burjo-
thx u lord-
jumat 27 4 12
pg k wrg-
k unaki-
thx u lord-
siang k unimus-
ngajar-
jumatan-
makan-
ngajar-
thx u lord-
sore krap yuda k kos-
thx u lord-
mlm k pedurungan-
thx u lord-
kamis 26 4 12
pg k ikip-
ngajar-
putu-
makan-
thx u lord-
siang k ikip-
putu n b yuni-
k wrg-
thx u lord-
sore k burjo-
thx u lord-
mlm k adimei pekunden-
thx u lord-
rabu 25 4 12
pg k ikip-
k wrg--
thx u lord-
siang k undip-
liat ujian s3 mam tri unaki-
congratz atas gelar barunya-
smg aku jg bs nyusul-
Allahuakbar-
mlm k sk-
thx u lord-
senen 23 4 12
pg k dinus-
k undip seminar-
thx u lord-
-
siang k masjid-
k unaki-
beol-
ngajar mpe sore-
thx u lord-
sore k pedurungan-
ambil prosiding-
k pom-
thx u lord-
mlm k air--
thx u lord-
MINGGU 22 4 12
pg k buray-
thx u lord-
siang k unes nadiv-
thx u lord-
sore k wrg-
thx u lord-
mlm febry ardian k kos-
thx u lord-
sabtu 21 4 12
SEPAGIAN NGETIK-
THX U LORD-
SIANG K WRG-
THX U LORD-
-
NGETIK LG-
THX U LORD-
SORE K KFC-
THX U LORD-
NGETIK LG-
THX U LORD-
Zentai
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (September 2010)
For other uses, see Zentai (disambiguation).
A zentai suit. Note that it covers the entire body — hands, feet and face.
Zentai (from the Japanese ????) is a term for skin-tight garments that cover the entire body.[1] The word is a contraction of zenshin taitsu (?????) ("full-body tights"). Zentai is most commonly made using nylon/spandex blends, but other materials such as cotton and wool are used as well.[citation needed]
There are several variations based on the Zentai suit including mummy bag (similar to a sleepsack) and hybrid suits consisting of either a single leg and arms, or separate legs and no arms.[citation needed]
Contents
[hide]
* 1 Mainstream use
* 2 See also
* 3 References
* 4 Further reading
* 5 External links
[edit] Mainstream use
UK-based Remix Monkeys is a dance clan which uses Morphsuits in their street dance routines.
Some companies have tried to create mainstream brands of the suits, by dropping the traditional name; in particular, examples include RootSuit or Superfan Suit in the United States and Bodysocks or Morphsuits in the United Kingdom and Jyhmiskin in Finland. The latter brand, in particular, has achieved relative commercial success internationally. Between January and late-October 2010, the company shipped 10,000 alone to Canada.[2] Morphsuits brand has actively tried to disassociate themselves from the existing zentai community, occasionally being listed as the product's co-inventor.[3] Superfan Suits acknowledges that the outfits have existed previously in interviews.[4] Their term has become somewhat generic in the process; one New Zealand-based newspaper refers to competing brand, Jaskins, as a "one of the main online morphsuit brands." Jaskins company founder Josh Gaskin says their origins are unclear, pegging the first usage with It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia.[5]
This mainstream push has made them relatively common apparel at major sporting events, and created internationally recognized personalities out of The Green Men, two fans of the Vancouver Canucks NHL team.[6] Some sports leagues, such as Major League Baseball, ban the use of the costume hoods.[7] Various professional street dance/hip hop dance groups use the outfits, such as The Body Poets in the United States,[4][8] and Remix Monkeys in the United Kingdom.[9]
Other applications of the bodysuits have included music videos (Black Eyed Peas' song "Boom Boom Pow", including the live performance at the Super Bowl), breast cancer awareness,[10][11] fashion modeling on an episode of America's Next Top Model, social anxiety workshops,[12] a participant in public art project "One & Other",[13] and social experiments.[14] A British theme park offered free admission for those in zentai in the colours of their park logo.[15]
Yaoi
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
"Boys Love" redirects here. For the film, see Boys Love (film). For the manga, see Boys Love (manga).
A corresponding article in the Japanese Wikipedia may contain information and sources useful in building this article. (May 2011)
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* Google's machine translation may provide useful guidance. (Do not simply copy-paste this machine translation, however.)
* Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low-quality. If possible, verify the text with references provided in the foreign-language article.
* After translating, {{Translated|ja|corresponding article}} must be added to the talk page to ensure copyright compliance.
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Example of shonen-ai artwork, originally published at Animexx.
Yaoi (????)[nb 1] also known as Boys' Love, is a Japanese popular term for female-oriented fictional media that focus on homoerotic or homoromantic male relationships, usually created by female authors. As these depict males, there is an androphilic male audience as well, however manga aimed at a gay male audience is considered a separate genre. Originally referring to a specific type of dojinshi (self-published works) parody of mainstream anime and manga works, yaoi came to be used as a generic term for female-oriented manga, anime, dating sims, novels and dojinshi featuring idealized homosexual male relationships. The main characters in yaoi usually conform to the formula of the seme (??, lit. "attacker"?) who pursues the uke (??, lit. "receiver"?). In Japan, the term has largely been replaced by the rubric Boys' Love (??????, Boizu Rabu?), which subsumes both parodies and original works, and commercial as well as dojinshi works. Although the genre is called Boys' Love (commonly abbreviated as "BL"), the males featured are pubescent or older. Works featuring prepubescent boys are labeled shotacon, and seen as a distinct genre. Yaoi (as it continues to be known among English-speaking fans) has spread beyond Japan: both translated and original yaoi is now available in many countries and languages.
Yaoi began in the dojinshi markets of Japan in the late 1970s/early 1980s as an outgrowth of shonen-ai (????) (also known as "Juné" or "tanbi"), but whereas shonen-ai (both commercial and dojinshi) were original works, yaoi were parodies of popular shonen anime and manga, such as Captain Tsubasa and Saint Seiya.
BL creators and fans are careful to distinguish the genre from bara, including "gay manga", which are created by and for gay men.[1][2] However, some male manga creators have produced BL works.[3]
Part of a series on
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Anime
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Industry • Companies
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Scanlation • Dojinshi
International market
Longest series
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Harem • Magical girl
Mecha • Yaoi • Yuri
Selected biographies
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Fandom
Conventions (list) • Clubs • Cosplay
Anime music video • Otaku
Yaoi fandom
General
Omake • Terminology
Anime and Manga Portal
* v
* t
* e
Contents
[hide]
* 1 Terminology
o 1.1 Usage
o 1.2 Gei comi/Bara
o 1.3 Seme and uke
* 2 Shonen-ai
* 3 Dojinshi
* 4 Global BL
* 5 Publishing
* 6 Thematic elements
o 6.1 Female characters
o 6.2 Gachi muchi
o 6.3 Gay rights
o 6.4 Idealism
o 6.5 Rape
o 6.6 Tragedy
* 7 Critical attention
* 8 See also
* 9 Notes
* 10 References
* 11 Further reading
[edit] Terminology
[edit] Usage
Although different meanings are often ascribed to the terms yaoi and Boy's Love (with yaoi generally said to be more explicit and BL generally said to being less so),[4] there is conflicting information on their usage.[5]
Yaoi is an acronym created in the dojinshi market of the late 1970s by Yasuko Sakata and Akiko Hatsu[6] and coined in the 1980s[7] standing for Yama nashi, ochi nashi, imi nashi (?[?]?????????????) "No peak (climax), no fall (punch line/denouement), no meaning". This phrase was first used as a "euphemism for the content"[8] and refers to how yaoi, as opposed to the "difficult to understand" shonen-ai of the Year 24 Group,[9] focused on "the yummy parts".[10] The phrase also parodies a classical style of plot structure.[1] Kubota Mitsuyoshi says that Osamu Tezuka used yama nashi, ochi nashi, imi nashi to dismiss poor quality manga, and this was appropriated by the early yaoi authors.[8] As of 1998, the term yaoi was considered "common knowledge to manga fans".[11] A joking alternative acronym among fujoshi (female yaoi fans) for yaoi is Yamete, oshiri ga itai (??? ??? ???, "Stop, my ass hurts!").[3][12]
Originally in Japan, much BL material was called june (????),[13] a name derived from June, a magazine that published male/male tanbi (??, "aesthetic"?) romances,[nb 2] Kaoru Kurimoto had also written shonen ai mono stories in the late 1970s that have been described as "the precursors of yaoi".[6] The term "bishonen manga" was used in the 1970s, but became depreciated in the 1990s when the manga featured a broader range of protagonists than adolescent boys.[16] June magazine was named after the French author Jean Genet, with "june" being a play on the Japanese pronunciation of his name.[17] Eventually the term "june" died out in favour of "BL," which remains the most common name.[13] Mizoguchi suggests that publishers wishing to get a foothold in the June market coined the term BL to disassociate the genre with the publisher of June.[16]
Another term for yaoi is 801.[18] "801" can be read as "yaoi"[8] in the following form: the "short" reading of the number 8 is "ya", 0 can be read as "o" – a western influence, while the short reading for 1 is "i" (see Japanese wordplay). For example, an Internet manga called Tonari no 801-chan, about a male otaku who dates a fujoshi, has been adapted into a serialized shojo manga and a live-action film. 801-chan, the mascot of a Japanese shopping centre, is used in the manga.[19]
Yaoi has become an umbrella term in the West for women's manga or Japanese-influenced comics with male-male relationships,[13] and it is the term preferentially used by American manga publishers.[20] The actual name of the genre aimed toward women in Japan is called 'BL' or 'Boy's Love'. BL is aimed at the shojo and josei demographics, but is considered a separate category.[13][21] Yaoi is used in Japan to include dojinshi and sex scenes,[13] and does not include gei comi, which is by and for gay men.[1][13]
