Create the page "American culture" on this wiki! See also the search results found.
- Everything
About 500 results for "American_culture"
-
The Watermelon Woman
period. It was the first feature film directed by a black lesbian. Cheryl is a young, African American lesbian who works in a video rental store in Philadelphia with her friend Tamara. They earn extra -
Chester Lockhart
Chester Lockhart is an American actor and recording artist. Lockhart was born on April 3 in Riverside County, California. Their mother is from South Korea, and their father is of Dutch heritage. Lockhart grew up -
Avram Finkelstein
Avram Finkelstein is a graphic artist, gay rights activist, and member of the AIDS art collective Gran Fury. Finkelstein describes himself as a "red diaper baby", raised by leftist parents who encouraged him to develop -
Brudner Prize
will he established the prize and lecture as "a perpetual annual prize for scholarship in the history, culture, anthropology, biology, etiology, or literature of gay men and lesbians or related fields, or for advancing the -
Caio Fernando Abreu
the Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul but abandoned academia before graduating to write for pop culture magazines such as Revista Nova, Revista Manchete, Revista Veja and Revista Pop. He was a prolific journalist -
Bugis Street (film)
hit at the box office with a nostalgic evocation of a seedy but colourful aspect of Singaporean culture, prior to the redevelopment of Bugis Street into a modern shopping district and the eradication of transvestite -
Saturday Night Live
Saturday Night Live (also known simply as SNL) is an American late-night live television sketch comedy and variety show created by Lorne Michaels and developed by D*ck Ebersol. The show premiered on NBC -
Tyler Curtain
of Engineering at the University of Colorado at Boulder, Curtain took the Ph.D. in English and American Literature at The Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland. Curtain's dissertation was directed by noted philosophers -
Lhamana
bodied person" who "dressed as women and performed women's crafts [in Zuni culturenoteIn contrast with European culture knitting, for example, was a male craft./note] such as weaving and potting, but also had the -
Philadelphia Gay News
Philadelphia Gay News (PGN) is a lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) newspaper in the Philadelphia area. PGN is a member of the National Gay Newspaper Guild. This article is a stub. You can help -
Doug Stevens
Doug Stevens (born 1957) is an American country singer from Tupelo, Mississippi. In the 1990s, he led Doug Stevens and The Outband, one of the premier gay and lesbian groups in the country music genre -
Laverne Cox
Laverne Cox (May 29, 1972) is an American actress and activist for LGBT rights. She is most known for, and gained celebrity status with, her role as Sophia Bursett in the Netflix adaptation of Orange -
Noah Galvin
Noah Galvin (born May 6, 1994) is an American actor. He currently plays the role of Kenny O'Neal in the ABC sitcom The Real O'Neals. Before starring on The Real O'Neals, he -
Project SCUM
Project SCUM was a "Sub Culture Urban Marketing" scheme proposed by R.J. Reynolds Tobacco (RJR) to sell cigarettes to members of the "alternative life style" areas of San Francisco, in particular the large number -
Calvin Thomas (critical theorist)
Calvin Thomas is an American academic who works in the fields of critical theory, modern and postmodern literature and culture. He is an associate professor at Georgia State University. His writings have focused on gender -
Peter Ackroyd
Peter Ackroyd, CBE, FRSL (born 5 October 1949) is an English biographer, novelist and critic with a particular interest in the history and culture of London. For his novels about English history and culture and -
Mark Adamo
Mark Adamo (born 1962) is an American composer, librettist and professor of music composition at New York University's Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development. He was born in Philadelphia. Adamo, who is -
Call Me Malcolm
Call Me Melcom is an American LGBT-related movie released in 2004. An amazing story of the human spirit and God’s spirit, and the liberating struggle to realize and express with confidence the marvelous -
HERO (magazine)
HERO Magazine was an American glossy men's magazine co-founded in 1997 by Sam Jensen Page and Paul Horne that rode the wave of the "mainstreaming" of gay culture. It published the first automotive -
Imaan
was started in 1998 as an offshoot of the U.S. organization Al-Fatiha Foundation after its American members visited London. Imaan hosts conferences that deal with such topics as culture, Islamaphobia, non-Muslim partners -
Pepper LaBeija
Pepper LaBeija (5 November 1948 – May 14 2003) was an American transvestite performer and designer featured in the 1990 documentary Paris Is Burning. LaBeija was the head of the notable ball culture House of LaBeija -
Template:Discrimination
Template:NoticeTemplate:Caution ar:قالب:تمييز it:Template:Discriminazione -
Template:Discrimination (footer)
Template:Caution Template:Notice it:Template:Discriminazione -
Adelphopoiesis
together two people of the same sex (normally men). Similar blood brotherhood rituals were practiced by other cultures, including American Indians, ancient Chinese as well as Germanic and Scandinavian peoples. It was argued by the -
Michael Manning (fetish artist)
director of short films, commercials, and music videos. Early exposure to Japanese animation, fairy-tale book illustration, American and European comix, and mythology of many cultures has contributed to the formation of Manning’s style.
Related Community
Wonderland Online Wiki
games
2K
Pages2K
Images1
Video
The ultimate guide for Wonderland Online that anyone can edit! Wonderland is a 2D adventure MMORPG based on several ancient South American and pacific Island cultures, the mysterious Mayans, the huge stone statues of Easter Island and much more combine to…