BDSM RTV NEWS!!!!
3 may 2009
Painfully miffed
By Kitty Powell
from WillametteLive, Section Word
Source: willamettelive.com
WilliametteLive.com - Salem,OR,USA
The Twitterverse erupted in a sea of criticism on Sunday, April 13 when it was revealed that the worlds largest online media clearinghouse, Amazon.com, had de-listed over 57,000 items in its database - including many gay-themed books or media with homosexual content.
Within days, the Internet behemoth corrected what it called a glitch and had re-listed items such as Annie Proulxs Brokeback Mountain, which had incorrectly been labeled as adult content. But the correction didnt occur soon enough for many authors who felt that they had suffered from loss of sales and disappearance from the most important marketplace for books.
While the Twitterverse has mostly died down about what has become known as Amazonfail, one Salem woman, erotica writer I.G. Frederick, is still tweeting away about what many have interpreted as an attempt at censorship by a company that has, over the last decade, forced many independent bookstores to close their doors.
At a meeting in Salem recently, I.G. Frederick passed her two most recent books wrapped in a brown paper package because she is still not ready for most of the people who know her to know this:
She is a purveyor of smut - and her brand of erotica has a Sado-masochistic bent.
Her first book, Shattered, published in 2008, gives a first taste of what shes offering and why it clearly doesnt fit with the mainstream. It concerns a psychologist named Jessica Richards who uses an uncommon, non-proven therapy to help a young male patient recover from past traumas.
It is a cautionary tale, Frederick said. It gets people thinking about what they should and should not allow themselves to get into.
This kind of storyline isnt for everybody. Then again, the book was named one of the best erotica books of 2008 by a readers poll, so it is appealing to somebody.
That somebody includes a group of about 40 Salem residents who meet regularly at restaurants to share information about the S&M lifestyle. Frederick heads the group, which includes people from all adult age groups and sexual orientations.
Fredericks second book, "Broken," a prequel to "Shattered," tells the story of how Jessica got the way she is - how she transformed from a Louis Vouitton-wearing psychology Phd student forced by sudden poverty into an S&M relationship with a professor, into a powerful dominatrix with her own sex slave.
Again, not for everybody. For even the most open-minded of individuals, books like these can come across as completely beyond the pale, disturbing, and even subversive.
But the problem is not necessarily that these books exist, it is that I.G. Frederick exists in Salem - a community not particularly known for its tolerance of people with other lifestyles.
For people like Frederick, who is bisexual and who has lived with an African-American man as a white woman here in Salem, the Internet has long been a place to find acceptance among people whose lives and choices attract harassment from those around them.
Salem is a very nasty town, Frederick said. My social life is mostly elsewhere.
For people like Frederick, Amazonfail therefore represents a complete turnaround in the culture of the Internet. Where once it represented a free exchange of ideas and a place for like to find like, the web, they say, is increasingly being dominated by a select few companies with the power to control content.
Amazon.com has responded to the controversy by calling it an embarrassing and ham-fisted cataloging error and by promising to restore the titles - which include health and reproductive medicine in addition to homosexual content.
In the meantime, Frederick, who also writes historical novels and science fiction under a different pen name, has much to do and cant continue to lose days to the Twitterverse in her quest to raise awareness about Amazonfail.
The Twitterverse has a short attention span, Frederick said.
Shes got an erotica showcase to judge in Seattle at the beginning of the month and has over a hundred texts to read. And she is trying to sell her house so she can move somewhere more hospitable to people like herself - Portland, if she can afford it.
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