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#ryken
cocomuffy · 1 year
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it's the lack of acknowledgement of ryan from the hit tv show "barbie life in the dreamhouse" (2012) for me.
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know your actual barbie lore.
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calebyap · 2 years
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The Christian life is a combination of amnesia and deja-vu in which we keep learning that which we keep forgetting.
Phil Ryken, quoting historian Clair Davis.
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froody · 1 year
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Cis people marginalized and fetishized trans people so much that many of us had no choice but to turn to the sex industry to support ourselves and now that we’ve began to crawl out from the shadows, they tell us we’re too sexual in nature, too perverse a creation to be allowed near children, too lascivious to even be allowed to use a public bathroom.
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yther · 2 months
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ya. getting scammed online is starting to piss me off. you know who you are. pony the fuck up, bitch.
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lilium-dragomir · 1 year
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To be holy is to be set apart in purity. It is to be separated from what is common and ordinary in order to be devoted to God’s service. Whatever is holy is distinguished from the secular and dedicated to the sacred.
Philip Graham Ryken
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stairs-feooff · 2 years
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As a medievalist. Cishet people don’t think about Joan of Arc that much
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judgingbooksbycovers · 5 months
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Beauty Is Your Destiny: How the Promise of Splendor Changes Everything
By Philip Graham Ryken.
Design by Tim Green.
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enthusiasticallydawn · 6 months
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Beauty Is Your Destiny By Philip Ryken
I am bringing you a book review today on the theme of beauty. Beauty is a topic I have identified as one with which I am completely enamored. The subject of beauty is one that I have been pondering in an ever deeper way since youth. That could be a whole other blog post, and I don’t want to wander far from the path of this book today, because I assure you it is a short but thoroughly packed with…
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oh-dear-so-queer · 7 months
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Some people born as men lived as women and undertook women's work. A woman calling herself Eleanor was arrested in 1395 and accused of 'detestable unmentionable and ignominious vice' with a man.
"Normal Women: 900 Years of Making History" - Philippa Gregory
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gospelborn · 9 months
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The Elixir by George Herbert
Teach me, my God and King, In all things Thee to see, And what I do in anything To do it as for Thee. Not rudely, as a beast, To run into an action; But still to make Thee prepossest, And give it his perfection. A man that looks on glass, On it may stay his eye; Or if he pleaseth, through it pass, And then the heav'n espy. All may of Thee partake: Nothing can be so mean, Which with his…
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queerism1969 · 2 months
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Notable transgender people from history
Here's the list I put together for when people on non-trans subreddits claim we didn't exist until recently:
Ashurbanipal (669-631BCE) - King of the Neo-Assryian empire, who according to Diodorus Siculus is reported to have dressed, behaved, and socialized as a woman.
Elagabalus (204-222) - Roman Emperor who preferred to be called a lady and not a lord, presented as a woman, called herself her lover's queen and wife, and offered vast sums of money to any doctor able to make her anatomically female.
Kalonymus ben Kalonymus (1286-1328) - French Jewish philosopher who wrote poetry about longing to be a woman.
Eleanor Rykener (14th century) - trans woman in London who was questioned under charges of sex work
[Thomas(ine) Hall](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas(ine)_Hall) - (1603-unknown) - English servant in colonial Virginia who alternated between presenting as a woman and presenting as a man, before a court ruled that they were both a man and a woman simultaneously, and were required to wear both men's and women's clothing simultaneously.
Chevalier d'Eon (1728-1810) - French diplomat, spy, freemason, and soldier who fought in the Seven Years' War, who transitioned at the age of 49 and lived the remaining 33 years of her life as a woman.
Public Universal Friend (1752-1819) - Quaker religious leader in revolutionary era America who identified and lived as androgynous and genderless.
Surgeon James Barry (1789-1865) - Trans man and military surgeon in the British army.
Berel - a Jewish trans man who transitioned in a shtetel in Ukraine in the 1800's, and whose story was shared with the Jewish Daily Forward in a 1930 letter to the editor by Yeshaye Kotofsky, a Jewish immigrant in Brooklyn who knew Berel
Mary Jones (1803-unknown) - trans woman in New York whose 1836 trial for stealing a man's wallet received much public attention
Albert Cashier (1843-1915) - Trans man who served in the US Civil War.
Harry Allen (1882-1922) - Trans man who was the subject of sensationalistic newspaper coverage for his string of petty crimes.
Lucy Hicks Anderson (1886–1954) - socialite, chef and hostess in Oxnard California, whose family and doctors supported her transition at a young age.
Lili Elbe (1882-1931) - Trans woman who underwent surgery in 1930 with Dr. Magnus Hirschfeld, who ran one of the first dedicated medical facilities for trans patients.
Karl M. Baer (1885-1956) - Trans man who underwent reconstructive surgery (the details of which are not known) in 1906, and was legally recognized as male in Germany in 1907.
Dr. Alan Hart (1890-1962) - Groundbreaking radiologist who pioneered the use of x-ray photography in tuberculosis detection, and in 1917 he became one of the first trans men to undergo hysterectomy and gonadectomy in the US.
[Louise Lawrence](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louise_Lawrence_(activist)) (1912–1976) - trans activist, artist, writer and lecturer, who transitioned in the early 1940's. She struck up a correspondence with the groundbreaking sexologist Dr. Alfred Kinsey as he worked to understand sex and gender in a more expansive way. She wrote up life histories of her acquaintances for Kinsey, encouraged peers to do interviews with him, and sent him a collection of newspaper clippings, photographs, personal correspondences, etc.
Dr. Michael Dillon (1915-1962) - British physician who updated his birth certificate to Male in the early 1940's, and in 1946 became the first trans man to undergo phalloplasty.