The terms yaoi and shonen-ai are sometimes used by western fans to differentiate between the contents of the genre. In this case, yaoi is used to describe titles that contain largely sex scenes and other sexually explicit themes and shonen-ai is used to describe titles that focus more on romance and do not include explicit sexual content, although they may include implicit sexual content.[22][23][24] When using the terms in this way, Gravitation is considered to be shonen-ai due to its focus on the characters' careers rather than their love life, while the Gravitation Remix and Megamix dojinshi by the same author, which emphasize the characters' sexual relationships, would be considered yaoi. Sometimes the word hentai is used as an additional modifier with yaoi – "hentai yaoi" – to denote the most explicit titles.[25] However, Kaze to Ki no Uta[nb 3] was groundbreaking in its depictions of "openly sexual relationships", spurring the development of the Boys Love genre in shojo manga,[26] and the development of sexually explicit amateur comics.[28] The use of yaoi to denote those works with explicit scenes sometimes clashes with use of the word to describe the genre as a whole. Yaoi can be used by fans as a label for anime or manga-based slash fiction.[29]
While shonen-ai literally means boy's love, the two terms are not synonymous. In Japan, shonen-ai used to refer to a now obsolete subgenre of shojo manga about prepubescent boys in relationships ranging from the platonic to the romantic and sexual. The term was originally used to describe ephebophilia, and in scholarly contexts still is. Boy's Love, on the other hand, is used as a genre's name and refers to all titles regardless of sexual content or the ages of characters in the story (with the exception of titles featuring prepubescent boys, which are categorized as shotacon, a distinct genre with only peripheral connections to BL).[13]
[edit] Gei comi/Bara
Main article: Bara (genre)
Although sometimes conflated with "yaoi" by Anglophone commentators, gay manga (????, gei comi?) (also called "Mens' Love" (?????, Menzu Rabu?), ML, in Japan and "bara" in English) caters to a gay male audience rather than a female one and tends to be made primarily by homosexual and bisexual male artists (such as Gengoroh Tagame) and serialized in gay men's magazines.[30] It is an even smaller niche genre in Japan than yaoi manga; none has been licensed in English and not much has been scanlated into English.[31] Considered a subgenre of seijin (??, adult?) (men's erotica) for gay males, bara resembles comics for men (seinen) rather than comics for female readers (shojo/josei).
Recently a subgenre of BL has been introduced in Japan, so-called gachi muchi (?????) or "muscley-chubby" BL,[32] which offers more masculine body types and is more likely to have gay male authors and artists. Although still marketed primarily to women,[32] it is also thought to attract a large crossover gay male audience.[33] This material has been referred to as "bara" among English-speaking fans,[34][35] but it is distinct in publishing terms (and often in content and style), and should not be confused with gei comi proper.
[edit] Seme and uke
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Artwork depicting a seme (left) and uke (right) couple.
The two participants in a yaoi relationship (sometimes also in yuri[36]) are often referred to as seme (?? or ???) and uke (?? or ???). These terms originated in martial arts and uke is used in Japanese gay slang to mean the receptive partner in anal sex.[37] Aleardo Zanghellini suggests that the martial arts terms have special significance to a Japanese audience, as an archetype of male same-sex relationships involves that once held between samurai and their companions.[4] Seme derives from the ichidan verb semeru (??? to attack?) and uke from the verb ukeru (??? or ???, to receive?). The seme and uke are often drawn in the bishonen style and are "highly idealised",[38] blending both masculine and feminine qualities.[11]
Zanghellini suggests that the samurai archetype is responsible for "the 'hierarchical' structure and age difference" of some relationships portrayed in yaoi and BL.[4] The seme is often depicted as the stereotypical male of anime and manga culture: restrained, physically powerful, and/or protective. The seme is generally older and taller,[39] with a stronger chin, shorter hair, smaller eyes, and a more stereotypically masculine, even "macho",[40] demeanour than the uke. The seme usually pursues the uke, hence the name. The uke usually has softer, androgynous, feminine features with bigger eyes and a smaller build, and is often physically weaker than the seme.[20][37][41] Zanghellini feels that these stereotypes come from shojo manga conventions of depicting heroines and her female rival, where the heroine would be portrayed as kawaii and her rival would be portrayed as a sophisticated and adult beauty. When the characters were changed from female to male, these characteristics remained in the seme and uke characters. In this view, readers identify with the uke.[4] Readers may identify with the seme, or the uke, or both at the same time, or instead become a voyeur.[42]
Anal sex is a prevalent theme in yaoi, as nearly all stories feature it in some way.[37] The storyline where an uke is reluctant to have anal sex with a seme is considered to be similar to the reader's reluctance to have sexual contact with someone for the first time.[43] Zanghellini notes that anal sex is almost always in a position so that the characters face each other, not in the doggy style Zanghelli states is portrayed by gay pornography. Zanghellini also notes that the uke rarely fellates the seme, but instead receives the sexual and romantic attentions of the seme.[4]
One stereotype that is criticized is when the protagonists do not identify as gay, but rather are simply in love with that particular person.[2][37] This is said to heighten the theme of all-conquering love,[44] but is also pointed to as avoiding having to address prejudices against people who consider themselves to have been born homosexual.[2] In recent years, newer yaoi stories have characters that identify as gay.[3] Criticism of the stereotypically "girly" behavior of the uke has also been prominent.[41] It has been questioned if yaoi is heteronormative, due to the masculine seme and feminine uke stereotypes.[20][45] Additionally, yaoi stories are often told from the uke's perspective.[20] When the seme and uke roles are more closely adhered to, the uke character may be said to represent a "'vagina/anus' to be penetrated", but even as he is penetrated, his phallus is not forgotten, for example, as a seme simultaneously fellates and digitally penetrates his partner in Play Boy Blues. This combination of penetration and phallic pleasure reinforces depictions of sex in yaoi as challenging the idea that there is an active, penetrating, male sexuality as opposed to a passive, penetrated, female sexuality.[46]
Though these stereotypes are common, not all works adhere to them.[5][41] Mark McLelland says that authors are "interested in exploring, not repudiating" the dynamics between the insertive partner and the receptive partner.[47] The possibility of switching roles is often a source of playful teasing and sexual excitement for the characters, which has been said to show that the genre is aware of the "performative nature" of the roles.[24] Sometimes the bottom character will be the aggressor in the relationship,[nb 4] or the pair will switch their sexual roles.[49] Riba, ?? (a contraction of the English word "reversible") is used to describe a couple that yaoi fans think is still plausible when the partners switch their seme/uke roles.[48] In another common mode of characters, the author will forego the stylisations of the seme and uke, and will portray both lovers as "equally attractive handsome men". In this case, whichever of the two who is ordinarily in charge will take the "passive role" in the bedroom.[40]
[edit] Shonen-ai
Shonen-ai originally connoted ephebophilia or pederasty in Japan, but from the early 1970s to the late 1980s, was used to describe a new genre of shojo manga, primarily by the Year 24 Group, about beautiful boys in love. Characteristics of shonen-ai include that they were exotic, often taking place in Europe,[50] and idealistic.[51] Suzuki describes shonen-ai as being "pedantic" and "difficult to understand",[9] saying that they required "knowledge of classic literature, history and science"[51] and were replete with "philosophical and abstract musings".[52] She says that this challenged the young readers and expanded their minds. Although they could not understand the works at first reading, as they grew older they would come to understand the works more. In the meantime, "the readers' attention became focused on the figure of the male protagonist" and how he navigated his sexual relationships.[52] By the late 1980s, the popularity of professionally published shonen-ai was declining, and yaoi dojinshi was becoming more popular.[10] In recent years, the terms yaoi and shonen-ai have sometimes been used by western fans to differentiate between the contents of the genre. Yaoi has been used to describe titles that contain largely sex scenes and other sexually explicit themes and shonen-ai is used to describe titles that focus more on romance and do not include explicit sexual content, although they may include implicit sexual content.[22][23][24]
[edit] Dojinshi
The dojinshi subculture has been considered the Japanese equivalent of the English-language slash fandom, especially as they both do not have typical "narrative structure", science fiction works are particularly popular in both,[11] and they both originated in the 1970s.[7][22] Typical yaoi dojinshi features male-male pairings from non-romantic, published manga and anime. Much of the material derives from male-oriented (shonen and seinen) works which contained male-male close friendships and are perceived by fans to imply homosexual attraction,[10] such as with Captain Tsubasa[1] and Saint Seiya, two titles which popularised yaoi in the 1980s.[7] Saint Seiya was particularly popular as it had a large cast of characters, most of them male, which allowed "an incredible number" of pairings between characters, although Andromeda Shun was one of the more popular characters to parody in yaoi, as he was presented in the original series as "fragile and sensible, with fine traits, long hair, doe eyes and the most feminine armour of the group".[53] For a time, yaoi dojinshi was known as “Captain Tsubasa”.[54] Dojinshi has been described by Comiket's co-founder Yoshihiro Yonezawa as being "girls playing with dolls";[43] yaoi fans may ship any male-male pairing, sometimes pairing off a favourite character, or creating a story about two men and fitting existing characters into the story.[1]
