User talk:Tony Sandel
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[edit] Welcome to Wikipedia!
I noticed nobody had said hi yet... Hi!
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If you have any questions, feel free to ask me on my talk page. Thanks and happy editing, --Alf melmac 14:42, 4 January 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Image copyright problem with Image:Cupidbutterfly.jpg
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[edit] Hello
I noticed a couple of articles that you have been working on, and only wanted to question your choice of terms for the relationship between the boys in the "Sorcerer's Apprentice." Why would you use the term "molest" for a love affair between two minors? Haiduc 12:10, 2 March 2006 (UTC)
- He should probably read the definitions of pedophilia and pederasty, before he starts his next edit-rounds.... Fulcher 16:15, 3 April 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Tony Sandel
Hi Tony Sandel. I'm following your career with some interest. I can't really tell, but it seems possible that you are an editor with interests and knowledge around subjects related to pedophilia and pederasty, yet are not on either a pro-anything or anti-anything crusade. Is this true? If so, it would be rare, and welcome.
Also, do you need any help making a user page, or are you happy with not having one? Herostratus 22:47, 12 April 2006 (UTC)
Hi you're right - how do I contact you and join PAW>
Tony
Well, you know how to contact me by clicking on my name to get to my userpage, then clicking on "discussion" at the top to get to my talk page, then either starting a new discussion by clicking on the "+" at the top, or editing (continuing) an existing discussion by going down to the title and clicking on the "edit" tag at the right. And to sign your name by tuping four tildes (~~~~ at the end of your message.
To join PAW, just click here: Wikipedia:WikiProject Pedophilia Article Watch. Then, after reading through the materials on the page, if you decide you can get on board with that, you join just by... doing some of those things. "Members" are really just people who work on the project goals a lot. But you can add your name to the participants list by clicking on on the "participants" link in the menu near the top of the page (it's #9), then clicking the "edit" tag at the left of the section header, then adding your name to the bulleted list (by typing "*~~~~". This is entirely optional. On the project talk page you can ask any questions etc.
Obiously "joining", such as it is, doesn't require any commitment of doing any particular work (I myself spend most of my time working on unrelated stuff, usually.) But you do have to commit to being very scholarly and unbaised. The project members are trying to weed out bias in these articles, and most of the bias at this time seems to come what might be termed "pedophilia advocates" or whatever term you want to use, and we're mostly oriented toward correcting that right now. But of course we do see attempts to add non-scholarly anti-pedophile bias also, and try to correct that too. Not all members focus on the same things or have exactly the same philosophy.
Basically, I would strongly suggest that if you are going to edit articles related to pedophilia that you get a different username, if your name really is Tony Sandel. There are people out there who feel strongly about this subject, and members have been harrassed in real life. Cheers, Herostratus 19:17, 13 April 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Debate
Article talk pages are the usual place to discuss edits. There's an active discussion/debate going on at Talk:Pedophilia_and_child_sexual_abuse_in_fiction. Cheers, -Will Beback 18:22, 13 April 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Nickname
If you click on on "my preferences" at the top of the page, whatever you enter in the Nickname field will appear as your name. So you won't have to edit your signature to add it. For example, my Nickname is "Herostratus", so my signature automatically writes [[User:Herostratus|Herostratus]] when I sign. Your nickname doesn't have to match your user name, although they're usually related. (N.B. This does not hide your identity (username) per the last comment above, it's just a convenience.) Herostratus 19:22, 13 April 2006 (UTC)
[edit] re: Pedophile vs Pederast
Hi Tony. I moved your draft on this to the bottom of Section One of the talk page here as part of a general cleanup and restructuring. Don't do anything yet; I'll get back to you in a day or so, OK? Herostratus 10:12, 20 April 2006 (UTC)
Hi Tony. Sorry to take so long getting back to you. I responded to your post on the Wikipedia:WikiProject Pedophilia Article Watch/Terminology talk page, here is a copy:
- Dictionary definitions aside, I'm not convinced that that is this is the actual scholarly understanding of what "pederasty" means, to the extent that there is a scholarly understanding. I know the word is used in both ways (teen-only and pre-teen) in the everyday world, and in fact often includes both sexes in common usage. The actual usage is what matters, and its probably a hard word to pin down, but my inclination without looking into it in more detail is that pederasty usually refers to relations between an adult male and a teen male.
