Bob Schreck
Autor(a) de The Superman / Madman Hullabaloo! (TPB)
About the Author
Obras por Bob Schreck
Dark Horse Presents, Issue 099 [Vol 1] 6 exemplares
Dark Horse Presents, Issue 115 [Vol 1] 5 exemplares
Dark Horse Presents, Issue 098 [Vol 1] 5 exemplares
Dark Horse Presents, Issue 092 [Vol 1] 5 exemplares
Dark Horse Presents, Issue 093 [Vol 1] 5 exemplares
Dark Horse Presents, Issue 104 [Vol 1] 4 exemplares
Dark Horse Presents, Issue 122 [Vol 1] 4 exemplares
Dark Horse Presents, Issue 097 [Vol 1] 4 exemplares
Dark Horse Presents, Issue 096 [Vol 1] 4 exemplares
Dark Horse Presents, Issue 103 [Vol 1] 4 exemplares
Dark Horse Presents, Issue 123 [Vol 1] 4 exemplares
Dark Horse Presents, Issue 111 [Vol 1] 4 exemplares
Dark Horse Presents, Issue 110 [Vol 1] 4 exemplares
Dark Horse Presents, Issue 107 [Vol 1] 4 exemplares
Dark Horse Presents, Issue 105 [Vol 1] 4 exemplares
Dark Horse Presents, Issue 124 [Vol 1] 3 exemplares
Dark Horse Presents, Issue 121 [Vol 1] 3 exemplares
Dark Horse Presents, Issue 120 [Vol 1] 3 exemplares
Dark Horse Presents, Issue 117 [Vol 1] 3 exemplares
Dark Horse Presents, Issue 119 [Vol 1] 3 exemplares
Dark Horse Presents, Issue 113 [Vol 1] 3 exemplares
Dark Horse Presents, Issue 109 [Vol 1] 3 exemplares
Dark Horse Presents, Issue 108 [Vol 1] 3 exemplares
Dark Horse Presents, Issue 106 [Vol 1] 3 exemplares
Dark Horse Presents, Issue 116 [Vol 1] 3 exemplares
Jurassic Park: Redemption #3 1 exemplar
Jurassic Park: Redemption #4 1 exemplar
Jurassic Park: Redemption #5 1 exemplar
Jurassic Park: Redemption #2 1 exemplar
Associated Works
Guest of Honor: Harlan Ellison — Autor — 1 exemplar
Etiquetado
Conhecimento Comum
- Sexo
- male
Membros
Críticas
You May Also Like
Associated Authors
Estatísticas
- Obras
- 51
- Also by
- 16
- Membros
- 287
- Avaliação
- 3.9
- Críticas
- 5
- ISBN
- 4
- Línguas
- 2
Strossen's speech on behalf of the ACLU at the San Diego convention is the core, book-ended by much shorter contibrutions from Gaiman and other writers - from Dave Sim before he turned out to be a misogynist, and Frank Miller before he turned out to be a bigot.
It's funny how last-century this all feels; sure, protecting freedom of speech from government interference is still an issue, including in the creative industries (just last week we had another redneck Texan legislator protesting against subversive literature in schools), but it seems to me that the debates we are now having are more often about the use of (legally protected) speech to punch down at the oppressed, and what options are open to the rest of us exercising our rights of freedom of association and freedom of speech to object to creators who choose to do that, while at the same time of course deploring acts or threats of violence by state or non-state actors.… (mais)