❤pdf✔ Hanging Out: The Radical Power of Killing Time
COPY LINK : https://fastpdf.bookcenterapp.com/yump/B004ZH8GBE " ...the best and most realistic depiction of the modern world of pornography written in book form to date.." said Adult Video News publisher Paul Fishbein in 1999. UCLA Film School graduate David Jennings entered the porn business to research and write about it. When he began working for a large Mafia-connected pornography distributor in 1977, he planned 6 months in the porn industry, not 12 years. But after pioneering the first adult features shot DIRECTLY on videotape, his own company, Superior Video, Inc., weathered th
COPY LINK : https://fastpdf.bookcenterapp.com/yump/B004ZH8GBE
" ...the best and most realistic depiction of the modern world of pornography written in book form to date.." said Adult Video News publisher Paul Fishbein in 1999. UCLA Film School graduate David Jennings entered the porn business to research and write about it. When he began working for a large Mafia-connected pornography distributor in 1977, he planned 6 months in the porn industry, not 12 years. But after pioneering the first adult features shot DIRECTLY on videotape, his own company, Superior Video, Inc., weathered th
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Hanging Out: The Radical Power of Killing Time
Description :
"...it was not because I thought her book was interesting that I
had reached out to Liming. It was because I passionately believed
that her book was right...Hanging Out is rich with illuminating
stories..." - Slate "We could all use more of that blissfully
unstructured social time, posits Sheila Liming in the well-considered
series of arguments found in Hanging Out." —Reader's
DigestA smart and empowering book about the simple art of hanging
out ... and of taking back our social lives from the deadening whirl of
contemporary life.Almost every day it seems that our world becomes
more fractured, more digital, and more chaotic. Sheila Liming has
the answer: we need to hang out more. Starting with the
assumption that play is to children as hanging out is to adults,
Liming makes a brilliant case for the necessity of unstructured social
time as a key element of our cultural vitality. The book asks
questions like what is hanging out? why is it important? why do we
do it? how do we do it? and examines the various ways we hang
out—in groups, online, at parties, at work. Hanging Out: The
Radical Power of Killing Time makes an intelligent case for the
importance of this most casual of social structures, and shows us
how just getting together can be a potent act of resistance all on its
own.