Matt Thorn notes that unlike in slash fandom, a canonical homoerotic element "takes away the fun" of creating yaoi for that series, for example, From Eroica with Love is more popular with slash fans than it has been with dojinshi artists.[10] Kazuko Suzuki outlines the thematic development of the yaoi fandom, from curiosity about sexuality, to taking a parodic revenge against men, to a feminist protest, and lastly, exploring "ideal relationships".[55] The parodic themes in dojinshi have been compared to the queer practice of camp.[56]
Important characteristics of the early yaoi dojinshi were that they were amateur publications not controlled by media restrictions, the stories were by teens for other teens and they were based on famous characters who were in their teens or early twenties, the same age as the yaoi fans.[7] The rapid expansion of Comiket during the 1980s (less than 10,000 attendees in 1982-over 100,000 attendees in 1989) permitted many doujinshi authors to sell thousands of copies of their works, earning a fair amount of money. Mizoguchi points out that June paid a small honorarium and only published stories which suited their less-explicit style, leading to some authors of yaoi choosing not to try to publish in June.[16] During the early 1990s, dojinshi played a part in popularising yaoi.[38] Yaoi dojinshi has been compared to the Plot, what Plot? subgenre of fan fiction.[57]
Though collectors often focus on dojinshi based on particular manga, any male character may become the subject of a yaoi dojinshi, even characters from non-manga titles such as Harry Potter or The Lord of the Rings,[58] or video games such as Kingdom Hearts and Final Fantasy,[59][60] real people such as politicians, or personifications such as Hetalia: Axis Powers, or complementary items such as salt and pepper or peanut butter and jelly. Patrick W. Galbraith sums this up by saying "Among fujoshi, there seems no limit to the potential of transgressive intimacy imagined in yaoi relationships in pursuit of moe."[61]
Most dojinshi are created by amateurs who often work in "circles";[62] for example, the group CLAMP began as an amateur dojinshi circle, drawing Saint Seiya yaoi.[53] However, some professional artists, such as Kodaka Kazuma create dojinshi as well.[63] Some publishing companies have used dojinshi published in the 1980s to spot talented amateurs,[22][37] such as Biblos hiring Youka Nitta.[64]
Convention when labelling stories differs between Japanese fandom and slash-influenced fandoms. In Japan, the labelling is to put the two names of the characters separated by a multiplication sign, with the seme being first, and the uke being second.[65]
[edit] Global BL
As Japanese yaoi gained popularity in the U.S., a few American artists began creating original English-language manga for female readers featuring beautiful male-male couples,[7][15] referred to as "American yaoi." The first known original English-language BL comic is Sexual Espionage #1 by Daria McGrain, published in May 2002.[66] Since approximately 2004, what started as a small subculture in North America has become a burgeoning market, as new publishers began producing female-oriented male/male erotic comics and manga from creators outside Japan.[67] Because creators from all parts of the globe are published in these "original English language" works, the term "American Yaoi" fell out of use; terms like 'Original English Language yaoi'[68] shortened to 'Global Yaoi'.[69] The term Global BL was coined by creators and newsgroups that wanted to distinguish the Asian specific content known as 'yaoi', from the original English content, and so the term Global BL was used.[70][71] "Global BL" was shortened by comics author Tina Anderson in interviews and on her blog to the acronym 'GloBL'.[34][72]
Current North American publishers of 'Global BL' are Yaoi Press,[73] and publisher DramaQueen, which debuted its 'Global BL' quarterly anthology RUSH in 2006.[74] RUSH ceased publishing when the company experienced financial issues and were uncommunicative with the creators involved in the project.[75][76][77] Dramaqueen began publishing again in 2010,[78] and on their forums, CEO Tran Nguyen indicated RUSH would return in a new format in 2011.[79]
Former publishers include Iris Print.[80][81]
Prolific GloBL creators include Yayoi Neko,[82] Dany & Dany,[83][84] Tina Anderson,[85] and Studio Kosen.[86]
The most recent publishing boom in GloBL is happening in Germany, with a handful of original German titles gaining popularity for being set in Asia.[87] Some publishers of German GloBL are traditional manga publishers like Carlsen Manga,[88] and small press publishers specialising in GloBL like The Wild Side[89] and Fireangels Verlag.[90]
[edit] Publishing
Books on display at a San Francisco Kinokuniya bookstore
Mizoguchi divides BL publication into two eras – the first era from the time of June to 2004, and a second era from 2004 onwards.[91] The earliest magazine about Boy's Love was June, which began in 1978 as a response to the success of commercially published manga such as the works of Keiko Takemiya, Moto Hagio and Yumiko Oshima.[65] Other factors was the rising popularity of depictions of bishonen in the dojinshi market and ambiguous musicians such as David Bowie and Queen. June was meant to have an underground, "cultish, guerilla-style" feeling – most of its manga artists were new talent. Frederik L. Schodt describes June as "a kind of 'readers' magazine, created by and for the readers." Essays about the characteristics of the June genre were published with the manga in June. In 1982, Shosetsu June ("Novel June"), a sister magazine to June began publication. Its content is text-only stories with male romance.[92] Nagaike believes that the true "revolution" in BL culture was when it began to be commercially published en masse in the 1990s.[93] As of the mid-1990s, Shosetsu June outsold June.[92] As of 2008, June was still running,[94] although the target audience's ages have widened and the style of stories has changed from being "soft love" to more overtly pornographic.[65] The magazine Allan (???, Aran?) (1980–1984) which was more text-based than June was influential in cultivating a lesbian culture.[95] The Japanese publisher Biblos was a BL publisher established in 1988 but their bankruptcy due to failure of their parent company[37] caused them to fold in April 2006.[96] Most of their titles were picked up by Libre.[97] A 2006 breakdown of the Japanese commercial BL market estimated it grosses approximately 12 billion yen annually, with novel sales generating 250 million yen per month, manga generating 400 million yen per month, CDs generating 180 million yen per month, and video games generating 160 million yen per month.[93] A 2010 report estimated that the Boys Love market was worth approximately 21.3 billion yen in both 2009 and 2010.[98]
Japanese BL works are sold to English-speaking countries by companies that translate and print them in English; companies such as Digital Manga Publishing with their imprints 801 Media (for explicit BL) and June (for "romantic and sweet" BL),[22] as well as DramaQueen, Kitty Media, Central Park Media's Be Beautiful,[20] Tokyopop under their imprint BLU, Broccoli under their Boysenberry imprint, Aurora Publishing under their imprint Deux Press, and Yaoi Generation. The first publisher of BL in translation may be ComicsOne, which released two volumes of shonen-ai manga as e-books in January 2000.[99] In 2001, the only BL-type manga available in print in English were the barely-suggestive Banana Fish and X/1999,[100] and in 2002, commercially translated BL was "not common".[101] According to McLelland, the earliest officially translated BL manga in print appeared in 2003, and as of 2006 there were about 130 English-translated works commercially available.[37] In March 2007, Media Blasters stopped selling shonen manga and increased their yaoi lines, anticipating to publish one or two titles per month that year.[102] In 2007 following Biblos' bankruptcy, Libre published an open letter on their website which said that English-language publishers had to renegotiate publishing rights for Biblos' former series with Libre, specifically naming CPM's releases as "illegal".[103][104] Diamond Comic Distributors estimated the U.S. sales of yaoi manga as being approximately $US 6 million in 2007. In English-speaking countries explicit stories are either sold online or displayed in shrink wrap.[105] Mark McLelland surveyed 135 yaoi books published in North America between 2003 and 2006, and found that 14% was rated at 13 years or over, 39% was rated for readers aged 15 years or over, and 47% was rated for readers 18 years or older.[106] In 2008, BLU reported that although bookshops are becoming more willing to stock BL titles, they are conservative about how the books are labelled, leading to books being shrink wrapped and rated for over 18s which previously would have garnered an over 16 rating, and do not "really follow through on the [adult content] promise."[15]
In 2010, Libre Publishing sent cease and desist letters to English language BL scanlation groups.[107]
Tokyopop and its imprint BLU folded in May 2011. In October 2011, Viz Media launched the BL imprint SuBLime in collaboration with the Japanese BL publisher Libre and the Japanese retailer Animate to publish English-language BL for the print and worldwide digital market.[108][109]
[edit] Thematic elements
BL has similar themes to heterosexual shojo manga, several exploring adolescent romance and the "interiority of the characters."[110] Nagaike identifies common narratives as being toshishita zeme, where the younger partner penetrates the older, shota mono about young adolescents, riiman mono, about salarymen, and gakuen mono, stories set on a campus.[46] Common characters in yaoi are schoolboys and yakuza.[111] Sometimes, schoolboys are depicted in sexual situations, which is controversial when these titles are licensed in countries where underage sexuality and its depiction is taboo.[112]
[edit] Female characters
