IC :
BDSM Dictionary : Gor - Dictionary: history
A,
B,
C,
D,
E,
F,
G,
H,
I,
J,
K,
L,
M,
N,
O,
P,
Q,
R,
S,
T,
U,
V,
W,
X,
Y,
Z
This entry is part of the BDSM Dictionary hosted
by Informed Consent.
Gor - Dictionary
A glossary of some terms found in the "Chronicles of
Gor" series of science fiction books written by
John Norman, in alphabetical order (some of
them are used by real-world Gorean lifestylers
to describe their practices, and a few have been taken up in general
BDSM use):
- Bina: Gorean-language term for "slave beads", i.e. cheap
glass or painted wooden beads
considered appropriate for slave adornment, generally worn around the neck.
- Bondage knot: A simple loose overhand knot tied in the long
hair falling at the right side of a kajira's face can be symbolic of the
master-slave relationship in several contexts. Most commonly, the
kajira ties the knot in her own hair, and kneels naked before her master
to inform him silently that she is in the mood and "ready for love" (of
course, a
slave on Gor must always obey her or his owner's commands, regardless of
mood).
- Camisk: A common Gorean garment for female slaves (the simplest
and cheapest garment which provides some degree of coverage at both top
and bottom). In its basic form, it is a simple rectangle of cloth,
about 18 inches wide and up to six feet long, with a hole in the centre.
The kajira's head goes through the hole, and the cloth is worn as a
sideless poncho, generally belted at the waist by a tied cord, and often
falling a little above the knees in front and back (sometimes shorter).
Making a camisk requires no tailoring or seaming skills (though the cut
edges of the fabric are often stitched to prevent unraveling). A kajira
in a camisk would generally wear nothing besides the camisk, her collar,
the cord or strap wrapped once or twice around her waist and tied
"snugly" above a hip to provide a belt, often
also a string or ribbon to tie back her hair (since the hair of kajirae
is often full and long, but elaborate hairstyles tend to be considered
inappropriate for them), and possible restraints and adornments (though
occasionally she might be allowed to wear low non-heeled slippers).
Undergarments are not worn, due to the prohibition against a "nether
closure" (see the entry for "Tunic" below). A version of this
was the main slave attire seen in the first release of
a Japanese fan's
efforts to illustrate Gor book #19 (an early, influential, use of
Poser software for Gorean fan-art).
- Dina: The "slave flower", an alternative symbol to the "kef"
for a female slave.
- First girl: In a household or establishment with multiple
kajirae, one of them is often given authority over the others, in order
to help in maintaining discipline and ensuring the efficient and orderly
performance of kajira duties. Such a "first girl" might wear a "talmit"
or headband to mark her status, and/or have other differences in
her clothing. She is addressed as "mistress" by the other kajirae, and
is sometimes given a five-strap flogger or "slave whip" to help enforce
her authority over them. However, she is still a full slave and must
follow the orders of free persons with perfect obedience. Of course,
who (if anyone) is designated as first girl is entirely up to the owner
of the kajirae, or the free person who has been given charge of them,
and first girl status can be withdrawn or transferred at the whim of
masters.
- Free companion: On Gor, the pledging of a "free
companionship" between a free man and a free woman is the counterpart to
marriage. In a number of ways, a woman in a free companionship is more
autonomous than a wife in a traditional marriage on earth: the man and
woman are viewed as partners in a contractual relationship; there is no
particular expectation that the woman should submerge her personality in
that of the man; in many cases, a free companionship is automatically
dissolved after a year, unless annually mutually renewed by the parties;
and most
of the time a woman free companion is fully respected as befits her
status as a free woman. However, woman free companions are sometimes
subject to occasional arbitrary assertions of male authority by their
partners (in accordance with prevailing Gorean views of the basic
natures of the two sexes), and if a man in a free companionship has sex
with a kajira, normally this is not viewed as adultery or "cheating"
according to Gorean laws and social customs. Gorean free woman are
often frustrated that they are effectively in competition with kajirae
for the attentions of free men, but in some ways are kept at a
disadvantage in such competition by the restrictive social customs
governing the behavior of free women; since free women can't generally
vent such frustrations on the men themselves, they often take them out
on the kajirae, so that free women often despise kajirae.
