Gayle Rubin: Difference between revisions

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Latest revision as of 19:19, 29 November 2010

Gayle Rubin is a cultural anthropologist, known for queer, feminist, and pro-sex work.

In 1971, she called a meeting of Ann Arbor lesbians, resulting in formation of the Radicalesbians at the University of Michigan.[1] After moving to San Francisco, Rubin, Pat Califia and other San Francisco Bay Area women, she co-founded Samois, the first lesbian SM group, in San Francisco, in 1978. After Samois broke up, Rubin co-founded a successor organization, "The Outcasts." Rubin holds a faculty position at the University of Michigan.


Significant works

  • "The Traffic in Women: Notes on the 'Political Economy' of Sex" (1975 essay; available in Anthropology and Women, ed. Rayna Reiter)
  • "The Leather Menace: Comments on politics and S/M" (essay; first published April 1982
  • 1982 Barnard Conference paper on legal regulation of sexuality
  • "Thinking Sex: Notes for a Radical Theory of the Politics of Sexuality" (1984 essay; available in Pleasure and Danger, ed. Carole Vance)
  • "Of Catamites and Kings: Reflections on butch, gender, and boundaries" (1992 essay) in The Persistent Desire: A Femme-Butch Reader, ed. Joan Nestle
  • The Valley of the Kings: Leathermen in San Francisco, 1960 – 1990 (1994 dissertation)

Notes

  1. Karen Miller, "Revisioning Ann Arbor's Radical Past: An Interview with Gayle S. Rubin," Michigan Feminist Studies, no. 12 (1997-98), pp. 91-108.