Female characters often have very minor roles in yaoi, or are absent altogether.[44][113] Suzuki notes that mothers, in particular, are portrayed badly, such as Takuto's mother from Zetsuai 1989, who killed her husband in front of her young son. Suzuki suggests this is because the character and the reader are attempting to replace a mother's lacking "unconditional love" with the "forbidden" all-consuming love presented in yaoi.[114] Nariko Enomoto, a yaoi author, says she feels that when women are shown, "it can't help but become weirdly real".[115] When yaoi fan works are created from a series which originally contained females (such as Gundam Wing),[116] the female's role is either minimised or the character is killed off.[113] Early shonen-ai and yaoi has been regarded as misogynistic, but Lunsing detects a decrease in misogynistic comments from characters and regards the development of the yuri genre as reflecting a reduction of internal misogyny.[3] Alternatively, the yaoi fandom is also viewed as a "refuge" from mainstream culture, which in this paradigm is viewed as inherently misogynistic.[7] Fumi Yoshinaga is regarded as a creator who usually includes at least one sympathetic female character in her works.[117] Also, there are many female characters in Yaoi who are Fujoshi themselves.
[edit] Gachi muchi
Recently, a subgenre of BL has been introduced in Japan, so-called "muscley-chubby BL" or gachi muchi (from gacchiri (????, muscular?) and muchimuchi (????, chubby?))[32] which offers more masculine body types and is more likely to have gay male authors and artists. Although still marketed primarily to women,[32] it is also thought to attract a large crossover gay male audience.[118] Although this type of material has also been referred to as "bara" among English-speaking fans,[34][35] it is not equivalent to gei comi proper (although there is considerable overlap, as writers, artists and art styles cross over between the two genres). Prior to the development of gachi muchi, the greatest overlap between yaoi and bara authors has been in BDSM-themed publications[119] such as Zettai Reido, a yaoi anthology magazine which had a number of openly male contributors.[3] Several female yaoi authors who have done BDSM-themed yaoi have been recruited to contribute stories to BDSM-themed bara anthologies or special issues.[119]
[edit] Gay rights
Many BL manga have fantastic, historic or futuristic settings, and many fans consider BL to be an "escapist fantasy".[120] Homophobia, when it is presented as an issue at all,[5] is used as a plot device to "heighten the drama",[121] or to show the purity of the leads’ love.[14] Matt Thorn has suggested that as BL is a romance narrative, having strong political themes may be a "turn off" to the readers.[10] Yaoi narratives show characters "overcoming obstacles, often internal, to be together". The theme of the victory of the protagonists in yaoi has been compared favourably to Western fairy tales, as the latter intends to enforce the status quo, but yaoi is "about desire" and seeks "to explore, not circumscribe, possibilities."[122] Hisako Miyoshi, vice editor-in-chief for Libre Publishing, has said that she feels that boys love manga has become less realist, with more comedic elements or being "simply for entertainment". She thinks that earlier BL focused "more on the homosexual way of life with a realist perspective."[123] Makoto Tateno has said that she feels that BL with a focus on realistic gay issues "won't become a trend, because girls like fiction more than realism."[124] Akiko Mizoguchi feels that while depictions of homosexuality as "shameful" to heighten dramatic tension are still shown, BL is including more coming out stories which portray a gradual acceptance from the wider community. Mizoguchi feels that BL is showing far more gay-friendly depictions of Japanese society, which she regards as activism.[91]
[edit] Idealism
[icon] This section requires expansion.
Most BL manga have been said to "foster an aesthetic of purity, even when depicting hard-core sex acts."[125] Sandra Buckley felt that the characters have equality in their relationships, which were "free of domination and exploitation".[126] Yaoi stories are often strongly homosocial, which gives the men freedom to bond with each other and to pursue shared goals together, as in dojinshi representations of Captain Tsubasa, or to rival each other, as in Haru wo Daiteita. This spiritual bond and equal partnership shown overcomes the male-female power hierarchy.[46]
[edit] Rape
According to Suzuki, sexual intercourse in yaoi is a way of expressing commitment to a partner, and "apparent violence" in sex is a "measure of passion". Suzuki elaborates that when a woman is raped, she is stigmatised by society, but in yaoi narratives, boys who are loved by their rapists are still "imbued with innocence", a theme she attributes to Kaze to Ki no Uta.[127] According to Nagaike, rape scenes in yaoi are rarely presented as crimes with an assaulter and a victim. Nagaike feels that scenes where a seme rapes a uke are not symptomatic of the seme's "disruptive sexual/violent desires", but instead are a signifier of the "uncontrollable love" felt by a seme for an uke. Instead of being depicted as a crime, rape scenes can be a plot device used to make the uke see the seme as more than just a good friend, resulting in the uke falling in love with the seme.[46] Rape fantasy themes have been said to free the protagonist of responsibility in sex, leading to the narrative climax of the story, where "the protagonist takes responsibility for his own sexuality".[112] The 2003–2005 Under Grand Hotel, set in a men's prison, has been praised for showing a more realistic depiction of rape.[128]
[edit] Tragedy
June stories with suicide endings were popular,[92] as was "watching men suffer".[129] Matt Thorn theorises that depicting abuse in yaoi is a coping mechanism for some yaoi fans.[10] By the mid 1990s the fashion was for happy endings.[92] When tragic endings are shown, the cause is not infidelity, but "the cruel and intrusive demands of an uncompromising outside world."[130]
[edit] Critical attention
Boys' Love manga has received considerable critical attention, especially after translations of BL became commercially available outside of Japan in the 21st century.[10] Different critics and commentators have had very different views of BL. In 1983, Frederik L. Schodt observed that “aesthetically” depicted male-male homosexual relationships had become popular among female readers as an extension of bisexual themes already present in shojo manga.[131] Japanese critics have seen BL as allowing girls to distance sex from their own bodies,[132] as allowing girls to avoid adult female sexuality while simultaneously creating greater fluidity in perceptions of gender and sexuality,[133] and as rejecting “socially mandated” gender roles as a “first step toward feminism.”[134] In more elaborate theorizing, Kazuko Suzuki sees BL manga emerging from girls' contempt and dislike for masculine heterosexism and from an effort to define "ideal relationships" among men.[135] Mizoguchi, writing in 2003, feels that BL is a "female-gendered space", as the writers, readers, artists and most of the editors of BL are female.[136] BL has been compared to romance novels by English-speaking librarians.[39][121] Parallels have also been noted in the popularity of lesbianism in pornography,[37][43] and yaoi has been called a form of "female fetishism".[137] Mariko Ohara, a science fiction writer, has said that she wrote yaoi Kirk/Spock fiction as a teen because she could not enjoy "conventional pornography, which had been made for men", and that she had found a "limitless freedom" in yaoi, much like in science fiction.[138]
Other commentators have suggested that more radical gender-political issues underlie BL. Shihomi Sakakibara (1998) argued that yaoi fans, including herself, were homosexually oriented female-to-male transsexuals.[139] For Sandra Buckley, bishonen narratives champion “the imagined potentialities of alternative [gender] differentiations"[140] and James Welker described the bishonen character as "queer", observing that manga critic Akiko Mizoguchi saw shonen-ai as playing a role in how she herself had become a lesbian.[141] Dru Pagliassotti sees this and the yaoi ronso as indicating that for Japanese gay and lesbian readers, BL is not as far removed from reality as heterosexual female readers like to claim.[15] Welker added that shonen-ai liberates readers "not just from patriarchy, but from gender dualism and heteronormativity."[141]
Some gay and lesbian commentators have criticized how gay identity is portrayed in BL, most notably in the yaoi ronso or "yaoi debate" of 1992–1997.[3][14] In May 1992, gay activist Masaki Sato criticized yaoi fans and artists in an open letter to the feminist zine (or minikomi in Japanese) Choisir.[3][14] Sato said that yaoi failed to provide accurate information about gay men, promoted a destructive image of gay men as wealthy, handsome, and well-educated, ignored prejudice and discrimination against gay men in society, and co-opted gay men as masturbation fantasies.[14] An extensive debate ensued, with yaoi fans and artists arguing that yaoi is entertainment for women, not education for gay men, and that yaoi characters are not meant to represent "real gay men."[14] As internet resources for gay men developed in the 1990s, the yaoi debate waned[142] but has had later echoes, for example when Mizoguchi in 2003 characterised stereotypes in modern BL as being "unrealistic and homophobic".[143] There has been similar criticism to the Japanese yaoi debate in the English-speaking fandom.[5][144][145][146] In 1993 and 2004, Matt Thorn pointed to the complexity of these phenomena, and suggested that yaoi and slash fiction fans are discontented with “the standards of femininity to which they are expected to adhere and a social environment that does not validate or sympathize with that discontent.”[10][147]
As women have greater economic power, commercial demand for the sexualization of men may correlate. Korean manhwa writer Jin Seok Jeon wrote in a commentary to Vol. 5, Chp 2 of an Arabian Nights themed shonen-ai work, A Night of a Thousand Dreams, "Men are now marketable. It's also a time where women are big consumers and can buy almost anything they desire. Some men think this is degrading...but the tables have turned, and I like the fact that men are just as commercialized now." He jokes that after researching oil wrestling, which requires extreme physical fitness, he does not feel as marketable, illustrating that yaoi and other pornography exploiting men is subject to traditional criticisms, such as sexual objectification, creating unrealistic expectations and negative body images.