- Honorifics of address: All slaves must address all free
persons as "master" or "mistress". In some contexts, a slave must
address even other slaves placed in authority over her or him as
"master" or "mistress". The form "my master" or "my mistress" is
reserved for a slave
addressing her or his actual owner. For one free person to address
another free person as "master" or "mistress" is usually a sign of
obsequious
cringing servility on Gor. Also, the words "master" and "mistress" are
not used as titles on Gor (i.e. regularly prefixed to names) -- in fact,
almost the only situation in the books where "master" is prefixed to a
name is when a kajira is speaking to one free man, and mentions the name
of another free man who is also present and overhearing the
conversation; in that context, the name of the second free man will be
preceded by the word "master" to acknowledge his presence. Note that
slaves are generally not permitted to directly address free persons by
name, unless given special permission to do so.
- Hook bracelets: Locking wrist manacles or leather wrist
cuffs, each of which has a ring or "U" on the outside which latches shut
without locking (i.e. "snap rings"). If hook bracelets worn by a kajira
are attached to
fixed points more than a few inches apart, or are snapped together
behind her body, then anyone who comes along can easily unlatch the
bracelets, but she is powerless to free herself. Not to be confused
with "snap bracelets" -- which are permanently chained in place
(separated by more than a few inches), and made so that the bracelets
latch shut around a kajira's wrists without locking -- though the end
result is the same (others can free the kajira, but she cannot free
herself).
- Iron belt: Chastity belt for
female.
- Kajira: Word for female slave in the
Gorean language (the Latin-style plural is
"kajirae"). A less commonly-used metaphorical synonym is "Sa-Fora"
(which most literally means "daughter of the chain" in the Gorean
language). Other synonyms used in certain contexts are "bondmaid",
"property girl" etc. A woman who is enslaved loses all legal status
(citizenship, caste membership, name etc.) and cannot own anything (but
is herself owned). Under Gorean laws, a slave is the absolute property
of her or his owner, and has no rights or protections; no obligations or
duties are ever owed to a slave. A slave of
either sex (kajira or kajirus) must render perfect obedience to an owner
of either sex (master or mistress) or suffer the consequences -- but
many on Gor believe that the situation of a male master owning a female
slave is most in accord with the basic natures of the two sexes. Only a
minority of women on Gor are enslaved, but there is a fairly common
opinion that the female slave is the paradigmatic or ideal woman
(kajirae "are closest, perhaps, to the essentials of the female, those
of subservience to the masculine will, obedience, service and
pleasure"). Free women can be very conscious of kajirae, and sometimes
envy them for being uninhibited by the restrictive customs which
frequently govern the behavior of free women (especially high-caste
women in the city-states), but they often seek to distinguish and
differentiate themselves from kajirae as far as possible.
- Kajirus: Word for male slave in the Gorean language
(the Latin-style plural is "kajiri"). There are far fewer kajiri than
kajirae on Gor, since Gorean men can only rarely be effectively "tamed",
so that most male slaves are considered inherently slightly dangerous,
and have little value other than as unskilled heavy labor which must
often be kept under armed guard. Men conquered in war who are not
left free are more often killed than enslaved, while women in the same
situation are almost always enslaved (since kajirae are a
readily-negotiable commodity, among other reasons).
- Kef: Letter of the fictional
Gorean alphabet (slightly
resembling a Latin-alphabet "k"), which is commonly used as a symbol for
a slave (since it writes the first sound of the words Kajira/Kajirus) --
it is found in a stylized cursive form (the "staff and fronds") for a
female slave, and in a simple block script form to designate a male slave.
- Kennel: When a household has few kajirae (or only one), a
kajira often sleeps on a mat on the floor at the foot of her master's
bed or "couch" (sometimes fastened to the fixed "slave ring" which is almost
invariably found at the foot of a Gorean couch). It is considered a
privilege for a kajira to be allowed on the master's couch, and kajirae
are generally trained to kneel before the couch and kiss it before
"ascending" to join the master there. However, in some circumstances
(especially when a household has multiple kajirae) it is considered
desirable for a kajira to have a separate bedroom or "kennel". A kennel
can be reasonably roomy, but it is generally too short for the kajira to
stand up straight in. It is constructed so that a master or first girl
can easily inspect the kajira within from the outside at any time. The
door is usually relatively small and square, so that the kajira must
enter and exit the kennel on her hands and knees; it is thus easy to
attach a leash to a kajira's collar etc. as she is exiting the kennel.
