The So Called Same-Sex Marriage, Sweet But The Most Horrific Enemy
by Hea Sook Son
'It’s Nice to Be Heard'
Trans Artists have been creating work for longer than we can even imagine, and now we're finally starting to recognise the impact and import of their work. This collection brings together a range of voices, both established and emerging, to showcase just a drop in the ocean of incredible Trans Talent out there. From rom coms and fantasy to feisty political monologues, this collection of plays has it all. Join us on a journey through the imaginations of some of the best playwrights alive today,...
In Beethoven's Kiss, Kevin Kopelson takes you on a journey through a unique literary style which is both scholarly and meditative. It interweaves the issues of gender, sexuality and erotic romanticism and presents them against the backdrop of romantic pianism. Exploring quasi-sexual myths of the nineteenth century, Beethoven's Kiss takes a long look at the origin and consequences of those myths.
In this chronicle of political awakening and queer solidarity, the activist and novelist Sarah Schulman describes her dawning consciousness of the Palestinian liberation struggle. Invited to Israel to give the keynote address at an LGBT studies conference at Tel Aviv University, Schulman declines, joining other artists and academics honoring the Palestinian call for an academic and cultural boycott of Israel. Anti-occupation activists in the United States, Canada, Israel, and Palestine come toge...
LOOK WHAT'S HAPPENED TO PIXIE DE COSTA! is the tragic tale of the De Costa Sisters; gracious, loving and talented Margot and the train wreck that IS Pixie De Costa! Their story beigins witht eh De Costa Family's Vaudeville act circa 1912, and travels forward in time to 1932, the height of the sisters' Movie Fame! But a horrible accident cuts the De Costa's assent short, and sends them spiralling downward into the pitch black abyss of evil! Today, it is 1957 and Margot and Pixie find themselves...
Same Sex Partnerships
Scrutinizing the weave and texture of Walt Whitman's earliest poetry and fiction, the notebooks of 1845-54, the first edition (1855) of Leaves of Grass, and the Calamus poems, Byrne R. S. Fone demonstrates that from the beginning and throughout, Whitman's homoerotic muse, his "Fierce Wrestler, " dictated the shape, tone, and message of the poetry. In this first full-length study of homosexual textuality--the homosexual text, the homosexual tradition--and Walt Whitman's central place within that...
"Are girls necessary?" asks Julie Abraham in this provocative study of 20th-century lesbian writing. Examining the development of lesbian writing in English across the 20th Century, Abraham identifies a shift from this "romance" model to a more complicated "history" model. The great modernists, Woolf and Stein, as well as the popular writers of succeeding generations, like Mary Renault, looked to historical narratives, creating an important change in the way the "lesbian story" is built....
Sci-Fi "what if" speculating that through the galaxy all humans are artificially modified? This is the fourth book of Allon Sci-fi. What would humanity do in a billion years given rapid growth in technology we see, in a universe 13 billion years old? Are they here now? Alien machines made of molecules and work with flesh as if molding clay? An individual living for thousands of years has mellowed, not bothered by Gay affection. Immortal living still protects body health perhaps even more. Anger...