In China, BL became very popular in the late 1990s, attracting media attention, which became negative, focusing on the challenge it posed to "heterosexual hegemony". Publishing and distributing BL is illegal in mainland China.[148] Zanghellini notes that due to the "characteristics of the yaoi/BL genre" of showing characters who are often underage engaging in romantic and sexual situations, child pornography laws in Australia and Canada "may lend themselves to targeting yaoi/BL work". He notes that in the UK, cartoons are exempt from child pornography laws unless they are used for child grooming.[4]
In 2001, a controversy erupted in Thailand regarding homosexual male comics. Television reports labeled the comics as negative influences, while a newspaper falsely stated that most of the comics were not copyrighted as the publishers feared arrest for posting the content; in reality most of the titles were likely illegally published without permission from the original Japanese publishers. The shonen ai comics provided profits for the comic shops, which sold between 30 to 50 such comics per day. The moral panic regarding the male homosexual comics subsided. The Thai girls felt too embarrassed to read heterosexual stories, so they read homosexual male-themed josei and shojo stories, which they saw as "unthreatening."[149]
Youka Nitta has said that "even in Japan, reading boys' love isn't something that parents encourage" and encouraged any parents who had concerns about her works to read them.[150] Although in Japan, concern about manga has been mostly directed to shonen manga, in 2006, an email campaign was launched against the availability of BL manga in Sakai City's public library. In August 2008, the library decided to stop buying more BL, and to keep its existing BL in a collection restricted to adult readers. That November, the library was contacted by people who protested against the removal, regarding it as "a form of sexual discrimination". The Japanese media ran stories on how much BL was in public libraries, and emphasised that this sexual material had been loaned out to minors. Debate ensued on Mixi, a Japanese social networking site, and eventually the library returned its BL to the public collection. Mark McLelland suggests that BL may become "a major battlefront for proponents and detractors of 'gender free' policies in employment, education and elsewhere."[151]
Folsom Street Fair
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A Folsom Street Fair banner (using the Leather Pride flag) hangs from a city lighting pole and marks Leather Pride Week in San Francisco, California.
A mixture of kink and leather subcultures mix at the festival. The man on the right may be into uniform and military interests while these other 2007 fair-goers seem to be interested in animal roleplay including a bare-chested man with his "pony".
The Folsom Street Fair (FSF) is an annual BDSM and leather subculture street fair held on the last Sunday in September and caps San Francisco's "Leather Pride Week". The Folsom Street Fair, sometimes simply referred to as "Folsom", takes place on Folsom Street between 7th and 12th Streets, in San Francisco's South of Market district.
The event started in 1984 and is California's third largest spectator event[citation needed] and the world's largest leather event and showcase for BDSM products and culture.[1] It has grown as a non-profit charity, and local and national non-profits benefit with all donations at the gates going to charity groups as well as numerous fundraising schemes within the festival including games, beverage booths and even spanking for donations to capitalize on the adult-themed exhibitionism.
The coordination agency, Folsom Street Events (FSE) is a registered charity and has also started similar events in Canada and Germany. In San Francisco they also manage Dore Alley Fair and special events like the "Folsom Street Fair Formal Leather Gala" with Joan Rivers which celebrated the 25th anniversary, and their annual circuit party "Magnitude" which has a leather subculture focus.[2][3][4]
Contents
[hide]
* 1 Origin of the leather subculture
* 2 History of the leather community in San Francisco
* 3 Beginnings of the Folsom Street Fair
* 4 Atmosphere
o 4.1 Folsom Street East
o 4.2 Folsom Europe
o 4.3 Folsom Fair North (FFN)
* 5 2007 poster controversy
* 6 See also
* 7 References
* 8 External links
[edit] Origin of the leather subculture
Main article: Leather subculture
Although sadomasochism has been practiced for many centuries, the modern gay leather scene in the United States developed beginning in 1945 when thousands of gay servicemen were given blue discharges from service after World War II and came to live in the major port cities of the United States to live in gay ghettos. In 1953 the film The Wild One appeared starring Marlon Brando and the more butch gays began to imitate him by wearing black leather jackets, a black leather cap, black leather boots, and jeans, and, if they could afford it, by also riding motorcycles.[5] Many gay servicemen had played sex games with each other where one played the top and the other played the bottom. In the 1950s, the magazine Bizarre familiarized people with sexual fetishism.
[edit] History of the leather community in San Francisco
The first proto-leather bar in San Francisco was the Sailor Boy Tavern, which opened in 1938 near the Embarcadero YMCA and catered to Navy boys looking for some male-to-male action.[5]
Folsom Street has been the center of San Francisco's men's leather community since the mid 1960s. Before centering in the South of Market neighborhood, leather friendly bars were located in the Embarcadero (Jack's On The Waterfront at 111 Embarcadero 1952-1963, On The Levee ?-1972), and the Tenderloin (The Spur Club at 126 Turk- raided and closed in 1959, The Why Not at 518 Ellis- opened and closed in 1960, The Hideaway at 438 Eddy - raided and closed in 1961). The first leather bar in SOMA was The Tool Box, which opened in 1961 at 339 4th St and closed in 1971.[6] It was made famous by the June 1964 Paul Welch Life Magazine article entitled Homosexuality In America, the first time a national publication reported on gay issues. Life's photographer was referred to The Tool Box by Hal Call, leader of the San Francisco chapter of the Mattachine Society, who had long worked to dispel the myth that all homosexual men were effeminate. The article opened with a two page spread of the mural of life size leathermen in the bar, painted by Chuck Arnett, a patron and employee.[7] The article described San Francisco as "The Gay Capital of America" and inspired many leathermen to move there.[6]
The first leather bar on Folsom Street was Febe's, on the southwest corner of 11th and Folsom, which opened July 25, 1966. The Stud bar, which opened in 1966 at 1535 Folsom St., was originally a Hells Angels hangout; by 1969 it had become a dance bar for hippies on the margins of the leather scene and had a psychedelic black light mural by Chuck Arnett (in 1987, it moved to 399 9th St. at Harrison). In 1967 A Taste of Leather, one of the first in-bar leather stores, was established at Febe's by Nick O'Demus. As of late 2009, A Taste of Leather announced it will be going out of business after 43 years.