When the door is closed, it latches shut so that it cannot be opened
from the inside. Usually a kajira is required to be naked in her
kennel, except for the blanket that covers her when she sleeps.
- Kirtle: In the cool climate of Torvaldsland, the common
kajira garments of more southern latitudes are not practical during much
of the year, so that the main kajira garment there is the "kirtle", or
long ankle-length white wool gown (of thin wool in summer, and
presumably of thick wool in winter). However, it is sleeveless, has a
plunging neckline ("slit to the belly"), and is worn without underwear,
to clearly indicate that it is a slave garment. If this would make doing a
task easier and is allowed by the weather (or if the master orders it),
then the kirtle is often hitched up so that its hemline is some inches
off the ground.
- Ko-lar (Collar): The collar is an important symbol of Gorean
slavery; the brand (usually the Kef or Dina) symbolizes general slave
status, while the collar proclaims ownership by a particular Master or
Mistress. Many different types of collars can be worn in different
circumstances or cultures, but the type most commonly worn by kajirae in the
northern hemisphere city-states is a thin cylindrical metal locking
collar (which usually fits closely enough to leave only the width of a
finger or two in space between the inside of the collar and the neck),
with the lock worn at the back of the neck.
Collars worn by slaves under a long-term ownership and/or who go out in
public generally have an emblem or inscription which identifies the
slave's owner, and thus indicates whom the slave should be returned to
if lost, stolen, or runaway. (By contrast, in a closed environment such
as a slaver's establishment, a collar can sometimes be just a plain
narrow bar of iron bent around the neck.) A collar is sometimes
inscribed with the name of the slave who wears it, but this is not
always feasible, since slaves have no permanent names, but are only
given names for the convenience of their owners (who can change them or
remove them at will). Occasionally a slave is named by her collar --
that is, if a collar of the correct size happens to be available for a
kajira to wear, and this collar has previously been inscribed with a
name, then the kajira might be given that name simply to match the collar.
- Kurt: Gorean-language term for a five-strap flogger
("five-stranded Gorean slave lash") or "slave
whip", described as typically having an eighteen inch long handle
(suitable for either one- or two-handed use, and about an
inch-and-a-quarter to an inch-and-a-half in diameter) from which hang five
relatively soft and flexible flat lashes, each an inch-and-a-half wide
and two-and-a-half to three feet long. It is intended to effectively
discipline female slaves without real risk of injury or scarring.
Gorean kajirae are fairly often required to kiss the whip, or to fetch
the whip to the master (carrying it gripped in their teeth while
crawling on their hands and knees across a room), in order to remind
them of their status, and what the consequences can be if they fail in a
kajira's duty of being "absolutely obedient" and "perfectly pleasing".
Kajirae are usually punished not so much for any specific fault as for
having been generally "displeasing". Since a master's power over his
kajira is absolute, he can punish her for any reason, or no reason at
all (other than to "remind her that she is a slave"); however, the goal
of a good Gorean master is to get a master-slave relationship running
along smoothly so that only rather sporadic physical punishment is
necessary to maintain perfect discipline. Gorean masters are
occasionally quite harsh in order to impress on a kajira the fact of her
slavery and subjection to male domination -- but inflicting pain on a
slave solely for the personal gratification of the master, without any
legitimate relationship to discipline or training, is what Norman
condemns as "sadism" (and insists is rare on Gor).
- La kajira: A sentence meaning "I am a slave girl" in the Gorean
language (the main lingua franca of the
city-states). In some cases, a free woman who utters this sentence
becomes legally enslaved. This is one of the few Gorean-language
sentences given in the books. The Gorean language appears to have
sex-specific first person pronominal forms (the corresponding masculine
being "Lo").
