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Season Four is in full swing, this is the time to get in on the ground floor and help build a By the Book Gorean community.
PvP Days on Sat, Tues and Thur. PvP Intent on Sun, Mon, Wed and Fri.

Teach Gor AI Bot

From Barbarians of Gor

Revision as of 20:37, 20 May 2024 by Branwyn (talk | contribs)


Question - What is a Torvie?
Answer - The term Torvies is an onlineism used in Gorean role-play communities. Torvie is an online nickname for Torvaldslander. Torvies is the plural of Torvie and is online nickname for Torvaldslanders.
Question - What are the other names for the Red Hunters
Answer - The Red Hunters from the book Hunters of Gor are also known as Inuit or 'the people' in their language.
Free Women and Sexuality
For Monday's Gorean Philosophy Discussion
Accordingly, it was said that amongst many free women the taint of carnality was to be

eschewed, even violently, as a thing of embarrassment and shame, unworthy of a free woman. One's slave is to be denied, hysterically, if necessary. To acknowledge her, is it not to acknowledge that one should be suitably collared, that one is already, so to speak, in the collar. Accordingly, when the society's demands were to be met, and the more embarrassing, regrettable aspects of companionship satisfied, those having to do with matchings, lines, alliances, and such the proper free woman was to enter into carnal congress with disdain, resignation, and reluctance, or feigned disdain, resignation, and reluctance, insisting, at least, that such lamentable congress be as brief as possible, and take place in complete darkness, preferably while substantially clothed, and surely beneath coverlets. To be sure, theory and profession were one thing, and reality another.

Upper-caste women doubtless were subject to the same needs and drives as other

women, and I would learn that affairs and assignations were not infrequent amongst them, and that many free women, particularly those most sensitive to the demands of their codes, who had most internalized society's expectations with respect to their behavior, often lived a life of frustration, loneliness, and misery, speaking the secrets of their needs only to the silence of damp tear-stained pillows.

Demands on lower-caste women, on the other hand, were less, as befitted their inferior status, and such women were more likely to enjoy a life of open flirtation, even of comparative vulgarity and bawdiness. Indeed, it was often thought that lower-caste women, for all their jollity and looseness, or perhaps in virtue of it, commonly tended to live a more genuinely satisfactory life than their sisters of the higher, nobler castes. To be sure, much depends on the particular woman, the caste, the city, and sometimes, I understand, even the neighborhood or district within the city, as a Gorean city, as many cities, often contains a medley of subcultures.

Conspirators of Gor , p. 89 - 91C