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Gayle S. Rubin (b. 1949) is a cultural anthropologist best known as an activist and influential theorist of sex and gender politics. She has written on a range of subjects including feminism, sadomasochism, prostitution, pornography and lesbian literature, as well as anthropological studies and histories of sexual subcultures.
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Rubin first rose to prominence through her 1975 essay "The Traffic in Women: Notes on the \'Political Economy\' of Sex", in which she attempts to discover historical social mechanisms by which gender and compulsory heterosexuality are produced, and women are consigned to a secondary position in human relations. In this essay, Rubin coined the phrase "sex/gender system", which she defines as "the set of arrangements by which a society transforms biological sexuality into products of human activity, and in which these transformed sexual needs are satisfied". She takes as a starting point writers who have previously discussed gender and sexual relations as an economic institution (Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels) which serves a conventional social function (Claude Levi-Strauss) and is reproduced in the psychology of children (Sigmund Freud and Jacques Lacan). She argues that these writers fail to adequately explain women\'s oppression, and offers a reinterpretation of their ideas.
In 1978 Rubin moved to San Francisco to begin studies of the gay male leather culture. On June 13 of that year, Rubin, together with Pat Califia and 16 others founded the first known lesbian SM group, Samois. The group disbanded in May 1983, and Rubin was involved in founding a new organisation, "the Outcasts", the following year.
Rubin became a prominent "pro-sex activist" in the Feminist Sex Wars of the 1980s, giving a now-classic paper at the volatile 1982 conference at Barnard College in New York City.
In her 1984 essay "Thinking Sex", Rubin interrogated the value system that social groups — whether left- or right-wing, feminist or patriarchal — attribute to sexuality which defines some behaviours as good/natural and others (such as pedophilia) as bad/unnatural.
She served on the Board of Directors of the Leather Archives and Museum from 1992 to 2000.
In 1994, Rubin completed her PhD in anthropology at the University of Michigan, with a dissertation titled The Valley of the Kings: Leathermen in San Francisco, 1960 - 1990. She is currently an assistant professor of anthropology at the university. She received both unwanted notoriety and praise in 2006 when she was listed in David Horowitz\'s book "The Professors: The 101 Most Dangerous Academics in America."
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