- Politics:
- User:Haiduc is an extraordinarily erudite, energetic, cogent, and relentless editor and debater. He's an excellent editor. He's on a mission - and by that I don't mean to accuse him of any POV or bias in his edits - but he's on a mission to ensure that Wikipedia reflects what he sees as the truth of pederasty: (1) it involves men and teen boys (2) it is far more common in societies than is commonly assumed (3) it is an integral part of homosexuality, homsexual history, homosexual culture, and what being a homosexual is (4) it is generally beneficial to society and the parties involved.
- I do not want to tangle with him (and his supporters). You do not want to tangle with him, believe me. He knows far about this issue than you or I.
- It's not just Haiduc. The group protecting the NAMBLA article, and others, will be all over us like a cheap suit if we try to define pederasty downward.
- And for other reasons both political and scholarly, it's greatly preferable IMO to seperate teen sex and sexuality from pre-teen sex and sexuality, provided this is scholarly of course.
- User:Haiduc provided me with the following cite, and he has many others I'm sure: "{Pederasty is] The erotic relationship between an adult male and a youth, generally one between the ages of twelve and seventeen, in which the older partner is attracted to the younger one who returns his affection" by Vern L. Bullough in [1].
Herostratus 16:59, 24 April 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Fair use images
The trend on Wikipedia is to reduce the use of "fair use" images, including book covers. The two concepts are that fair use only exits if we are commenting on the work of art, and that more than a single fair use image in an article is indefensible. I'm not a lawyer or an expert, so I can't comment on the correctness of this view. However it may affect lists like Pedophilia and child sexual abuse in fiction. I see you've been adding images to that article. My advice to you is to not waste time and effort adding images that are likely to be removed in the future. Cheers, -Will Beback 20:30, 24 April 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Novels
I noticed that you have been adding quite a few novels to Category:Novels lately, and we over at Wikiproject:Novels would like to thank you for this contribution. However, We have just recently finished clearing out the novel category and putting things into subcategories, and would appreciate it if in the future you categorized the novel pages you create by year (Category:Novels by year) and country that the author lives in (Category:Novels by country). You can do this by simply omitting the novel and book by year categories and adding separate categories such as Category:2004 novels or Category:American novels. Oh and just so you know, you can sign your talkpage comments by typing four tildes (~~ ~~, but without the space.) -- Gizzakk 21:07, 3 May 2006 (UTC)
thanks ~~Tony Sandel~~
[edit] Your recent addition to Pedophilia and child sexual abuse in fiction
It's messy and in its current state, likely to be reverted. Before your addition, the article was only a list (and hence "list of..." might have been a better title) but your addition (if it stays) takes it into a new direction. I suppose (if you really want to analyse child sexual abuse in literature) you can create a new article on such a thing. Creation of a literature genre. I don't see why not. Skinnyweed 16:29, 22 May 2006 (UTC)
- I'm impressed if you've actually read all that. Skinnyweed 16:30, 22 May 2006 (UTC)
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- Skinnyweed is correct that the material will be removed if is based on your own research. It goes against our concepts of "No original research" and "Wikipedia is not a publisher of original thought". What we can do is summarize what others have said about the topic. If there have been academic or popular reivews of the field we can report what they have said. If you like, I can move the material to a user page so you can keep it and perhaps find a different place to post (like a blog or IPCE). -Will Beback 01:23, 23 May 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Article for deletion
Your article, Pedophilia and child sexual abuse in fiction, has been nominated for deletion Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Pedophilia and child sexual abuse in fiction. You should post your comments as soon as possible. -Will Beback 05:06, 6 June 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Image Tagging for Image:Strong-at-the-heart.jpg
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[edit] Edit summary
Skinnyweed 13:32, 20 June 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Fair use of book covers
Since you seem to be interested in this sort of thing: despite the existence of "boilerplate" fair use templates (including for book covers, film posters, etc) there's actually no "blanket" cases of fair use. The difference between fair use and a free license (like GFDL, or CC-BY, or even public domain images) is that the image itself, if PD or GFDL or whatever, is always PD or GFDL wherever it is used. Fair use images are "fair" only in their individual uses, which is why each individual use requires a rationale (even with the boilerplate template present - if you read those templates they ask for a rationale to be given).