In 1971, the modern bandana code came into use among leather people.
Many leather people went to the Embarcadero YMCA (at this YMCA doing weight training while wearing nothing but gym shoes and a jockstrap as well as nude swimming were both allowed until 1975, when women were enabled to become members of the YMCA). Leather people who worked out at the Embarcadero YMCA took advantage of the opportunity to get together with sailors when they came into town and rented rooms at the adjacent Embarcadero YMCA Hotel.
By the late 1970s Folsom's Miracle Mile had featured nearly 30 different leather bars, clubs, and merchants, most within walking distance of each other. These establishments included, in the order they were established: 1968 - Off the Levee (by the same owner of On The Levee), The Ramrod. 1971 - The In Between (later renamed The No Name), The Bootcamp. 1972 - The Barracks at 72 Hallam St., off Folsom between 7th and 8th Streets (a gay bathhouse for people into hardcore BDSM—each room was set up like a stage set to cater to a different sex fetish sex fantasy). 1973 - The Red Star Saloon (connected to the Barracks) (which featured new artwork by Chuck Arnett), the End Up (not a leather bar but a dance bar; however, many leather people who liked to dance went there), Folsom Prison, The Ambush, Big Town—a gay leather shopping mall on the south side of Folsom between 6th and 7th Streets 1975 - Hombre, The Catacombs (for those into hard core fisting), The Emporium. 1976 - The Trading Post, The Slot (for those into hardcore flagellation), The Hotel (later renamed The Handball Express—a place for those into hardcore fisting). 1977 - The Brig, The Balcony. 1978 - The Arena, The Roundup (later renamed The Watering Hole—a place for those into urolagnia), The Quarters, Black & Blue, Folsom Street Baths at 1015 Folsom (a BDSM gay bathhouse)(later renamed The Sutro Baths in 1980—the slogan of the Sutro Baths was "a rainbow of sexual preferences", which was inscribed on a banner above the orgy room, located where the main dance floor of 1015 Folsom now is. The Sutro Baths also admitted women and transsexuals.) . 1979 - The Stables at 1123 Folsom (for those who liked to dress as cowboys), The Trench (for those into hardcore urolagnia), The Hothouse on the northwest corner of 5th and Harrison (another BDSM gay bathhouse), Tailor of San Francisco, Mister S Leathers. 1980 - The Plunge—a gay BDSM bathhouse with a swimming pool on the northwest corner of 11th and Folsom (in 1983 the swimming pool was covered over and became the surface of the dance floor of the popular bisexual dance club the Oasis). 1981 - The Eagle at 398 12th St., as of 2010, was San Francisco's oldest leather bar, as well as its largest with its extensive outdoor patio, and it hosted many popular barbecues and beer busts to benefit charitable organization; however, it closed in June 2011 due to a dispute over its real estate.
The predecessor of the Folsom Street Fair was the CMC Carnival (California Motorcycle Club Carnival), a gay leather BDSM dance (with DJ's and a rock band) and fair, with vendors and a back room for casual sex, held on the second Sunday of November every year from 1966 to the last one in 1986 at various indoor venues including most often at the Seafarer's International Union Hall (referred to as Seaman’s Hall for short) in the Embarcadero area of SOMA. In the early 1970s, the CMC Carnival was attended by a few hundred people and by the time of the last large CMC Carnival in 1982 at what was then the Yellow Cab Building at Jones and Turk in the Tenderloin, it was attended by over 4,000 people.[8][9]
The "CMC Carnival" was organized by one of the leather motorcycle clubs, the California Motorcycle Club, with the help of other gay motorcycle clubs. The members of these gay motorcycle clubs rode mostly Harley Davidson motorcycles and on periodic weekends rode their motorcycles to outings at picnic grounds in the Sierra Nevada Mountains. The first gay motorcycle club in the United States was the Satyrs, founded in Los Angeles in 1954. The first gay motorcycle club in San Francisco was the Warlocks, which was founded in 1960, followed by the California Motorcycle Club, also founded in 1960 later in the year. By the mid-1960s, San Francisco's South of Market district had become the center of the gay motorcycle club scene and was home to motorcycle clubs such as the Barbary Coasters (founded in 1966) and the Constantines and the Cheaters (both founded in 1967).[10] These gay motorcycle clubs also organized many benefits for charity at various leather bars. During the 1970s and early 1980s one could see many dozens of motorcycles belonging to people who were members of these clubs parked up and down the length of Folsom Street on the Miracle Mile. Unfortunately the membership of these motorcycle clubs was decimated by the AIDS crisis beginning in 1982.[11]
In 1979 the newly formed San Francisco lesbian motorcycle club, Dykes on Bikes, led what was then called the San Francisco Gay Freedom Day Parade for the first time[12] and has done so ever since (since 1994, the event has been called the San Francisco Pride Parade). By the mid-1980s, lesbian motorcycle enthusiasts in other cities began to form motorcycle clubs.[10] In the 1980s and early 1990s, lesbian leatherwomen were often involved in helping to care for gay leathermen who had been stricken with AIDS.
Some leather people of the 1960s and 1970s felt that one wasn’t really a leather person but just a poseur unless one owned an actual motorcycle, preferably a Harley Davidson.[13]
[edit] Beginnings of the Folsom Street Fair
The community had been active in resisting the city's ambitious redevelopment program for the South of Market area throughout the 1970s. City officials had wanted to "revitalize" the historically blue collar, warehouse, industrial district by continuing successful high rise development already underway on Rincon Hill.
But as the AIDS epidemic unfolded in the 1980s, the community's relative autonomy from City Hall was dramatically weakened. The crisis became an opportunity for the city (in the name of public health) to close bathhouses and regulate bars, which they did beginning in 1984.[14]
As these establishments for the leather community were rapidly closing, a coalition of housing activists and community organizers decided to start a street fair. The fair would enhance the visibility of the community, provide a means for much-needed fundraising, and create opportunities for members of the leather community to connect to services and vital information (e.g., regarding safer sex) that bathhouses and bars might otherwise have been situated to distribute.[14]
Thanks to the success of the first Folsom Street Fair, the organizers created the Up Your Alley Fair on Ringold Street in 1985. This fair moved to Dore Street ("Dore Alley") between Harrison and Folsom in 1987.
[edit] Atmosphere
Bondage demonstration with Van Darkholme at the 2003 Folsom Street Fair
As one of the few occasions when sadomasochistic activities are encouraged and performed in public, it attracts a considerable number of sightseers and those who enjoy the attention of onlookers as well as hundreds of photographers and videographers. Although the costumes and activities are frequently transgressive, many attendees find the event "eye-opening" and positive.[15] On the other hand, the event has at times drawn public and internal criticism for its bawdy atmosphere and broad tolerance of lewd behavior,[16][17] and it is a regular target for unsympathetic organizations such as Americans for Truth about Homosexuality.[18]
The organizers have reportedly earned a great amount of trust from city officials as they have demonstrated not only an exceptional level of community and volunteer support but also have risen to be a role-model for other street fairs in San Francisco which have faced opposition from various neighborhood groups. With the assistance of the high-profile Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence the gate donations totaled more than $300,000 in 2006 and the methodology emulated at other street fairs like the Sisters' Pink Saturday, the Castro Street Fair and San Francisco Lovefest.
The fair annually draws 400,000 visitors[19][20] including kinky leather fans from around the world, and is the third largest street event in California, after the Tournament of Roses Parade and San Francisco Pride parade.[21][22] Each year all proceeds from the Folsom Street Fair, including gate donations and beverage sales, are given to qualified local charities. These include AIDS charities and the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence who lead the organizing effort at the gates themselves. The event generates over $250,000 annually for charity.[23]
Fair organizers present two live stages for alternative bands and artists. Previous headlining live acts have included Ladytron (DJ Team), Dragonette, Imperial Teen, Berlin (band), The Presets, The English Beat, Shiny Toy Guns, Natalie Portman's Shaved Head, Nitzer Ebb, MEN (band) (featuring JD Samson of Le Tigre), and My Life With The Thrill Kill Kult, among others. There is also a dance area with DJs and cage dancers. In 2006, Folsom Street Fair introduced a women's area, first dubbed "Bettie Paige's Secret" then changing its name in subsequent years to "Venus' Playground." In 2007, an erotic artists' area was established as well.
[edit] Folsom Street East
Partial suspension bondage demonstration at Folsom Street Fair 2005.
