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Centre for the Study of Sexual Dissidence & Cultural  Change 
University of Sussex 
Queory  Seminar Series: Autumn 2010 
Gay  Liberation in Britain: 40 Years On 
Simon  Watney, University for the Creative Arts 
Thursday,  14 October 2010 
Fulton  Building Room 104 
Simon  Watney has been involved in British lesbian and gay politics since 
1970.  He was co-founder with Mark Rowlands of  Brighton GLF and has a 
long-established international reputation in the field of  HIV/AIDS education and 
service provision.  He has also been extensively involved in cultural and 
voluntary sector  responses to HIV/AIDS both as a writer/scholar and as a 
founder of numerous  charities and not-for-profit companies.  From 1985-89, 
Simon was founding chair of the Health Education Group at  the Terrence Higgins 
Trust where he developed the Trust’s pioneering HIV  prevention campaigns.  
Simon also  was a member of the Learning About Aids Project based at Bristol 
Polytechnic,  which developed the main teaching text for HIV/AIDS education 
in British  secondary schools.  In 1990, he was  co-founder of the activist 
group OutRage, and in 1991, he was founder-signatory  of the Red Ribbon 
Project in New York.  From 1988-1995, he wrote a monthly column on HIV/AIDS 
issues for the Gay Times. Openly HIV+, Simon was a  trustee of the charity 
Crusaid from 2007-2010, with a particular interest in  questions of AIDS and 
poverty in the UK.  Intertwined with his own personal trajectory, Simon’s talk 
will address  this rich history of the politics of sexual dissidence in 
Britain from 1970 to  the present day. 
Brief  bio: 
Simon  Watney is currently Acting Head of the M.A. in Contextual Studies at 
the  University for the Creative Arts in Farnham, Surrey.  His books 
include Policing Desire: Pornography, AIDS, and the  Media, which has been 
published in three editions (1987, 1989, and 1997),  and which won the 1987 
Gustavus Meyer Prize for the study of human rights;  Taking Liberties: AIDS and 
Cultural  Politics, co-edited with Erica Carter (1989), which won the 1990 US 
Words  Project and Gregory Kolovakos Prize; Practices of Freedom: Selected 
Writings on  HIV/AIDS (1994), and Imagine Hope:  AIDS and Gay Identity (2000). 
  Simon also received the Pink  Paper Annual Lifetime Achievement Award, 
London, in 2001 for his ‘long  campaigning for lesbian and gay rights and the 
rights of those affected by HIV  and AIDS.’ 
This  seminar is free and open to the public. For more information, please  
contact  Prof. William J Spurlin, Director of the Centre for the Study of  
Sexual Dissidence & Cultural Change on [log in to unmask] 
(mailto:[log in to unmask])   We  look forward to welcoming you at Sussex!