You've already been given a very good answer about fair use above. Book covers are an interesting case - it's generally agreed here that using the front cover of a book in the article about that book is likely to be fair use. But using a front cover to illustrate not the book, but, say, the person illustrated on the front cover, is unlikely to be. So it's not true that "book covers are okay for Wikipedia" (even though there is a copyright tag for them), it's more like "book covers are a particular type of copyright image, certain uses of which may be covered by fair use doctrine". Including a book cover in a list of books is a marginal case. If it looks like the use is essentially decorative rather than educational or in some way "transformative" (which is one of the keys to the relevant law) then it isn't so likely to pass muster. If you wanted to use a book cover from a particular book in an article about a certain controversial theme in books, and there some analysis to say "this book cover became notorious for the open way it addressed the theme of the book" (to avoid breaching WP:NOR, a reliable source would have to found for this statement), then that is probably an instance where fair use might apply beyond the article on the book itself. TheGrappler 01:01, 6 July 2006 (UTC)
- Yes, it can be hard to tell where "no original" research begins - though I suspect that anything that merely describes what can be clearly be seen on the cover is fine. Happy editing! (By the way - all section headings, even sub-subheadings, ought to begin with a capital letter, according to the Manual of Style, you may want to change a few instances of all-lower case headings in that otherwise rather impressive article!) TheGrappler 12:51, 9 July 2006 (UTC)
- Hi. As a rule of thumb, avoid creating galleries of unfreely licensed images, and avoid using unfree content to decorate lists. If you need to discuss a particular book cover, go ahead and republish it in the article. See Wikipedia:Fair use for more information about the handling of unfreely licensed content here. Jkelly 18:02, 28 August 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Your contributions to the pederasty article
Hello Tony, May I ask what your logic was in adding the links to pedophilia topics in the "See also" section of the "Pederasty" article? Thanks, Haiduc 02:08, 26 July 2006 (UTC)
- "ps how come my name comes up red and everyone else's blue??" I dunno, are you a communist? Seriously, it just indicates that you have written nothing on your user page. I really have no objection to a link to the pedophilia department in the main pederasty article, but I think three is a bit over the top. Can we settle for one? The other pederasty articles are way too specialized for any such link, in my opinion, since they mainly deal with other places and times. Actually, the one on Pederasty in the modern world would be another candidate, but again, one link is quite enough.