Since 1997, a smaller event called Folsom Street East has been organized in New York City by GMSMA. There is no affiliation between Folsom Street East (NYC) and Folsom Street Events (SF).[21][24]
[edit] Folsom Europe
Folsom Europe was established in Berlin, Germany in 2003 in order to bring the non-profit leather festival concept pioneered by the Folsom Street Fair in San Francisco to Europe. [25]
[edit] Folsom Fair North (FFN)
The Toronto version of Folsom Street Fair was dubbed Folsom Fair North, FFN or FFNTO and was held every July since 2003. The FFN was canceled permanently in 2008.
[edit] 2007 poster controversy
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This article or section may be slanted towards recent events. Please try to keep recent events in historical perspective. (May 2011)
For the 24th annual event held September 30, 2007 the official poster artwork was a photo featuring well-known LGBT and BDSM community members in festive and fetish attire including Sister Roma "as players in an innovative version of the culturally iconographic" The Last Supper by Leonardo da Vinci complete with table draped with the Leather Pride flag and "cluttered with sex toys, whips, and various (BDSM) restraints".[26] The artwork by FredAlert[27] was used on the official event guide as well as produced as collector's posters that were also posted throughout the city for advertising. Some conservative religious groups criticized this as anti-Christian and blasphemous although media outlets noted that parodies and homages of the Last Supper painting like Renée Cox's Yo Mama's Last Supper are numerous including ones by The Simpsons, The Sopranos, Phish, That '70s Show, Robert Altman (in the film MASH) and the Boston Red Sox.[28][29] Senior Pastor at San Francisco's Metropolitan Community Church agreed that "they are just having fun" with both the painting and the current notion of 'San Francisco values' stating he thought it was "tastefully and cleverly done."[27]
From a press release about the poster, Andy Copper, Board President of Folsom Street Events, a non-profit organization, states "There is no intention to be particularly pro-religion or anti-religion with this poster; the image is intended only to be reminiscent of the ‘Last Supper’ painting. It is a distinctive representation of diversity with women and men, people of all colors and sexual orientations."[30] and "We hope that people will enjoy the artistry for what it is - nothing more or less. Many people choose to speculate on deeper meanings. The irony is that da Vinci was widely considered to be homosexual. In truth, we are going to produce a series of inspired poster images over the next few years. Next year's poster ad may take inspiration from 'American Gothic' by Grant Wood or Edvard Munch's 'The Scream' or even 'The Sound of Music! I guess it wouldn't be the Folsom Street Fair without offending some extreme members of the global community, though."
Masked fellow at the fair
The Catholic League, Concerned Women for America and the Family Research Council targeted the largest mainstream sponsor of the event, Miller Brewing Company, threatening to boycott their products for the company supporting the event and allowing its logo to appear in the ad.[31][32] Miller asked for their logo to be removed from the poster with a statement on their website "while Miller has supported the Folsom Street Fair for several years, we take exception to the poster the organizing committee developed this year. We understand some individuals may find the imagery offensive and we have asked the organizers to remove our logo from the poster effective immediately."[33] The Catholic League dropped the boycott within a month[34] with no evidence of Miller's sales being affected.
Nancy Pelosi, Speaker of the United States House of Representatives who represents San Francisco and is also Roman Catholic, fielded a question on this as part of her Friday morning press conference.[27] She responded "It's a Constitutional question. It's a religious question. It's about as global a question as you could ask...I'm a big believer in the First Amendment. I do not believe Christianity has been harmed by the Folsom Street Fair."[35]
Eddie Stone
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This biographical article needs additional citations for verification. Please help by adding reliable sources. Contentious material about living persons that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed immediately, especially if potentially libelous or harmful. (September 2007)
Eddie Stone is a Canadian gay pornographic actor (porn star) from Montreal, Quebec. Stone was discovered while go-go dancing in a nightclub in Los Angeles, California. In 2003, after appearing on Chi Chi LaRue's internet sex site Live And Raw, Eddie signed an exclusive contract with her studio, Rascal Video.[1] He starred in fourteen movies for Rascal from 2003–2005, most notably When in Rome, Stone Fox, Eddie Stone's Private Screening, Set in Stone, Master of the House, and Little Big League 2: Second Inning, which he also wrote. A GayVN and Grabby nominated screenwriter, Stone also penned Sharp & Unknown: Ghost of a Chance for Rascal Video.[2]
During his time with Rascal, he appeared on the cover of several gay porn magazines: XXXShowcase, [2], the limited edition Rascal magazine, and Unzipped. He also appeared in the erotic coffeetable book Warning! [3]
In 2004, he embarked on a European tour to promote the Live And Raw book, visiting eight cities, including Berlin, Paris, Vienna, and Zurich. He has traveled coast to coast doing live appearances and has been interviewed in magazines, on Jason Sechrest's "The Young & the Curious" radio show, and on QTV. Eddie Stone's porn fame and good looks have led to mainstream modeling jobs for magazines such as GQ, i-D (London), and Paper (New York City).
A sensfirm dildo has been cast from Stone's penis. In 2005, he won the "Best Newcomer" award at the Adult Video News GAYVN Awards [4](March) and at the Grabby Awards (May). No longer with Rascal, but with no plans of retiring, Eddie Stone was, and still is, one of Chi Chi LaRue's most popular exclusive performers.
Eddie's real name is Patrick Marano.[5] He was previously the midday host on the world's first gay and lesbian commercial radio station, 103.9 Proud FM in Toronto, Ontario.
He is in a relationship with journalist Shaun Proulx.[5]
Contents
[hide]
* 1 Selected videography
* 2 See also
* 3 References
* 4 External links
[edit] Selected videography
* Workload (JetSetMen, March 2007)
* The Stone Age (Eon Films, 2007)
* Bolt (Rascal Video, 2004)
* Deceived (Rascal Video, 2005)
* Eddie Stone's Private Screening (Rascal Video, 2005)
* Hole Patrol (Rascal Video, 2004)
Awards
Preceded by
Jason Ridge GayVN Awards for Best Newcomer
2005 Succeeded by
Roman Heart
Drum (American magazine)
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DRUM
DRUM issue 27, October 1967
Editor Clark Polak
Categories News, Erotica
Frequency Monthly
Circulation 10,000
Publisher Janus Society
First issue 1964
Final issue 1967
Country USA
Based in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Language English
Drum (corporately styled DRUM) was an American LGBT-interest magazine based in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Published monthly beginning in 1964 by the homophile activist group the Janus Society and edited by Clark Polak, Drum took its title from a quote by Henry David Thoreau: "If a man does not keep pace with his companions, perhaps it is because he hears the beat of a different drummer."[1]
Drum differed from earlier homophile magazines in that it included a combination of news and erotica. In December 1965, Drum published the first full-frontal male nude pictorial in an American magazine.[2] DRUM also took a more militant editorial and political stance than other publications of the day. This combination quickly led to a monthly circulation of 10,000, the largest circulation to date for any magazine of its kind.[3]
In 1967, a federal grand jury indicted Drum editor Polak on 18 counts of publishing and distributing obscene material. In exchange for avoiding a prison sentence, Polak agreed to cease publishing Drum and relocate from Philadelphia to Los Angeles.[4]
Cuckold
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Cuckold is a historically derogatory term for a man who has an unfaithful wife. The word, which has been in recorded use since the 13th century, derives from the cuckoo bird, some varieties of which lay their eggs in other birds' nests. [1]
In modern usage, a cuckold can also mean a male fetishist who gains sexual gratification from his partner having intercourse with other people.
Contents
[hide]
* 1 History of the term
* 2 Metaphor and symbolism
* 3 Cultural usage of horn metaphor
* 4 Cuckoldry as a fetish
o 4.1 Theories in psychology
o 4.2 Theories in evolutionary psychology
* 5 See also
* 6 References
[edit] History of the term
Ca. 1815 French satire on cuckoldry, which shows both men and women wearing horns
Cuckold is derived from an Old French word that compounded coucou (cuckoo), with the pejorative suffix -old. The earliest written use of the Middle English derivation, cokewold, occurs in 1250, written by Jesse Conklin. The females of certain varieties of cuckoo lay their eggs in other bird’s nests, freeing themselves from the need to nurture the eggs to hatching by tricking another bird into doing so. Since the cuckold cannot be certain of his parentage of the children he is raising, he is said to be like the cuckoo. The female equivalent cuckquean first appears in English literature in 1562, adding a female suffix to the "cuck"; Wittol, which substitutes "wete" (meaning witting or knowing) for the first part of the word, first appears in 1520 and means a man aware of and reconciled to his wife's infidelity (in contrast to a cuckold, who by definition has been deceived by his wife).