- Merchant Law: On Gor, the ability or willingness of the
magistrates of one city to examine and
enforce the internal laws and judgements of another separately-governed
city is ordinarily minimal or non-existent. However, there is a
widely-recognized body of "merchant law" governing inter-city trade;
this is the only form of international or "intermunicipal" law on
Gor. Part of merchant law defines exactly who is and
is not considered to be a slave for the purposes of inter-city slave
trading. So if a prisoner or captive has not been branded or made to
wear a collar, and has not performed a
"gesture of submission" or uttered a formula of
self-enslavement, then that individual is not a slave according
to merchant law. Merchant law recommends that female slaves always be
branded, that the brand be at one of three locations (high on the side
of the left thigh below the hip, high on the side of the right thigh
below the hip, or on the lower left abdomen), and that a token of who
owns her (almost always a collar, rarely a bracelet or anklet) be
securely fastened on her. These recommendations are not any form of
limitation
on an owner's absolute power over a kajira, but in practice the vast
majority of kajirae on Gor are branded on the left thigh -- and if a
master ends up losing ownership of a kajira because he did not have her
branded or did not have her wear a collar with his name inscribed (thus
potentially making it more difficult to prove her slave status or his
ownership of her), then he has only himself to blame for not following
the standards of merchant law. Note that someone who is a slave under
merchant law is not always a slave under the laws of every Gorean city;
if a woman was illegally enslaved in a city, she is free according to
the laws of that city (and those who subjected her to false enslavement
are criminals in that city) -- but if she is then smuggled out to
another separately-governed city, she will generally be considered a
fully legitimate slave there (due to the lack of legal comity, which
accords
with Gorean attitudes that women of other cities are most naturally
slaves to the citizens of one's own city).
- Nadu: A Gorean-language command which invokes a classic
sexual submission kneeling position, with the torso held straight,
back over the heels, and the knees widely separated. (This
position was described in the "Story of O",
though the name "Nadu" is Norman's, used by him only in Gor book 13
"Explorers".)
By default, the hands rest on the thighs. Also called "the position of
the pleasure slave, that of a woman who is of interest to men". (See
Gorean slave positions for a more
detailed description, and further Gorean cultural context.)
- Panther girls: Some women who are dissatisfied with the
relatively narrow roles allocated to free women in Gorean societies, or
who have run afoul of the laws of their native city-state or community,
run away to the northern forests of Gor, joined there by some
successfully-escaped kajirae. Such women are known as "panther
girls" (from the panther-skins they wear as clothing) or "forest girls".
Since they are outlaws (not under the protection of any Gorean home
stone), they can be legitimately enslaved by anyone they meet, so they
group together into roaming bands for mutual protection, and generally
avoid men except in a few specific contexts (tense barter encounters,
surprise ambushes to acquire captives, and occasional temporary bandit
alliances). Some panther girls are very skilled with bows and arrows,
but they're not real warriors (Norman thinks that a woman warrior is a
contradiction in terms). Their only real military tactic is to try to
arrange a surprise ambush to capture isolated individuals or small groups
in the forest; if they fail to achieve a surprise ambush, or take on a
group which they do not outnumber, then they very often lose and are
captured and enslaved. They wear panther skins instead of cloth partly
because they try to be self-sufficient, making do with resources
available in the forests, in order to keep potentially dangerous
encounters with outsiders to a minimum. However, they do periodically
barter captives
and stolen objects for a few items which they greatly need or desire,
but which they can't make for themselves: knives and arrowpoints of
hard metal forged to a sharp edge, and the occasional block of hard
sugar candy. Panther girls are often contemptuous of women who are not
suited to the panther-girl way of life, and show little compunction
about making use of their male and female captives (including sometimes
raping male captives) while usually trying to quickly trade them for
weapons and candy.