- And now that we are here anyway, for a long time I have been looking at your collection of articles titled "Pedophilia and child sexual abuse in X". Imagine if I tried to publish here an article titled "Pederasty and friendship in fiction." Or "Heterosexuality and female rape in film" (and then included all the movies that had anything to do with heterosexuality). It is like that, I fear, with the articles conflating pedophilia and sexual abuse. Pedophilic sentiments seem to be quite common in the general population (20 to 30% in some studies, from what I gleaned from the article last night), but I do not think you can assert that child abuse incidence is of the same magnitude. Thus we have a situation where some pedophiles abuse children and, presumably, most do not. So why lump the two together? Let me suggest that even though it would require a great deal more discrimination and research (and possibly debate), splitting up those articles into two versions, one, say, Pedophilia in fiction and another Child sexual abuse in fiction would not only be far more useful for our readers but would also steer clear of any semblance of politicizing (which presently the articles practically proclaim). Best regards, Haiduc 01:30, 27 July 2006 (UTC)
-
- If the works are really as ambiguous as you say (and I too think that they are) then does it not stand to reason that tagging on the moniker "abuse" whether or not it is justified is misleading and an uncalled for value judgement in what puports to be an impartial article in an impartial encyclopaedia? Haiduc 00:01, 28 July 2006 (UTC)
[edit] American Beauty
You asked:
- Hi there: I watched American Beauty a couple of years ago, but I don't remember any pedophile/child sexual abuse themes. I know one of the teenagers gets it off with one of the Mothers. Can you remind me!! best wishes
I was referring to Kevin Spacey's character, who spends the entire movie pursuing his daughter's friend (played by actress Mena Suvari), and nearly has sex with her at the end of the movie. Regards, Matthew Fadoul 16:20, 27 July 2006 (UTC)
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- Matthew - I don't think think that's really pedophilia which is really related to much younger children - rather than the attentions of an older guy on a minor (boy or girl) who is fully sexually mature. Can I edit it out? Tony 09:24, 28 July 2006 (UTC)Tony
- Hi Tony, I would prefer not. My reasons are: (1) the girl character was ~16, which is only a year or so after puberty; (2) I googled the terms <spacey "american beauty" pedophilia> and got almost a thousand hits, all descibing the behavior of Spacey's character as pedophilia; (3) she was a minor, which is considered statutory rape in the USA, and the idea of her being "forbidden fruit" seems to have something to do with her age. I also realize that the term pedophile is sometimes restricted to pre-pubescents; but, as the pedophilia wiki article states, "In the United States and some other countries, the term pedophile is frequently used also to denote significantly older adults who are sexually attracted to adolescents." Matthew Fadoul 17:09, 28 July 2006 (UTC)
- Based on the wiki article quoted above (along with other reasons), I'm going to keep "American Beauty" on the list. Matthew Fadoul 15:17, 1 August 2006 (UTC)
- Hi Tony, I would prefer not. My reasons are: (1) the girl character was ~16, which is only a year or so after puberty; (2) I googled the terms <spacey "american beauty" pedophilia> and got almost a thousand hits, all descibing the behavior of Spacey's character as pedophilia; (3) she was a minor, which is considered statutory rape in the USA, and the idea of her being "forbidden fruit" seems to have something to do with her age. I also realize that the term pedophile is sometimes restricted to pre-pubescents; but, as the pedophilia wiki article states, "In the United States and some other countries, the term pedophile is frequently used also to denote significantly older adults who are sexually attracted to adolescents." Matthew Fadoul 17:09, 28 July 2006 (UTC)
- Matthew - I don't think think that's really pedophilia which is really related to much younger children - rather than the attentions of an older guy on a minor (boy or girl) who is fully sexually mature. Can I edit it out? Tony 09:24, 28 July 2006 (UTC)Tony
[edit] ephebophilia
I am unconcerned with the negative connotations of the terms pedophilia and ephebobhilia and so on. I do not consider that encyclopedic. However under the terms of the present wikipedia article and the medical use of the term pedophilia many of the listen films do not apply in the least. Sexual interaction among adult and teens nearing the age of majority is not pedophilia, and so if they are to be in the list, the description must be more accurate. The term ephebophilia has a wiki article, and should be included for encyclopedic reasons, in this page's title. For these reasons I will revert to my changes. Further discussion, I think, should be on the talk page. Tomyumgoong 03:20, 15 August 2006 (UTC)
[edit] The Culvert
I understand your reasoning regarding The Culvert; however, simply being about pedophilia does not make the book inherently notable, and as far as I can tell from the article itself and a Google search, there is nothing to indicate this book has had any sort of distribution or meets any other criterion for notability. See Wikipedia:Naming_conventions_(books)#Note_on_notability_criteria. Being self-published, it is highly unlikely this book appears in any library, and simply being available on Amazon is generally not considered enough, as almost anything is (also, its amazon.com Sales Rank is 1,019,124, indicating that, although it is available on amazon, it is not being purchased, at least not in any meaningful quantity). I would suggest, incidentally, that if the community does indeed vote to delete the book, you might consider removing it from pedophilia and child sexual abuse in fiction. Books judged to be non-notable probably shouldn't be on here, even in lists, as Wikipedia is not an indiscriminate collection of information. Feel free to post any further comments on my talk page or the article's AfD page, where I see you've already voted. Regards, Elmer Clark 18:40, 16 August 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Dream Boy Revert
Have you read Dream Boy? If you had read it and understood it in any sense, you would have noticed every single theme I presented. I contest your reversion on the basis that it removed valuable information about the book. The information removed may not have been detailed, but it had a point and a basis in reality. Even though you have taken it upon yourself to edit the articles involving pedophilia, you should allow said articles to contain information on other themes. Dream boy has an underlying theme of pedophilia. A much larger theme is gentle eroticism between two young men.
