Risk-Aware Consentual Kink
Home ] Up ] 24/7 ] 7 Principles Of Mastery ] BDSM Acronyms ] How to Approach a Female Dominant ] Awakening of a Cyber-slave ] BDSM ] BDSM Emblem Meaning ] Little Bedtime Story ] Fetish Blood Drink Fetish ] Bondage ] Submissive's Bill of Rights ] Breath Play-Scene ] Cane Making ] Captive (Story) ] Cleaning Leather ] Commotio Cordis & SM Play ] Connection Between Kink & Abuse ] von Sacher-Masoch Contract ] Dark Realities ] Difference D/s & BDSM ] Discipline ] Domination and submission ] What is D/s ] DSM-IV on Masochism ] DSM-IV on Sadism ] Emergence ] Endorphins? ] Fantasy Part 1 ] Preparing the Flesh ] Formal or Slave Collar ] Glossary for the Uninitiated ] Hanky Code ] Humiliation ] Humiliation Ideas ] Ideal Dominant ] Inspiration (Story) ] jealousy ] Sado and Masochisms bio ] Married Dominants ] Leather Flag & other meanings ] Medical Scene (story) ] Social Sexual Monogamy ] My thoughts on slavery ] S&M isn't what it used to be ] Views on Novice Dom ] Views on Novice Sub ] D/s Polygamy Relationships ] promiscuous D/s ] Pleasure of the Pain ] Purity of Submission ] Famous Quotes ] [ Risk-Aware Consentual Kink ] Master Slave Relationship ] Rituals ] Sex Massage ] Sexual Ritualism ] Sadism and masochism ] SM VS Abuse ] Spirituality ] Spiritual Magical masochismo BDSM FAQ ] Submissive vs Slave ] Power of Surrender ] Kinky Tapes ] Question of Training ] Training Collar ] Codes of Conduct & Identity ]

 

Risk-Aware Consensual Kink

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A risk-aware consensual kink (RACK) is any of several phrases used by portions of the BDSM community to describe themselves and their philosophies. The term is sometimes also seen as risk-accepted consensual kink.

"Risk-aware consensual kink" is a term that was coined in reaction to current dissatisfaction within the BDSM community regarding the political issues (internal and external) surrounding the "safe, sane and consensual" ethos that many people use to describe their form of consensual BDSM. Specifically, RACK is intended to embrace edgeplay and play that is engaged in without safewords. But note that legal consent may not create a defence to criminal liability for any injuries caused during edgeplay and that, for these purposes, non-physical injuries are included in the definition of grievous bodily harm in English law.

RACK is intended as a philosophy, and does not specifically refer to any particular type of BDSM play or activity.

External links