- Pierced-ear girl: Traditionally in the "northern civilized
cities of known Gor", piercing a woman's ears was usually done with the
serious intention of permanently marking her as a particularly low
slave, who should never be freed, and who should never even be made a
"high slave" -- since according to Gorean interpretations, a woman wearing
ear-rings has an overwhelming sexual symbolism in which "the
penetrability of her sweet flesh is brazenly advertised upon her very
body, a proclamation of her ready vulnerability". (The use and meaning
of ear-piercing described in Norman's "Gor" books was presumably
influenced by Bible verses Exodus 21:6 and Deuteronomy 15:17.) After
the fall of the southern-hemisphere city of Turia described in book 4
"Nomads", ear-piercing became more common in the north, often done
simply to attempt to increase a pleasure slave's price, but pierced ears
still
retain connotations of brazen sexuality and permanent status as a low
slave ("in Gorean eyes, [earrings] fasten a woman's degradation
helplessly upon her"). By contrast, septum-piercing and the wearing of
nose-rings is considered to be a simple kajira adornment (also practiced
by free women in some cultures on Gor), without any strong symbolic
significance.
- Red silk: Non-virgin (especially of a female slave), one
whose "body has been opened by men" for the "uses of men".
- Rep-cloth: A relatively cheap and durable fabric which the
majority of ordinary kajira garments are made from in the zone of the
"northern civilized cities" (though that's not its only use); it is
often dyed or printed with floral designs. The basic plant fibers are
soft, but the type of cloth used for slave garments is often rather
coarsely woven. Some serving slaves owned by free women wear tunics of
closely-woven white rep cloth starched to stiffness, which can be relatively
modest (as slave garments go). However, kajirae more often wear
unstarched clothing of rather thin rep-cloth which is closely clinging
and not very concealing (quite revealing when wet). Male slaves
(kajiri) more often wear garments of wool than rep-cloth.
- Robes of concealment (free women's attire): Everywhere on
Gor, it is required that the clothing of kajirae and the clothing of
free women be strongly distinguished, so that people can tell at a
glance whether a woman is free or slave, and thus be able to react to
her appropriately according to her social status. In the zone of the
main northern hemisphere cities, this almost always means that the gowns
worn by free women in public must be long (falling well below the
knees), be made of opaque material (not thin rep-cloth), and have high
necklines that fully cover the shoulders. Since kajira garments are
always sleeveless, in some cities free women's gowns must have sleeves
in order to contrast; however, low-caste women sometimes do wear
sleeveless gowns in other cities and regions. Free women also usually
wear slip-like undergarments, stockings, and shoes (while kajira attire
is generally restricted to one layer only, and kajirae usually go
barefoot when
the weather permits); however, some impoverished free women, or free women
living in certain geographically-remote areas somewhat independent of
typical city-state culture, sometimes do wear a gown without
undergarments (such as the summer dress of the women of the Alar tribe).
High-caste or wealthy women in the cities emphasize their high social
status by wearing voluminous "robes of concealment", with many layers of
petticoats, and veils covering the face, and in some cases also high
platform shoes (which can be almost mini-stilts). Such upper-class free
women invest great emotional and symbolic significance in never showing
their faces to any free men outside their family -- but poor free women
in many cities often find it impractical to go veiled, and the custom of
face-veiling is unknown in many rural or tribal areas outside the
cities. Some free women of intermediate social status in areas where
veiling is practiced compromise with a single veil of plain cloth (as
opposed to the multiple
layers of sheer veiling worn by upper-class women); in the
Tahari desert region, such free women often wear a "haik"
(black burka).
- Sign of the looped binding fiber: In the arctic zone of the
northern hemisphere of the planet Gor, it is not practical for kajirae
to wear skimpy attire, so that kajirae wear the same basic clothing
as free women. However, every single garment worn by a female
slave there (whether an inner garment or outer garment) must show a
distinctive pattern of stitching which represents a looped binding fiber
(such as is often used to tie up kajirae). The design, sewn into the
clothes with red-dyed sinew, appears prominently on the
left shoulder of upper-body garments, and on the left hip of some
lower-body garments.
- Silk slave: Male slave kept by a woman owner for bedroom duties
(most male slaves on Gor are used for hard labor in work gangs). When a
free woman makes use of a kajirus sexually, he is often chained so that
he is unable to hold her in his arms -- since allowing this would be
considered to add a note of male domination to the lovemaking. Some
free women carefully avoid kissing a kajirus when making sexual use of
him, since they would consider it degrading to soil their lips by
touching them to the body of a mere slave. Note that only a small
minority of rich free women on Gor own silk slaves, and (in contrast to
the usual situation with free men and kajirae) it is often not very easy
or convenient for a free woman to obtain the sexual use of a kajirus
whom she does not personally own (in the city of Ar it is strictly
forbidden by law).
