Vengeance Can Wait Movie


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It Is Continued


It Is Continued

Author: Ashok Pant

language: en

Publisher: iUniverse

Release Date: 2003-03-03


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If religion says that the interpretation of the religious books is right then unnecessarily Allaha wasted his time to create women like men. Then only three organs should have been needed to create a woman by attaching them together and making a piece of loath. Her breast, genital organ and womb. What is the use of putting legs on a woman's body when she is not permitted to take a step with her own desire? What is the use of putting eyes on her body when your society keeps a Burka on that? What is the use of a heart when her feelings and emotions are suppressed in molesting her making the wrinkles on bed sheets during intercourse? What is the use of a brain when society does not permit her to have her own reasoning? What is the use of tongue, as speaking truth is the biggest crime in Islam? *****If Allaha does not reside in human beings then where does he lives. Who is he and where is that supreme power Allaha. Why does he authorize a few religious people to play with his creation under their own distorted religious laws behind pseudo beliefs? Why doesn't he interfere now, in the worst condition of his creation? Why doesn't he send a new prophet, who may reinterpret Qur'an? He can't send a new prophet, as he knows that to reinterpret religion and remove the black shade of imposed, prejudiced and biased laws, is not possible now for a single prophet.

Writing Desire


Writing Desire

Author: Bertram Cohler

language: en

Publisher: Univ of Wisconsin Press

Release Date: 2007-05-15


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Exploring nearly sixty years of memoir and autobiography, Writing Desire examines the changing identity of gay men writing within a historical context. Distinguished scholar and psychoanalyst Bertram J. Cohler has carefully selected a diverse group of ten men, including historians, activists, journalists, poets, performance artists, and bloggers, whose life writing evokes the evolution of gay life in twentieth-century America. By contrasting the personal experience of these disparate writers, Cohler illustrates the social transformations that these men helped shape. Among Cohler's diverse subjects is Alan Helms, whose journey from Indiana to New York's gay society represents the passage of men who came of age in the 1950s and 1960s, when homosexuality was considered a hidden "disease." The liberating effects of Stonewall's aftermath are chronicled in the life of Arnie Kantrowitz, the prototypical activist for gay rights in the 1970s and the founder the Gay and Lesbian Alliance against Defamation. The artistic works of Tim Miller and Mark Doty evoke loss and shock during of the early stages of the AIDS epidemic in the 1980s. Cohler rounds out this collective group portrait by looking at the newest generation of writers in the Internet age via the blog of BrYaN, who did the previously unthinkable: he "outed" himself to millions of people. A compelling mix of social history and personal biography, Writing Desire distills the experience of three generations of gay America. Finalist, LGBT Studies, Lambda Literary Foundation

I Will Find You


I Will Find You

Author: Joanna Connors

language: en

Publisher: Open Road + Grove/Atlantic

Release Date: 2016-04-05


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The journalist’s “brutally affecting [and] powerful” memoir of her quest to uncover the life of the man who raped her twenty-one years earlier (Guardian, UK). Joanna Connors was thirty years old and on assignment for the Cleveland Plain Dealer to review a college theater production when she was held at knifepoint and raped by a stranger who had grown up five miles away from her. Once her assailant was caught and sentenced, Joanna never spoke of the trauma again . . . until her daughter was about to go to college. Resolving to tell her children about her rape, Connors began to realize that the man who assaulted her was one of the most formative people in her life. She embarked on a journey to find out who he was, who his friends were, and what his life was like. What she discovers stretches beyond one violent man’s story and back into her own, interweaving a narrative about strength and survival with one about rape culture and violence in America. I Will Find You is a “deeply humane and harrowing” memoir, as well as a brave and timely consideration of race, class, education, and the families that shape who we become (Boston Globe).