Nous les homosexuels ont souffrent trop dans ce monde 💔
Quant'est ce que vous allez nous laisser vivre en paix ?
Quant est ce que vous allez comprendre que l'homosexualité c'est pas de la perversion mais l'amour entre 2 personne de même sexe 🥹
#LGBTQ+,Gay, Homosexuel, Senegal
L'artiste chinois Ren Hang (1987-2017) a bousculé les codes de la photographie contemporaine. Ses clichés de nus, à la fois graphiques, provocants et d'une immense sensibilité, défiaient la censure pour célébrer la beauté brute des corps et de la nature. Un génie parti trop tôt.
Entrer dans l'univers d'Edward Burne-Jones, c'est accepter de se perdre dans un rêve éveillé. Le maître #préraphaélite a réinventé les mythes anciens avec une grâce et une intensité dramatique uniques. Une peinture de l'âme, tout en drapés et en regards hypnotiques.
#BeauxArts
Allen Ginsberg (b. 3 June 1926) was a visionary American poet, writer, and cultural icon who served as a leading force of the Beat Generation. Born exactly 100 years ago this month, with his raw, unfiltered, and deeply personal verse, he aggressively challenged the conformity and materialism of post-World War II America.
He is best known for his epic masterpiece "Howl" (1956) and the subsequent 1957 obscenity trial which attracted widespread publicity due to the poem's language and descriptions of homosexual sex at a time when sodomy laws made male-with-male sex a crime in every state. Judge Clayton W. Horn’s ruling that "Howl" was not obscene, asking – "Would there be any freedom of press or speech if one must reduce his vocabulary to vapid innocuous euphemisms?" – became a massive victory for American free speech.
Ginsberg was born into a Jewish family in Newark, New Jersey, and grew up in nearby Paterson. In 1943, he graduated from Eastside High School and briefly attended Montclair State College before entering Columbia University. In 1945, he joined the Merchant Marine to earn money to continue his studies and graduated from Columbia in 1948 with a B.A. in English and American Literature.
While at Columbia, Ginsberg met Lucien Carr (a fellow student later convicted of manslaughter for the murder of his “homosexual” stalker, David Kammerer – a fascinating story in and of itself) who introduced him to the 19th century French poet, Arthur Rimbaud (who would become a major influence on Ginsberg's own writing). Carr also introduced him to Jack Kerouac, Gregory Corso, William S. Burroughs, and later Neal Cassady, creating an artistic brotherhood built on spontaneous prose, jazz rhythms, and spiritual exploration that rejected the cultural conformity of America post-World War II. And the Beats were formed.
While Ginsberg maintained a highly influential, deeply complex creative bond with Cassady, after moving to San Francisco during the early 1950s, in ‘54 he met the poet and actor, Peter Orlovsky, who would remain his lifelong partner.
Although Ginsberg never claimed to be the leader of the Beat Generation, he was considered by many to be its visionary father, creating friction among the group and causing Kerouac and Burroughs to disassociate themselves from the name and the movement. Later in his life, Ginsberg formed a bridge between the beat movement of the 1950s and the hippies of the 1960s, befriending, among others, Timothy Leary, Ken Kesey, Hunter S. Thompson, and Bob Dylan.
Ginsberg gave his last public poetry reading at Booksmith, a bookstore in the Haight-Ashbury neighborhood of San Francisco, a few months before succumbing to liver cancer at the age of 70 in Manhattan on April 5, 1997.
To quote the Allen Ginsberg Project – “Allen was an outspoken voice for human rights, gay liberation, freedom of speech and ecology. The most politically engaged poet of the 20th century, he protested against the Vietnam War, nuclear weapons, sexual repression, censorship, corporate abuses, draconian drug laws, the FBI and the CIA, and spoke out for a new vision of peaceful coexistence that helped define the ideals of the 1960s and beyond.” That is his legacy.
Deux supporters de @AthleticClub s'embrassent dans les tribunes. Ils deviennent la cible de messages homophobes.
Le club ne regarde pas ailleurs : il les invite à témoigner devant ses jeunes joueurs.
Face à la haine, l'éducation reste notre meilleure réponse 🌈⚽