- Sirik: A set of linked chains and attached locking circlets
intended to thoroughly restrain a woman's movements, but without needing
to fasten her to anything, and while still allowing her to stand, to
walk with mincing steps, and to kneel in the tower or "nadu" positions.
The main chain (about five feet long) hangs down from a locking collar
(sometimes a loose Turian collar which can
be slipped over a regular slave collar);
a bracelet chain (connecting two locking wrist manacles that are usually
about 6-12 inches apart) is attached to the main chain roughly two feet
below the collar, or at the "lower belly", while an anklet chain
(connecting two locking fetters that are usually about a foot to a
foot-and-a-half apart) is attached to the end of the main chain. Ideally,
the chain lengths can be adjusted to taste; Norman suggests that
best results are obtained when the main vertical chain (collar chain) is
long enough to rest on the floor for several inches when the woman is
standing straight (alternatively, the collar chain can be slightly
shorter, and end in a small ring, through which the anklet chain is
allowed free play). The chains should be light enough not to be too
burdensome or uncomfortable when worn for hours.
- Slave bells: Small bells worn by a kajira to make her more
conscious
of her body movements and/or to make it easier for masters to track her
whereabouts, while providing a pleasant background of sound (the "music
of bondage"). Such bells
can be worn in many forms, but the most classic method is as five bells
attached to a locking slave anklet (this is worn by state slaves of Ar,
etc.).
- Slave bracelets: A pair of locking wrist manacles connected
by a
light chain often about five inches in length. Can be used to confine a
kajira's hands in front of or behind her body (more often the latter, as
indicated by the "Bracelets!"
command).
- Slave livery: Term which usually refers to a specific type
of basic slave tunic when this becomes a conventional kajira
uniform in certain contexts. Thus "state slaves" owned by the
government of the city of Ar wear standardized grey tunics. Also, in
some Gorean cities during certain periods it was customary for kajirae
to wear tunics with one or several diagonal stripes of colour across the
front. If in a household or establishment with multiple slaves, the
kajirae are generally required to wear the same standardized attire most
of the time, that's the "livery of the house".
- Slave papers: Legal documents which include minute physical
descriptions and measurements of a slave, along with information about
the circumstances of her enslavement, whether she was a virgin when first
enslaved ("white silk"), her ownership history, the names
she has been called by at different times, the type and location of her
brand, her various abilities and characteristics, etc. Often such
papers will include attestations by doctors who have examined her,
magistrates or merchants of cities where she was sold, etc.
Only a minority of slaves on Gor are the subject of papers of this type,
since they are not usually necessary to establish a kajira's slave
status. (If a woman in a city has a slave-brand on her body, and there
is no specific evidence that she was branded in the city contrary to the
city's laws or that she is a citizen of the city who has suffered the
illegal indignity of false enslavement, and the woman has no manumission
papers showing that she has been freed, then the fact of her being
branded is taken as an overwhelming indication that she is a kajira.)
However, slave papers might come in handy if a kajira is being kept in
the same city where she was formerly a citizen (to show that her
enslavement was legitimate and above-board), as proof of ownership when
a slave has become lost, stolen, or runaway, or as proof of slave status
if a kajira is (unusually) not yet branded. As is generally the case
with legal documents on Gor, slaves are not allowed to read or touch
slave papers (except to add an ink impression of their fingerprints or
similar personal identifying marks).