[edit] Metaphor and symbolism
In Western traditions, cuckolds have sometimes been described as "wearing the horns of a cuckold" or just "wearing the horns". This is an allusion to the mating habits of stags, who forfeit their mates when they are defeated by another male.[2] (See the Italian insult cornuto). In French, the term is porter des cornes, which is used by Molière to describe someone whose consort has been unfaithful. Molière's L'École des femmes (1662) is the story of a man who mocks cuckolds and becomes one at the end. In Geoffrey Chaucer's Canterbury Tales (c.1372-77), the Miller's Tale is a story that humorously examines the life of a cuckold. In Chinese usage, an altogether different allusion is used, when the cuckold (or wittol) is said to be "????" (wearing the green hat), which derives from the sumptuary laws used in China from the 13th to the 18th century which required the males in households with prostitutes to wrap their heads in a green scarf (or later a hat).[3]
[edit] Cultural usage of horn metaphor
In many countries "horns" are a metaphor for suffering the infidelity of a partner, not limited to husbands in modern usage. The gesture of the horned hand can be used to insult the cuckold.[citation needed]
In Vietnamese, the word "b? c?m s?ng" ("get attached with a horn") is used.
In Croatian and Serbian, the word "rogonja" has a similar meaning ("horned one"), and the phrase used is "nabiti rogove" ("to put horns on somebody").
In Czech and Slovak languages, the word "parohác" ("antlered one") is used, along with the phrase "nasadit parohy" ("nasadit parohy" in Slovak) — "to put antlers on somebody".
In Estonian the phrase is "sarvi tegema" ("to make antlers to somebody").
In Greek, the term is "?e?at??" meaning "horned one".
In Hungarian, the term is "felszarvazni", meaning "to put horns (on somebody)".
The Italian equivalent is cornuto, sharing the same double entendre with the English word cornuted, asserting both featuring horns and cuckolded. Its use is playful and lightheartedly derisive, with little or no particular efficacy in scorning someone during confrontations as it is lacking earnest damning credentials, potentially leading all parties to a chuckle and smothering the feud at its inception. A pervasive metaphor parodies the use of cornuto to great effect: il bue che dà del cornuto all'asino, meaning the ox labelling the donkey cornute, equivalent to pot calling the kettle black.[citation needed]
In Polish, the word "rogacz" ("horned one") is used, along with the phrase "przyprawiac rogi" ("to put horns on somebody").
In Portuguese, the terms corno ("horn") and cornudo or chifrudo ("horned") are used to spite or mock the cheated male partner. The expression corno manso ("tame horned") is used to indicate those men who, although cheated by their partners, come to accept it as a fact of their lives.
In Romanian, is încornorat, meaning "wearing horns".
In Russian, the word used is ????????? ("rogonosets"), literally "one who carries horns", and the act of being unfaithful is termed ????????? ???? ("nastavit' roga", lit. "to attach horns" [to smb]).
In Serbian, the word is ?????? (rogonja, "rogonya"), literally "one who carries horns", and the act of being unfaithful is termed ?????? ?????? ("nabiti rogove", lit. "to attach horns" [to smb]).
The Spanish word cornudo is used in some areas to describe a male partner whose female partner is sexually unfaithful. The word cabrón which means "male goat" is also used to indicate those men who, although cheated by their partners, come to accept it as a fact of their lives.
In Trinidad and Tobago and also Grenada, the term "horn" is used in conjunction with cuckolds, or anyone of either sex who has a cheating spouse. Other uses include "to horn" (to sleep with someone else's spouse), "horning" (the act of cheating on your spouse), "horner-man" (a man who is sleeping with someone else's spouse) and "horner-woman" (a woman who is sleeping with someone else's spouse), "to get horn", "to take (a) horn". It is usually used in a pejorative sense. Numerous calypsoes have been written about the topic; the most famous being "Horn Me Sandra" by the calypsonian known as Lord Kitchener.
This horn analogy extends to Turkey, where the cuckolded husband is termed boynuzlu, "horned one". But it also includes the females that are cheated on.
[edit] Cuckoldry as a fetish
A cuckold fetishist is aware of the spouse's activity and derives sexual pleasure from it.[4] This knowledge and tolerance of the spouse's activities makes the person in such relationships a wittol, properly speaking. But among fetishists the pose of reluctance—the victimization of the cuckold—is a major element of the kink so the more familiar word is used. In the fetish cuckolding subculture, the female is typically sexually dominant, while the man takes on a submissive role, only becoming involved with her or her lover when she permits it—sometimes remaining altogether celibate. Other arrangements are certainly possible, however, as wives can have husbands who take female lovers with their full knowledge.[5]
The wife who enjoys cuckolding her husband is sometimes referred to as a hotwife, a cuckquean,[6] or (rarely) cuckoldress.[7]
[edit] Theories in psychology
Psychology regards cuckold fetishism as a variant of masochism. In Freudian analysis, cuckold fetishism is the eroticization of the fears of infidelity and of failure in the male competition for procreation and the affection of females. In his book Masochism and the Self, psychologist Roy Baumeister advanced a Self Theory analysis that cuckolding (and other forms of sexual masochism) among otherwise mentally healthy people was a form of escapism. In this theory, cuckold fetishists are relieving themselves of the stress by relieving themselves of the burden of their social role and escaping into a simpler, less-expansive position.
[edit] Theories in evolutionary psychology
In his book Sperm Wars, biologist Robin Baker speculated that the excitement and stimulation of the cuckolding fetish emerges from the biology of sexuality and the effects of sexual arousal on the brain. According to his theory, when a man believes that his female mate may have been sexual with another man, the man mate is prompted by biological urges to copulate with the female, in an effort to "compete" with the other man's sperm. The effects of sperm competition are well documented.[8] Further, when initiating sex, the man mate thrusts harder, deeper and longer, in efforts to remove the sperm of the other man and is biologically driven to have sex multiple times. While he may be unable to have sex more than once under usual circumstances, the cuckolded man is prone to repeated sexual efforts. Meanwhile, the wife enjoys greater sexual stimulation, first by her other lover and second by her cuckolded husband. In addition, the wife enjoys the neurochemical "highs" triggered by entering into a romantic or physical relationship with another lover. These highs include the effects of oxytocin, other neurochemicals which trigger excitement, euphoria and other feelings common to the beginnings of romantic relationships. The effect from this gives the female a natural high, which can offset the negative physical symptoms like body pain, headache, and anxiety. These neurochemicals change over time and as a relationship persists, with neurochemicals changing to ones that promote bonding, planning and nurturing. When a new lover is taken, it triggers the neurochemicals of a new relationship, bringing home excitement to her husband.[9]
The above exposition conflicts with the hypothesized foundations for jealousy in evolutionary psychology, which is rooted in the idea that men specifically will react jealously to sexual infidelity on the parts of their mates.[10]
Crotch rope
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A knotted crotch-rope to stimulate the clitoris.
A clothed woman wearing a traditional crotch-rope.
A crotch rope (also known as Matanawa or Sakura[1] in Japanese bondage) is a bondage technique which involves the tying of rope around a woman's waist which is then passed between the labia to apply painful or pleasurable pressure to the female genitals. Crotch rope most commonly uses rope, but webbing, straps or a harness may also be used.
A crotch rope may be tied over clothing or directly onto the skin, and can be worn under clothing or in full view. While crotch ropes are most commonly intended for women, specific variations exist for males.
A crotch rope can also be used as an unsophisticated type of chastity belt.
Contents
[hide]
* 1 Usage
* 2 Variations
* 3 Combination with other techniques
* 4 See also
* 5 References
* 6 External links
[edit] Usage
Typically, the ropes pass between the labia majora[2] or deeper through the cleft of the vulva. Knots can be tied in the rope to apply specific pressure to the anus or clitoris.[3] It's usually fixed in place by tying it to a rope around the waist just above the hips or by tying the two ends to another fixture. It is also used in BDSM activities especially on female submissives most commonly as a part of tease and denial.
[edit] Variations
Two ropes passing between the groins on either side of the labia may be used instead of the center rope or in addition to it. In the latter case the ropes will press the labia against the center rope for additional pain/discomfort. For abrasion play if the rope is not tied to the waist it can be moved forward and backward between the labia or the subject can be made to walk across it.
The ropes may be wrapped tightly around waist and tied off in front, fed down across the genitals, then pulled back up behind and tied to other cords wrapped around the wrists, doubling as a cinch to tighten them further. This allows the rope bound person some ability to vary pressure on the genitals (often causing sexual stimulation) at the cost of reduced freedom of movement. If such a cord is pulled extremely tight the wrists and arms will have very little freedom of movement and the hands will be firmly forced in contact with the butt, particularly when combined with Elbow Bondage.
A historic illustration.
[edit] Combination with other techniques
Combination breast, elbow, and wrist bondage with crotch rope
Sometimes, a crotch rope is combined with other bondage techniques, such as breast bondage or elbow bondage.
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