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  2. Wife to Be Sacrificed - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wife_to_Be_Sacrificed

    Wife to be Sacrificed (生贄夫人, Ikenie Fujin) (1974) is a Japanese soft-core pornographic S&M film starring Naomi Tani and directed by Masaru Konuma. The film was produced by Nikkatsu studios as part of their Roman Porno series.

  3. Female submission - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Female_submission

    Female submission is common in traditional literature. [7] Story of O, published in 1954 in French, is an erotic tale of female submission involving a beautiful Parisian fashion photographer named O, who is taught to be constantly available for all forms of sex, offering herself to any male.

  4. List of dominatrices in popular culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_dominatrices_in...

    A dominatrix (plural dominatrices or dominatrixes) or mistress is a woman who takes the dominant role in bondage and discipline, dominance and submission or BDSM. As fetish culture has become more prevalent in Western media, depictions of dominatrices in film and television have become more common.

  5. Asian fetish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asian_fetish

    There was a perception that Japanese women were superior to American women, [22] and there was a widespread sentiment "that a Japanese woman's heart was twice as big as those of her American sisters". [22] In 1959, Akiko Kojima, a Japanese woman, became the first non-white woman to win the Miss Universe beauty pageant. [23]

  6. Feminization (sexual activity) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feminization_(sexual_activity)

    A dominant woman and a submissive man practicing feminization. Feminization or feminisation, sometimes forced feminization (shortened to forcefem or forced femme), [1] [2] and also known as sissification, [3] is a practice in dominance and submission or kink subcultures, involving reversal of gender roles and making a submissive male take on a feminine role, which includes cross-dressing.

  7. Wonder Woman (Earth-Two) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wonder_Woman_(Earth-Two)

    The Earth-Two Wonder Woman's returns in Infinite Crisis #5. Art by Phil Jimenez. When the new, post-crisis Wonder Woman breaks up a riot in Boston, she is interrupted by a woman she thinks is her mother (Queen Hippolyta); Hippolyta is the golden-age Wonder Woman via time travel in her continuity. The intruder identifies herself as Earth-Two ...

  8. List of Wonder Woman enemies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Wonder_Woman_enemies

    Wonder Woman #274 (December 1980) A second Pre-Crisis Cheetah, Deborah Domaine, the niece of the original, was an ecologist; she was kidnapped, brainwashed into a feral eco-terrorist, and trained in unarmed combat by Kobra. Post-Crisis, Deborah never became the Cheetah. Wonder Woman (vol. 2) #7 (August 1987) (as Barbara Ann Minerva); #8 (as the ...

  9. Murder of Lindsay Hawker - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murder_of_Lindsay_Hawker

    Lindsay Hawker was born to Bill and Julia Hawker, who lived in Coventry, England; her family came from the nearby village of Brandon, Warwickshire. [6] She was schooled at King Henry VIII School, Coventry, and studied biology at the University of Leeds, when she achieved a first-class honours degree, graduating in 2006. [7]