- Slave silks: Sheer or diaphanous garments with some similarity
to earthly lingerie, but generally respecting the Gorean "no nether
closure" rule; also known as "pleasure silks". Sometimes silk garments
which are almost completely transparent are said to make a kajira feel
"more naked than naked". Note that kajira clothing is more often brief,
open, and loose than tight-fitting, thus allowing fairly free access to
the kajira's body without the need to remove her clothing first (though
kajira garments are sometimes tightly belted at the waist); for this
reason, bra and panties or bikini type garments are not particularly
Gorean -- though minimal silk G-strings (which can easily be pushed to
one side) are occasionally worn. (Earth bras and panties are often
considered to be somewhat paradoxical garments on Gor, since their
skimpy cut and being made of thin or sheer silk-like fabrics strongly
suggests kajira attire, but the way in which they fit tightly over the
most intimate areas -- thus potentially obstructing the master's right
of constant unhindered access to all of his slave property -- would
very rarely be tolerated in kajira garments worn in the zone of the main
northern hemisphere cities.) Also, slave silks are not underwear (since
kajira clothing rarely has more than one layer, except for an
occasionally-worn outer "slave cloak").
- Slave strip(s): A garment which consists of a cord tied
around a
kajira's body at the belly (usually fastened by an easily-untied
slip-knot or bow at the left hip), sometimes with two rectangles or
strips of cloth folded over the cord (one in front and one in back), but
often with only one rectangle folded over the cord, in front.
- Slave wine: Semi-permanent female contraceptive, usually taken
by drinking an unsweetened bitter liquid. This is a medical refinement
of the naturally-growing "sip-root" (traditionally used as a short-term
contraceptive in some Gorean cultures); its effects can be reversed by
administering a dose of a "releaser".
- Southern hemisphere slave garments: In the southern
hemisphere of the planet Gor (south of the equatorial jungles and west
or south of the Tahari desert), there are some cultural practices
different from those prevailing in the zone of the main northern
hemisphere cities (or "northern civilized cities of known Gor"). Thus
in the largest southern-hemisphere city of Turia, piercing the ears of
kajirae, and having kajirae wear ear-rings, was traditionally done much
more often than in the northern hemisphere (and without the special
meaning assigned to ear-piercing in the northern hemisphere). The
loose-fitting toroidal Turian collar is
also favored over the close-fitting cylindrical collar of the northern
hemisphere. Another difference between the two hemispheres is that in
southern hemisphere cultures, kajira clothing often violates the "no
nether closure" rule of the northern hemisphere. So among the Wagon
Peoples of the Plains of Turia, standard kajira attire consists of the
following four items: the Curla, a red cord knotted tightly around the
waist and fastened above the left hip with an easily-untied slip knot
(i.e. shoelace knot); the Chatka, a strip of black leather about six
inches wide and four to five feet long, which is slipped over the Curla
in front, passed between the legs, and slipped over the Curla from the
inside in back, so that it is tight-fitting in the middle, while the
loose ends fall freely in front and back; the Kalmak, a short sleeveless
vest of black leather open in the front; and finally the Koora, a strip
of red cloth (matching the Curla) used to tie back the hair (note that
kajirae of the Wagon Peoples are not allowed to confine their hair in
any other way). In addition to the "no nether closure" principle, this
also violates the northern hemisphere preference that kajirae should not
usually wear leather (which is considered too "masculine" for them), but
rather soft clinging fabrics such as silk and rep-cloth. (See the entry
on "slave strips" for a Chatka and Curla type garment adjusted to
northern hemisphere preferences.) In the city of
Turia itself, the most common kajira attire is the "Turian camisk" or
piece of cloth cut in the shape of an inverted "T": the foot of the "T"
is fastened at the neck and goes down the front of the body, between the
legs, and up to the lower back where it meets the crossbar; the two ends
of the crossbar are then brought around to the front of the body and
fastened
there. Note that a Turian camisk is not actually a camisk according to
the basic northern hemisphere meaning of the word; however, the two
types of garment do share the feature of revealing the most common site
for a kajira brand (high on the side of the left thigh under the hip).
- Stabilization serum: Immortality potion. (Slave wine and
stabilization serums combine to contribute to certain apparently
intentionally unrealistic aspects of the Gor books.)
- Ta-Teera: The Gorean-language term for a "slave rag", that
is, an irregular and generally somewhat fragmentary garment which is
vaguely tunic-like, but which does not fit
the definition of any of the standard types of kajira clothing styles
(tunic, camisk, etc.). Ta-teeras are often customized with strategic
rips and gaps to be rather scanty and revealing. The minimum coverage
requirement for a ta-teera would seem to be that if the kajira stands
still, then her crotch will be covered from the view of anyone directly
in front of her (but it might become visible from other angles and/or
when she is in motion, as is the case to varying degrees with the
majority of Gorean slave garments).