Please review and possibly revise your reversion. If you could at least explain it better than "reverted recent edits: themes not in book" which makes no sense as the themes are very relevant to the book. who-is-me 13:09, 3 November 2006 (UTC)
- naturally I have read Dream Boy. I have my copy hear. Your latest addition reads "Major themes in the book include watching as eroticism, body parts, difference in similarity and gender, and soft sex." I'm afraid I find it difficult to accept this as clear use of English. 'watching as eroticism' does not make sense; 'body parts' carries no meaning. The expression 'soft sex' is not in common usage and you have chosen to link it to kindness. Why? Perhaps you could explain what points you want to get across - I'm sure they may be valid - then we can construct a way to describe what you are trying to say. Tony 22:43, 3 November 2006 (UTC)Tony
[edit] not ad hominem
Tony, I am sorry if I made you upset over my questioning the title of the article. My comments really were not directed at you as much as at the imbalance which I perceived. Surely there must be some way to balance things so that the presentation is more even-handed. You yourself conceded that there is material there which falls ouside the scope of the terminology. At any rate, I will not insist further. If you have any suggestions, let me know. Haiduc 00:53, 6 November 2006 (UTC)
- I checked and saw that the article is not yet oversize, but splitting it up seems like a good idea nonetheless. Let me know if I can help in any way. And I do hope you carry through your idea about setting the article up as a table - it would be a major improvement. Haiduc 01:16, 6 November 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Songs
I saw your note about me adding to the topic of Pedophilia and child sexual abuse in songs, and I would be happy to help contribute to the article. I am not a huge fan of the scenes that I mentioned, but I am a big fan of alternative music in general, and will hopefully be able to contribute to the article a lot. J Milburn 23:07, 10 December 2006 (UTC)
- thanks Tony 22:21, 11 December 2006 (UTC)Tony
[edit] Orphaned fair use image (Image:Frisk.jpg)
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- I'm waiting to write an article called Frisk, but haven't got around to it yet. I can upload image again when ready. The image is a book cover. Tony 16:28, 7 January 2007 (UTC)Tony
[edit] Orphaned fair use image (Image:Conformist.jpg)
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[edit] Orphaned fair use image (Image:Dream-life.jpg)
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[edit] Copyright problems with Image:Thorvaldsen-shepherd-boy.jpg
The same counts for Image:Chaudet-amour.jpg, please comment here, thanks. Garion96 (talk) 23:51, 25 February 2007 (UTC)
- The Thorvaldsen image has also been posted on Commons:Image:Thorvaldsen-shepherd-boy.jpg , negating its deletion on Wikipedia. Not sure of the correct procedure here. Lee M 20:40, 27 February 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Pedophilia and child sexual abuse in songs
Hello, regarding your reversion of my edit. The article's name is "Pedophilia and child sexual abuse in songs", its topic is therefore about the song's content. The article is about the subject matter of artistic works. Adding individuals' activities is very much off topic. Same can be said about Pedophilia and child sexual abuse in films with the addition of Wikipedia is not a collection of trivia --Monotonehell 15:43, 26 February 2007 (UTC)
- Wikipedia is not a democracy, but I'm will to participate in a consensus building discussion on the article's talk page. ;) --Monotonehell 15:56, 26 February 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Aspasia
Read the previous sections in Aspasia's talk page and my discussion with Pmanderson and Robth, and you'll see this article is correct. It is not proved that Aspasia married Lysicles. So, there is no inconsistency! I don't care what other articles say, since I know that what this particular article is correct and examined by some of the best classicistd in Wikipedia. Now, we don't link in the lead things that are analysed in the main text of the article. This is a basic rule, Tony.--Yannismarou 22:22, 5 March 2007 (UTC)
- Lysicles is corrected. You were right; it was my ommission. Now, about Aspasia, the key words are: "according to Debra Nails". She may believe that there was a marriage, but this does not mean that this is what most scholars believe, and that is why the main text avoids to reflect such a thing. The questions of the legal status of her relationships with both Pericles and Lysicles are wide open.--Yannismarou 13:05, 6 March 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Incorrect Author and Country link for Wiki article on novel "Sandel"???
