"The man who respects a woman does not know what else to do with her." -- John Norman
John Frederick Lange, Jr. (born June 3, 1931), better known under his pen name John Norman, is a professor of philosophy and an author. He is best known as the author of the book series Chronicles of Gor.
"A Gorean slave girl in the presence of a free man or woman always kneels, unless excused from doing so.""According to the Gorean way of looking at things a taste of the slave ring is thought to be occasionally beneficial to all women, even the exalted free woman.""It is one thing to own a woman, and it is another to have her within the bonds of an excellent mastery.""Perhaps it should only be added that the Gorean master, though often strict, is seldom cruel. The girl knows, if she pleases him, her lot will be an easy one.""Slave girls on Gor address all free men as Master, though, of course only one such would be her true Master."
John Lange was born in Chicago, Illinois to John Frederick Lange and Almyra D. Lange née Taylor.
Academic career
He began his academic career in the early 1950s, earning a Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of Nebraska in 1953, and his Master of Arts degree from the University of Southern California in 1957.
While at USC he married Bernice L. Green on January 14, 1956. The couple has three children: John, David, and Jennifer.
Lange became a Doctor of Philosophy in 1963 from Princeton University. His dissertation was named: "In defence of ethical naturalism: an examination of certain aspects of naturalistic fallacy, with particular attention to the logic of an open question argument". Lange summed it up in an interview by saying "if one cannot make sense of morality within some sort of satisfying, natural context, then one is likely to end up with no morality, which is less than societally reassuring, or is likely to end up with a competitive plethora of moralities in which ninety-nine percent of the world's population is convinced that the other ninety-nine percent is unclean, stupid, uninformed, vicious, depraved, in need of coercive correction, and such. That too, seems less than reassuring."
Currently, he is a professor at Queens College of the City University of New York. Philosophy Page Full Time Faculty
Writing career
Norman's fiction attained popularity in the 1970s and early 1980s with millions of copies sold.
The Gorean subculture, based on his Gor novels, developed and assembled on the Internet and in real life. Currently, all 25 of the previously published Gor novels are in print, joined by three new novels released over the past few years.
Norman's Gor series was influenced by Edgar Rice Burroughs' John Carter of Mars novels. His novels include lengthy philosophical and sociological dissertations criticizing the malaise of modern society (everything from common dishonesty to nuclear holocaust). A wide variety of societies, cultures, moral concepts, and technologies are described in depth in his novels; however it is always within the context of the male adventure genre, and, as such, families, children, and other mundane aspects of real life are generally absent and those roles are left undiscussed.
His fiction places emphasis on living in accordance with a Nietzsche-esque natural order, sponsoring a hierarchy of talent, especially strength. Based on this assumed hierarchy, combined with a particular usage of evolutionary psychology to analyze gender differences, he contends that woman is the submissive natural helper, and figurative slave, of dominant man. His work often takes this observation literally: heroes enslave heroines who, upon being enslaved, revel in the discovery of their natural place. Bondage in the novels and in his Imaginative Sex guide is overtly and completely sexual in nature and while the philosophy presented is unquestionably that of male dominance, the male characters are themselves often temporarily and elaborately enslaved by powerful females. In an interview with Polygraff magazine, Norman stated that he believes that it is "obvious" that all societies are based on dominance and hierarchy.