- Tower slave: Female slave whose duties do not prominently
include sexual services, also known as a "house slave" or sometimes "serving
slave" (derogatory variant: "kettle slave"). Opposite is "pleasure
slave" or "silk girl". Of course, the manner in which a kajira serves is
decided solely by her owner.
- Tower slave position: Like "nadu", but with knees together
(indicating a less sexual submission). Also called "the position of the
house slave". When the hands are not occupied with some task, they
generally rest loosely in front, with wrists crossed. Gorean free women
commonly use a similar position to simply sit on the floor or the ground
(without expressing any submission), but in less revealing garments than
kajirae, and never with wrists crossed.
- Tunic: Standard garment worn by men on Gor whose occupations
demand physical effort and freedom of movement (such as warriors) -- and
also (in a rather different form) by female slaves. The tunics (or loose
minidresses) worn by
kajirae are sleeveless and commonly rather short (with the hemline
always above the knees, and usually only
coming down to the upper thighs). Those slave tunics worn by pleasure
slaves (as opposed to tower slaves) often have a deeply-plunging
neckline, which can be slit in front down to the navel, and are often
modified so that they can be removed with a simple pull on a "disrobing
loop" attached to the left shoulder-strap, or by unfastening a clasp or
loosening an easily-untied slip-knot (bow or shoelace knot) at the left
shoulder strap. Unlike
several other types of kajira attire, a slave tunic usually covers the
most common kajira branding site (high on the side of the left thigh,
under the hip). However, tunics can be slit at the sides in various
ways, in order to be more revealing, and this can allow the brand to
become visible. The tunics of the house livery worn by the kajirae of
Miles of Argentum are "slit at the sides to the rib cage", so that the
back and front are joined only for a few inches below the armpit (of
course, if a tunic is slit completely, so that the back and front are
not joined at the sides at all, then it becomes a camisk). In the
northern-hemisphere city-states, all of a
kajira's garments are generally required to be open at the bottom
(allowing an open-air path to her privates), to symbolize and facilitate
her constant sexual availability and accessibility to her master (i.e. a
"nether closure" is forbidden), so that no undergarments are worn.
- Two-piece kajira outfits: The common northern-hemisphere
slave garments (camisk, tunic, etc.) do not fully bare the midriff. If
this is desired, then two-piece outfits can be worn: most often a simple
rectangle of cloth worn as a short skirt tied at the left hip (so that
the left leg and the common kajira branding site there are fully
revealed), and a halter top above. Fancy outfits worn for solo kajira
slave dances are often of the same basic type, but of silk rather than
rep cloth, etc. For another type of two-piece kajira outfit, see the
standard attire of the kajirae of the Wagon Peoples of the southern
hemisphere, described above.
- Walking chain: Light locking ankle fetters connected by a light
chain a foot or more long, when worn without other restraints in the Tahari
desert, are
likely mainly intended to keep a woman's stride length below some
maximum considered aesthetic, rather than to confine a slave as such.
Free women there sometimes use an analogous "silken thong" as a beauty
aid for the same reason, or occasionally even wear chains (as may have
also sometimes been done in Biblical times -- see Isaiah 3:16).
- White silk: Virgin (especially of a female slave). Virginity
in a kajira is more often considered a negative (i.e. a sign of awkward
inexperience) than a positive by Gorean men (though in some
contexts it can have a certain commercial value on Gor). In the zone of
the main northern cities, a "red-silk"
kajira would not normally wear pure white garments (without any accents
or trimmings of a contrasting colour), since to do so would be to falsely
proclaim her to be white silk; however, tower slaves / house slaves
often wear simple predominantly-white tunics.
See also
(This entry in the BDSM Dictionary incorporates text from the full
Gor-
Dictionary article in Wipipedia.)
This entry is published under the terms of the
GFDL. People with profiles on
Informed Consent can improve
this entry: see the BDSM Dictionary
help page for details.