And there's also the perfectly strange depiction of the randy monk in

GESUALDO --
DEATH FOR FIVE VOICES
(Tod für fünf Stimmen) by Werner Herzog

http://movies2.nytimes.com/gst/movies/movie.html?v_id=259006

who engages in rapt necrophilia upon the murdered wife of mad Gesualdo
and of the bodies which are so strangely preserved and remain on display
to this day.. and which prefigure or perhaps form part of the culture
of influence for artists not limited to the exemplar of Gunther Von Hagens...

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gunther_von_Hagens



don't forget the beer..
or the Pantagruelion (perhaps)

http://www.pantagruelion.com/

"Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law" is a moral utterance found in 
the Thelemic foundation scripture,
which is called the Book of the Law. "Do what thou wilt" is known as the Law of 
Thelema. It is derived from the rule
of
the fictional Abbey of Thélème in the classic satire Gargantua by the French 
priest and occult student François
Rabelais. Crowley recommends study of Rabelais when discussing the Law. In Rabelais 
this rule was "fay çe que
vouldras",
French for "do what you will." From his work the maxim became a well-known part 
of Western literary life, and was
adopted by the satirical English gentleman's society called the Hell-Fire Club 
or the Friars of Medmenham.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Hellfire_Club

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