Related:
Ásatrú,
Alyson Publications,
Anti-establishment,
Arthur Evans,
Ashram,
Baltic Neopaganism,
Beacon Press,
Benson, Arizona,
Breitenbush Hot Springs,
Celtic Neopaganism,
Celtic Reconstructionist Paganism,
Church of All Worlds,
Commercialization,
Counterculture,
Covenant of Unitarian Universalist Pagans,
Dievturība,
Eco-feminism,
Ecological,
Environmentally sustainable,
Federation of Damanhur,
Feraferia,
Finnish Neopaganism,
Folk religion,
Gay,
Gay liberation,
Gay rights,
Gender,
Genderqueer,
Germanic Neopaganism,
Harry Hay,
Hellenic Polytheistic Reconstructionism,
Heterosexual,
Hippie,
Homosexuality and Neopaganism,
Imitation,
International Standard Book Number,
Jewitchery,
John Burnside (inventor),
John Cameron Mitchell,
Kemetism,
LGBT,
LGBT rights,
Labor Day,
List of Neo-Pagan festivals and events,
List of Neopagan movements,
Mark Thompson (disambiguation),
Mitch Walker,
Neo-druidism,
Neo-paganism in Ireland,
Neo-völkisch movements,
Neopaganism,
Neopaganism in German-speaking Europe,
Neopaganism in Greece,
Neopaganism in Hungary,
Neopaganism in Latin Europe,
Neopaganism in Scandinavia,
Neopaganism in the United Kingdom,
Neopaganism in the United States,
Neoshamanism,
Orthopraxis,
Pagan,
Pagan Pride,
Paganism,
Pantheism,
Patriarchal,
Polytheism,
Polytheistic reconstructionism,
Queer,
Radical Faeries,
Religious discrimination against Neopagans,
Rituals,
Rodnovery,
Roman polytheistic reconstructionism,
Romuva (church),
Rural,
Semitic Neopaganism,
Sexual orientation,
Shortbus,
Slavic Neopaganism,
Spirituality,
Technologies,
Technopaganism,
The Advocate,
Theodism,
Urglaawe,
White Crane (magazine),
White Crane Journal,
Wicca,
Radical faeries (also faeries and faes) are a loosely affiliated worldwide network of queer people seeking to "reject hetero-imitation" and redefine gay identity; many are also pagans or members of counterculture movements. The Radical Faerie movement started in the United States among gay men during the 1970s sexual revolution.[1][dead link] The Faeries trace the origin of their movement's name to a "Spiritual Conference for Radical Faeries" called in 1979 by Harry Hay, John Burnside, and Don Kilhefner in Benson, Arizona.
Germanic Neopaganism (also known as Heathenism or Heathenry, Ásatrú, Odinism, Forn Siðr, Vor Siðr, and Theodism) is the modern revival of historical Germanic paganism. Precursor movements appeared in the early 20th century in Germany and Austria. A second wave of revival began in the early 1970s.
Alyson Books, formerly known as Alyson Publications, is a book publishing house which specialises in LGBT fiction and non-fiction. Publisher Don Weise markets it as "the world's oldest and largest publisher of LGBT literature" and "the home of award-winning books in the areas of memoir, history, humor, commercial fiction, mystery, and erotica, among many others".[1]
An anti-establishment view or belief is one which stands in opposition to the conventional social, political, and economic principles of a society. The term was first used in the modern sense in 1958, by the British magazine New Statesman to refer to its political and social agenda.[1] The term can be distinguished from counterculture, a word normally used to describe artistic rather than political movements that run against the prevailing taste and values of the time.[citation needed]Sir Arthur John Evans (8 July 1851 – 11 July 1941) was a British archaeologist most famous for unearthing the palace of Knossos on the Greek island of Crete at Kephala Hill and for developing the concept of Minoan civilization from the structures and artifacts there and elsewhere in Crete and the eastern Mediterranean. Evans was the first to define Cretan scripts Linear A and Linear B as well as an earlier pictographic writing.
Traditionally, an ashram (Sanskrit/Hindi: आश्रम) is a religious hermitage. Additionally, today the term ashram often denotes a locus of Indian cultural activity such as yoga, music study or religious instruction, the moral equivalent of a studio or dojo.The Baltic countries were the last part of Europe to be Christianized, and vestiges of paganism blend into a Neopaganism movement that is largely independent of Western Asatru.Beacon Press is an American non-profit book publisher. Founded in 1854 by the American Unitarian Association, it is currently a department of the Unitarian Universalist Association.[1]