A subculture of gay men participate in a radical form of sexuality and community known as leather. Through intimate forms of encounter, using such tools as pain-pleasure, bondage, and role-play, leather can bring a shift of conciousness and a new vision of the self. This innovative book pioneered in sensitively exploring and celebrating leathersexuality. As relevant today as when it was written 20 years ago, Urban Aboriginals is an intimate view of the gay male leather community. Within its pages, author Geoff Mains explores the spritual, sexual, emotional, cultural and physiological aspects that make this "scene" one of the most prominent yet misunderstood subcultures in our society. Geoff Mains was a sweet, intelligent, articulate, and wonderful man who cared passionately about the leather community. He wanted to make sure that its accomplishments would be remembered and its wild beauty understood. Urban Aboriginals resulted from his love and is an enduring part of his legacy. It is a unique cultural study, and a priceless document of a now vanished time. In Urban Aboriginals, Geoff Mains pioneered our understanding of the connection between the neurochemistry of pleasure seeking and radical sexuality. -- Guy Baldwin, M.S., psychotherapist and author It is a unique cultural study, and a priceless document of a now vanished time. -- Gayle, Ph.D., author and anthropologist Urban Aboriginals was way ahead of its time for clearly defining a significant transformation in Western Culture. -- Fakir Musafar, Father of the Modern Primitive Movement Urban Aboriginals was an instant classic the moment it appeared in the spirng of 1984. Published by the always daring Gay Sunshine Press, its author was a little known Canadian writer, Geoff Mains, who wove an audacious mix of theory and lived experience to explain the gay male leather scene. Mains introduced the notion of endorphins, recently discovered opium-like chemicals in the central nervous system, as a critical component of S/M sexuality. He furthered his insight by linking the social behaviors of this little understood subculture to the tribal rites of indigenous societies around the world. parts biochemistry lesson, anthropological study, and candid journalism, the book opened a gateway of revelation that is still being felt to this day.... Mains settled in San Francisco upon completing his book. He spent the last few years of his life among a community he had boundless regard for, providing witness in a novel, Gentle Warriors. Soon after that work was done, Mains died of complications due to AIDS on June 21, 1989. Well over a decade later, Mains' writing continues to be cited by influencial sources, including The New York TImes, which quoted from his diary these poignant words about the plague's impact on the world he loved: "I stand, uncertain....The pst that I beleived in, the times I lived for, are gone." Urban Aboriginals lived on, however, through a second edition and a whole new generation of appreciative readers. Main's message, enhanced by photographer Robert Pruzan's powerful images, continued to enlighten and affirm an ever-loving tribe of "modern primitives." Now some years out of print, the book is being circulated again. With original plates and negatives long gone, piecing the book back to its original form has entailed an act of literary archeology. Appropriately enough, ;proceeds from this new edition will help preserve thelife work of Mains and Pruzan (who also died of AIDS), now permanently archived at the San Francisco Bay Area Gay & Lesbian Historical Society. A sincere word of thanks is also due to the book's original publisher, Winston Leyland, who graciously consented to its revival. Many urban aboriginals everywhere continue to value and learn from these brave and visionary pages. -Mark Thompson This is a journey into the aboriginal soul. It is not a voyage into forests that reverberate with drums, but into an abyss upon which, precariously, western civilization balances. It is a journey marked by fetish and mana, shaman, ritual and trance. Here, men partake of a very real magic. They are men among whom danger, fear and new hope have broken many of the misconceptions upon which western civilization falters. These are men not apart from but of the very blood of that civilization. Urbane and savage in the smae breath, they are animal and human in the same stroke. Of the Caliban, Prospero admits: "This thing of darkness I acknowledge mine." Geoff Mains was born May 29, 1947. He had a doctorate in biochemistry and spent much of his professional career in Vancouver, B.C., where he was a member of the faculty of the Forestry Department at the University of British Columbia. In 1984, he was employed by Environmental Science Associates in San Francisco, enabling him to move to the city, “which he considered his true home” (San Francisco Bay Guardian obitituary). Mains will be best remembered in the gay community for his groundbrea