Unless I am very much mistaken, the Author and Country links (to Angus Stewart and Australia, respectively) in the "Sandel" article point to the wrong person, albeit with the same name as the author of Sandel (1967), Snow in Harvest (1969) and Tangier: A Writer's Notebook (1977), all published by Hutchinson (UK). The link points to an Australian horticulturist and author called Angus Stewart who, to the best of my knowledge, is a different person to the UK author Angus Stewart, son of author and academic Michael Innes (pseudonym). Although Michael Innes and his family did live in Adelaide, Australia for a period (approx 1936-46?), as far as I know Angus Stewart did not settle in Australia but in Tangier? 121.45.33.3 08:46, 9 March 2007 (UTC)
- You're right of course. Thanks for spotting it. Tony 09:54, 9 March 2007 (UTC)Tony
- Tony, I see you've removed the incorrect Author link. Perhaps the incorrect Country link (Australia) and Category (Australian Novels) should also be fixed to complete the job? :) 121.45.34.117 06:28, 10 March 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Britten's Children
Hi, I did not think of that, now I am not quite sure. It does seem to me that we should treat non-fiction works about real people differently - it is not the book but the person that seems to be the issue here. But you are right, of course, about linking the main article. What happens all too often however, is that the sexuality - especially THIS sexuality - of a personage is broken out of the main article and relegated to a separate one, in large part to protect the sensibilities of other editors, and to some extent to manage the length of the articles. To be honest with you, I have little appetite for engaging in another struggle, this time with the Britten editors. This is not the kind of work that can be done by one person working alone, and I am fed up, to be perfectly honest, with adversarial situations and try to avoid them whenever possible. So it would be much more to my liking to leave matters as they are - this links Britten (an obvious candidate) to the modern pederasty category, facilitating research for anyone interested, and sidesteps the need for me to grapple with another bunch of defenders of the status quo. If you have a better idea please feel free to let me know. Haiduc 12:30, 9 March 2007 (UTC)
- Thanks for the notice on Peyrefite's book. I wonder how he would have classified it. What I come back to again and again is the fact that there is always overlap between these categories, and it is hopeless to try to force something that is borderline to fit exclusively in one or another. The fact is that the book is of interest to people researching both pedophilia and pederasty since the fathers' interest at times could be said to be pedophilic and at other times pederastic. In reality their love interest is unitary, not binary, so that here the problem is one of definition. As for the main relationship, you could argue it as being pederastic, since it is that of an older adolescent for a younger one (not all that different from the Melanesian pederastic model, if you want an analogy). At any rate I would request that you replace the two links to pederasty, for all the reasons mentioned above. Regards, Haiduc 03:10, 10 March 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Marking edits as minor
Hi Tony. It looks like you've set your preferences to mark your edits as minor by default. You should probably change this setting, as most of your edits are substantive. See Help:Minor_edit#When_to_mark_an_edit_as_minor. Thanks! Fireplace 00:36, 17 March 2007 (UTC)
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- will do.Tony 00:37, 17 March 2007 (UTC)Tony
[edit] I am concerned.
Unsigned comment deleted as being inappropriate. Tony 08:11, 30 March 2007 (UTC)Tony