View text source at Wikipedia
Cynthia Slater | |
---|---|
Born | August 7, 1945 |
Died | October 26, 1989 | (aged 44)
Occupation | Activist, sex educator, dominatrix |
Subject | Activism, BDSM |
Notable works | Co-founding Society of Janus |
Cynthia Slater (August 7, 1945 – October 26, 1989) was an American sex educator, HIV/AIDS activist, and dominatrix. She was the co-founder of the second BDSM organization founded in the United States (after The Eulenspiegel Society),[1] a San Francisco, California based BDSM education and support group known as the Society of Janus, which she founded with Larry Olsen in August 1974.[2][3]
Slater's activism for women to be accepted within the gay leather scene in San Francisco during the late 1970s brought her to more mainstream attention.[2][4] Slater persuaded the management of San Francisco's S/M leather club the Catacombs, the most famous fisting club in the world, to open up to lesbians; it was originally a gay men's club.[5][4] It operated from 1975 to 1981, and reopened at another location from 1982 to 1984. Slater was also an early proponent of S/M safety, and one of the major AIDS activists and educators during the 1980s.[2] Slater hosted Society of Janus safety demonstrations during the late 1970s, cultivating a space for women within the 'plurality of gay men' already present within the leather/kink/fetish Venn-diagramatic culture.[6]
According to the Leather Hall of Fame biography of Slater, she said of the Society of Janus,
According to first-hand accounts, she coined the term "SM 101", referring to the safety demonstrations and classes she presented.[7] As well, in 1981 Slater and David Lourea "presented safer-sex education workshops in bathhouses and BDSM clubs in San Francisco."[8] In 1985, Slater, who was HIV-positive, organized the first Women's HIV/AIDS Information Switchboard.[9] She also contributed to "developing and disseminating kink friendly safer sex technologies".[7]
She was photographed by Robert Mapplethorpe in 1980.[10] She was a professional dominatrix;[2] and was openly bisexual.[8]
On October 26, 1989, Slater died of AIDS complications.[11] She is among those commemorated in the AIDS Memorial Quilt.[12]
In 1989, she received the National Leather Association International’s Jan Lyon Award for Regional or Local Work.[13]
In 2003, she received the Forebear Award as part of the Pantheon of Leather Awards.[14]
In 2007, the National Leather Association International inaugurated awards for excellence in SM/fetish/leather writing. The categories include the Cynthia Slater award for non-fiction article.[15]
In 2014, Slater was inducted into the Leather Hall of Fame.[2]
In 2017, the art installation known as the San Francisco South of Market Leather History Alley was installed; in it Slater is honored with a metal bootprint displaying her name and a short statement about her.[16][17]
She is an inductee of the Society of Janus Hall of Fame.[18]
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link), retrieved September 30, 2014.