Reed Erickson (1917-1992) - trans man whose philanthropic work contributed millions of dollars to the early LGBTQ rights movement
Willmer "Little Ax" Broadnax (1916-1992) - early 20th century gospel quartet singer.
Peter Alexander (unknown, interview 1937) - trans man from New Zealand, discusses his transition in this interview from 1937
Christine Jorgensen (1926-1989) - The first widely known trans woman in the US in 1952, after her surgery attracted media attention.
Miss Major Griffin-Gracy (1940-present) - Feminist, trans rights and gay rights activist who came out and started transition in the late 1950's. She was at Stonewall, was injured and taken into custody, and had her jaw broken by police while in custody. She was the first Executive Director of the Transgender Gender Variant Intersex Justice Project, which works to end human rights abuses against trans/intersex/GNC people in the prison system.
Sylvia Rivera (1951-2002) - Gay liberation and trans rights pioneer and community worker in NYC; co-founded STAR, a group dedicated to helping homeless young drag queens, gay youth, and trans women
Marsha P. Johnson (1945-1992) - Gay liberation and trans rights pioneer; co-founded STAR with Sylvia Rivera
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lilium-dragomir · 1 year
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makingqueerhistory · 1 year
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Do you have any resources on transgender history? What about drag culture and its origins?
Yes absolutely! Though, it depends a little on what you are looking for, if you are looking for individual stories:
Amelio Robles Ávila
Dana de Milo
Karl M. Baer 
Zinaida Gippius 
Social Men
Jackie Shane
Holly Woodlawn 
Carmen Rupe 
Claude Cahun
Victoria Arellano 
Zdeněk Koubek 
Jeanette Schmid
Lou Sullivan 
Eleanor Rykener 
Coccinelle
Dawn Langley Hall 
Elagabalus
Billy Tipton  
Alan L. Hart 
Maryam Khatoon Molkara
Dwayne Jones
Rita Hester
Sir Ewan Forbes 
Kristina King of Sweden 
Marsha P. Johnson 
As for more overall looks at transgender history here are some books I enjoyed:
Before We Were Trans: A New History of Gender Kit Heyam
We See Each Other: A Black, Trans Journey Through TV and Film Tre'vell Anderson with Angelica Ross
Tomorrow Will Be Different: Love, Loss, and the Fight for Trans Equality Sarah McBride with Joe Biden
Queer Magic: Lgbt+ Spirituality and Culture from Around the World Tomás Prower
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by Douglas Sean O'Donnell and Leland Ryken | Every parable has a connection to the gospel. So, when you preach, don’t moralize (e.g., the point of the parable of the talents is that God rewards hard work; so, work hard!).1 Moreover, because the parables describe various parts of the gospel of the kingdom—the rule of Christ inaugurated in the...
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crossdreamers · 2 years
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New York Times Contributors Say The Newspaper’s Coverage of Transgender People is Unprofessional and Destructive
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A group of more than 170 trans, nonbinary, and cisgender contributors to the New York Times published an open letter on Wednesday, condemning the paper’s coverage of trans issues, Buzzfeed reports.
The letter, which was written in conjunction with the Freelance Solidarity Project, a group of freelance writers in the National Writers Union, was signed by journalists — including current Times staffers — politicians, novelists, and other news media workers. Prominent signatories included Cynthia Nixon, Pennsylvania state Sen. Nikil Saval, and writers like Rebecca Solnit and Jia Tolentino.
The letter — addressed to the associate managing editor for standards, Philip Corbett — draws attention to the last year of coverage in the Times, during which time, the group writes, the paper of record published 15,000 words across its front pages “debating the propriety of medical care for trans children.”
In the letter they put the current policy of the New York Times into a wider context, reminding them that the paper has been on the wrong side of history before:
As thinkers, we are disappointed to see the New York Times follow the lead of far-right hate groups in presenting gender diversity as a new controversy warranting new, punitive legislation. Puberty blockers, hormone replacement therapy, and gender⁠-⁠affirming surgeries have been standard forms of care for cis and trans people alike for decades. 
Legal challenges to gender⁠-⁠nonconformity date back even further, with 34 cities in 21 states passing laws against cross⁠-⁠dressing between 1848 and 1900, usually enforced alongside so-called prohibitions against public indecency that disproportionately targeted immigrants, people of color, sex workers, and other marginalized groups. Such punishments are documented as far back as 1394, when police in England detained Eleanor Rykener on suspicion of the crime of sodomy, exposing her after an interrogation as “John.” This is not a cultural emergency.
You no doubt recall a time in more recent history when it was ordinary to speak of homosexuality as a disease at the American family dinner table—a norm fostered in part by the New York Times’ track record of demonizing queers through the ostensible reporting of science.
In 1963, the New York Times published a front⁠-⁠page story with the title “Growth of Overt Homosexuality in City Provokes Wide Concern,” which stated that homosexuals saw their own sexuality as “an inborn, incurable disease”—one that scientists, the Times announced, now thought could be “cured.” The word “gay” started making its way into the paper. 
Then, in 1975, the Times published an article by Clifford Jahr about a queer cruise (the kind on a boat) featuring a “sadomasochistic fashion show.” On the urging of his shocked mother, Times publisher Arthur Ochs Sulzberger sent down the order: Stop covering these people. The Times style guide was updated to include the following dictum, which stood until 1987: “Do not use gay as a synonym for homosexual unless it appears in the formal, capitalized name of an organization or in quoted matter.”
New York Times have some really good and open minded journalists. It is time the editors made them write about transgender issues, and not the ones trapped in a transphobic mindset.
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