Pan: A Magazine about Boy-Love: Difference between revisions

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==History==
==History==
It begun as an English-language publication based in the Netherlands in June 1979, aimed specific aimed at homosexual paedophiles in June 1979.<ref>Califia, Pat. ''Public sex: The culture of radical sex''. Berkeley: Cleis Press, 1994.</ref><ref>Sandfort, Theo. "Pedophilia and the Gay Movement". ''Journal of Homosexuality'', Vol. XIII, nr. 2-3, 1987.</ref><ref>Kent, George. ''Children in the International Political Economy''. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 1995. ISBN 0312128703.</ref> They continued operating under this name until the thirteenth issue, where their name was changed following a legal threat from the unrelated imprint Pan Books.{{cite}} At the same time, their publisher was changed from [[Spartacus]] to [[Coltsfoot Press]].
It begun as an English-language publication based in the Netherlands in June 1979, aimed specific aimed at homosexual paedophiles in June 1979.<ref>Califia, Pat. ''Public sex: The culture of radical sex''. Berkeley: Cleis Press, 1994.</ref><ref>Sandfort, Theo. "Pedophilia and the Gay Movement". ''Journal of Homosexuality'', Vol. XIII, nr. 2-3, 1987.</ref><ref>Kent, George. ''Children in the International Political Economy''. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 1995. ISBN 0312128703.</ref> They continued operating under this name until the thirteenth issue, where their name was changed following a legal threat from the unrelated imprint Pan Books.{{cite}} At the same time, their publisher was changed from Spartacus to Coltsfoot Press.


The magazine regularly featured news, articles, essays, and photography, as well as information on paedophile and childhood or other material of interest to paedophiles. Academicians such as [[Edward Brongersma]] and [[Frits Bernard]] were frequent contributors to the magazine.
The magazine regularly featured news, articles, essays, and photography, as well as information on paedophile and childhood or other material of interest to paedophiles. Academicians such as [[Edward Brongersma]] and [[Frits Bernard]] were frequent contributors to the magazine.
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==References==
==References==
{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}
==See also==
*[[The Boylove Library]]
==External links==
==External links==
*[http://exitinterview.biz/rarities/panfull.htm PAN magazine - All issues as PDF reproductions and HTML files]
*[http://exitinterview.biz/rarities/panfull.htm PAN magazine - All issues as PDF reproductions and HTML files]
*[http://web.archive.org/web/20130124151155/http://newgon.com/wiki/PAN Newgon (Web archive)]  
*[http://web.archive.org/web/20130124151155/http://newgon.com/wiki/PAN Newgon (Web archive)]  
 
{{Template:Navbox magazines}}
[[Category:Newspapers and magazines]]
[[Category:Newspapers and magazines]]

Latest revision as of 20:39, 19 March 2024

Pan Infobox

Editors: Frank Torey, John D. Stamford

Frequency: Roughly bi-monthly

Category: Gay magazine

Company:

  • Spartacus (Issues 1 to 12)
  • Coltsfoot Press (Issues 13 to 21)

First issue: Issue 1, June 1979
Last issue: Issue 21, December 1985

ISSN: 0167-4749

Pan: a magazine about boy-love (later P.A.N. (Paedo Alert News)) was a boylove magazine published in English, based in Amsterdam, by Spartacus, and later Coltsfoot Press.

History

It begun as an English-language publication based in the Netherlands in June 1979, aimed specific aimed at homosexual paedophiles in June 1979.[1][2][3] They continued operating under this name until the thirteenth issue, where their name was changed following a legal threat from the unrelated imprint Pan Books.[Citation needed] At the same time, their publisher was changed from Spartacus to Coltsfoot Press.

The magazine regularly featured news, articles, essays, and photography, as well as information on paedophile and childhood or other material of interest to paedophiles. Academicians such as Edward Brongersma and Frits Bernard were frequent contributors to the magazine.

It was supposed to be published five times a year, but its publication was quite irregular.[Citation needed]

References

  1. Califia, Pat. Public sex: The culture of radical sex. Berkeley: Cleis Press, 1994.
  2. Sandfort, Theo. "Pedophilia and the Gay Movement". Journal of Homosexuality, Vol. XIII, nr. 2-3, 1987.
  3. Kent, George. Children in the International Political Economy. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 1995. ISBN 0312128703.

See also

External links