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Jack Saul

    John Saul, también conocido como Jack Saul o Dublin Jack, fue un prostituto irlandés de la era victoriana. Fue una figura central en dos importantes escándalos homosexuales y apareció como personaje en dos obras literarias pornográficas de la época. Su vida e historias ofrecen una visión fascinante de los rincones más oscuros de la sociedad victoriana y sus actitudes hacia la sexualidad y la identidad.

    Collective Trauma, Collective Healing
    Collective Trauma, Collective Healing
    The Sins of the Cities of the Plain
    • 2022

      Collective Trauma, Collective Healing

      • 220 páginas
      • 8 horas de lectura

      Collective Trauma, Collective Healing is a guide for mental health professionals working in response to large-scale political violence or natural disaster. The classic edition includes a new preface from the author reflecting on changes to the field and the world since the book's initial publication.

      Collective Trauma, Collective Healing
    • 2013

      Collective Trauma, Collective Healing

      Promoting Community Resilience in the Aftermath of Disaster

      • 198 páginas
      • 7 horas de lectura

      Focusing on the impact of large-scale political violence and natural disasters, this guide offers mental health professionals a framework for community-based approaches to trauma treatment. It emphasizes culturally and contextually appropriate clinical services, equipping clinicians with insights into their evolving roles during disasters. The book highlights the importance of recognizing and strengthening resilience and coping skills within families and communities, ultimately fostering collective healing in the aftermath of trauma.

      Collective Trauma, Collective Healing
    • 2012

      Jack Saul, a handsome young man in London, navigates life as a prostitute, relying on his physical appeal. One day, after an encounter with a male customer in Leicester Square, he is offered payment for a written account of his experiences. This leads to a narrative that explores Jack's "vices" as he transitions from boarding school to young adulthood within London's secretive gay underworld. Blending fact and fiction, the work incorporates real figures linked to the Cleveland Street Scandal, the Oscar Wilde trials, and other notorious legal matters of the time. It stands as one of the earliest and most candid explorations of homosexuality in Victorian England. Read by Oscar Wilde and influencing the well-known gay erotic novel Teleny (1893), this work was privately printed in two volumes in 1881 and is now rare. The new edition features the unabridged text from the first edition at the British Library, alongside a new introduction by Wolfram Setz and facsimile title pages from the original volumes. Unlike previous modern editions, which were significantly altered, this version represents the first complete reprinting of the original text.

      The Sins of the Cities of the Plain