Home
header36.gif
Newsflash
Queertography!

We at Dramanonymous.com value your time. Mainly, we value the time you waste. We want you to waste it with us. To aid you in avoiding the work you should be doing, Dramanonymous introduces a new photography theme every other week to inspire you to pick up your camera and go exploring. When you're done, share your photos with us on our message boards!

Everyone from budding photographers to seasoned professionals is encouraged to participate. It doesn't matter if your camera is a digital SLR worth more than most people's cars or a simple camera phone. Let's see those photos! Maybe you’ll learn some new photography skills. Certainly you’ll earn praise from your fellow board members. You might even win prizes for your photographs! We hope it serves as a nice distraction from the tediousness of the day. It's not much, but it's better than what you're supposed to be doing. 

The newest Queertography theme is "Best Shots". We've all taken a photo that has touched us in some way, whether it be exceptionally technically proficient, a perfect moment caught in time or a photo that best expresses who we are. Share your favorite photos with us on our message boards!

Lensbians! Grab your cameras and show us your best shots!

 

 

'Where's the anger, the feeling, the fire?'
Written by Denise Sheppard   
Monday, 23 June 2008
lesbian blog:lesbian message boardDepending on who you are and where you come from, the term "lesbian music" likely conjures up one of two images.

The first, a peaceful roomful of queer women with acoustic guitars singing about love, collective empowerment and community.

For others, the idea of lesbian music might bring to mind the image of womyn/wimmin/women with mullet haircuts and plaid jackets singing outdated folk songs on their acoustic guitars, holding each other tight while crying and singing about wombs and waterfalls.

One thing is for certain: lesbian music has — since its initial heyday in the '70s — gained its place in history as groundbreaking, magical and inspirational to many.

Today, queer women generally don't have much more than a historically fuzzy perspective on that period, much less a sense of the depth and breadth of its significance. Yet many of the reasons that contemporary musicians are free to be out and proud are because of those lesbian foot soldiers of yesteryear.

Young queer musicians and music industry folks often deem landmark artists, ranging from Cris Williamson and Ferron (who broke ground in the '70s) to the Indigo Girls and Melissa Etheridge in the acoustic revival of the '90s, as "too out" or "too gay" — in spite of their accomplishments.

For many 20-something recording artists, the fight for freedom appears to be over, and as a result, the need to queer-identify in one's lyrics or to the press seems to them to be a step back — a blinkered approach to their craft that doesn't begin to describe who they are at their core.
Read more...
Because I said so!
Written by Darby Blue   
Sunday, 18 May 2008
lesbian blog:lesbian message boardDo as I say, not as I do.  Whoever first said it, I’m sure she was somebody’s mother.  Sometimes it seems like one of the primary tenets of parenting survival.  Other times, it stinks of double standards, hypocrisy, and the head-in-the-quicksand approach to parenting - the "if I just assume my children’s lives aren’t as complex as mine, this will all be easier" route.  Sometimes it is a reasonable solution.  Stretching an allowance to cover new Pokemon cards and a candy bar is not the same as budgeting a mortgage, utilities, and putting groceries on the table.  But what am I really saying when I deny my daughter the extra dollar she needs, give the lecture on not spending money you don’t have, and then whip out the plastic at the checkout?  Where’s that line?
Read more...
Girls Rock!
Written by Maggie Weller   
Monday, 03 March 2008

lesbian blog:lesbian message boardFive days, over one hundred teenage girls, one goal: be yourself. Not the self your parents hope you’ll be. Not the self your siblings and friends bully you into being. Not the self who mimics those girls you publicly hate but secretly admire because everyone looks at them. Be the real you - the you that ROCKS. This goal is the driving force behind the Rock ‘n’ Roll Camp for Girls and the basis of the new documentary, Girls Rock!

The Riot Grrl movement in the early 1990s tapped into the raw musical talent and intense energy so many women had been taught to hide and deny. But with every cultural movement comes backlash. For the Riot Grrl movement, it came in the form of vacuous pop music icons with glossy lips, bare midriffs and pigtails, dancing suggestively while singing along to pre-recorded voice tracks.  Clearly, it’s time to re-empower young women.

Read more...
<< Start < Previous 1 2 3 4 Next > End >>

The next president will be...