Curve (Female subscribers only) Magazine The Curve (Female subscribers only) Magazine has 8 issues per year. It is presently circulating in the USA and comes with free shipping and handling via regular mail. This publication is also for up to 1 year(s). Subscription to this magazine for a year costs only 29.95 USD, giving readers a great savings of $1.65 (5.22%) the cover cost. Note: This is the best cost given by the publisher. Curve (Female subscribers only) Magazine's initial copy from Health & Fitness Magazines category will be sent in 10 to 16 weeks. If you want to extend your current subscription, MagazineSubscriptions.ws can just combine your purchase to your current account. To make sure that you will not skip any copies of Curve (Female subscribers only) Magazine, it is recommended that you renew your subscription four (4) months earlier the expiry day. Please take note that your subscription will start when you have your initial copy and not when you checkout. You can be sure that the latest magazine copies will be delivered to you as soon as it is available.
Description Curve (Female subscribers only) Magazine is America's best-selling lesbian magazine, and is read by over a quarter million well educated, sophisticated, upwardly mobile gay women. This is a magazine that tackles the tough topics, like Don't Ask, Don't Tell, same-sex marriage and lesbian youth. Each issue profiles gay women who make a difference, such as Melissa Etheridge, Anne Heche, Sinead O'Connor, Kate Clinton, Ellen DeGeneres and Susie Bright.Curve (Female subscribers only) Magazine Homosexuality, sexual orientation toward people of the same sex. Homosexuality contrasts with heterosexuality, sexual orientation toward people of the opposite sex. People with a sexual orientation toward members of both sexes are called bisexuals. Female homosexuals are frequently called lesbians. In recent years, the term gay has been applied to both homosexual men and women. Homosexuality appears in virtually all social contexts - within different community settings, socioeconomic levels, and ethnic and religious groups. The number of homosexuals in the population is difficult to determine, and reliable data do not exist. However, current estimates suggest that the term homosexual may apply to 2 to 4 percent of men. Estimates for lesbians are lower. Not all people who engage in homosexual activity necessarily identify themselves as homosexual. Attitudes toward homosexual behavior have varied with time and place. In ancient Greece, homosexual relations were accepted and, in some cases, expected activity in certain segments of society. Later attitudes toward homosexuality in the Western world were determined largely by prevailing Judeo-Christian moral codes, which treat homosexuality as immoral or sinful. But like many other sins, homosexual relations were seen as expressions of the weakness inherent in all human beings, and not as a mental disorder or as the behavior of a specific type of person. This latter view, which regarded homosexuality as a pathology, developed in the late 19th century. By the beginning of the 20th century, psychoanalysts viewed homosexuals as the victims of faulty development. During the first half of the 20th century, attitudes toward homosexuality were overwhelmingly negative. Homosexual activities were hidden and spoken of only in whispers, and homosexual behavior, even among consenting adults, was a criminal offense in most of the United States. Homosexuals were subject to stereotypes and prejudice. Gay men were viewed as effeminate, lesbians were portrayed as mannish, and both were seen as being obsessed with sex, with little self-control or morality. Homosexuals frequently were thought to be potential child molesters. In the 1930s and during World War II, homosexuals were targets of persecution in Nazi Germany. Prejudices against homosexuals in Western societies have only recently begun to change. The first major shift followed the publication of two famous reports, Sexual Behavior in the Human Male and Sexual Behavior in the Human Female, by American biologist Alfred Charles Kinsey. Kinsey found homosexuals in all walks of life, growing up in all kinds of families, practicing many different religions. As a result of the ensuing scientific discussion, the American Psychiatric Association in 1973 eliminated homosexuality from its list of mental illnesses and, in 1980, dropped it from its Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. It's already 2007, birth of several new ideas are already here. This Curve magazine may somehow open the public's eyes to these new beliefs and ideas. Enjoy reading!
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Updated on Jan 31, 2012. |