Carol Leigh, a San Francisco activist, performer and artist, who is credited with coining the term “sex work” and worked for decades to improve conditions for prostitutes and others in the adult entertainment business, has died. She was 71.
Kate Marquez, the executor of her estate, said Leigh died on Wednesday of cancer, the San Francisco Chronicle reported on Thursday.
Who Was Carol Leigh?
Born in New York City, Leigh had a bachelor’s degree in creative writing when she moved to San Francisco in 1977. She began working as a prostitute to earn money but her focus changed after she was raped by two men at a sex studio in 1979, she told SFGate in a 1996 interview.
She couldn’t file a crime report because her workplace would have been closed.
“The fact that I couldn’t go to the police to report the rape meant that I was not going to be able to protect other women from these rapists,” she said. “And I vowed to do something to change that.”
Leigh co-founded BAYSWAN, also known as Bay Area Sex Worker Advocacy Network, which according to its website works with human rights activists to address problems such as human trafficking in the industry as well as labour and civil rights violations.
She was deeply involved in aiding sex workers both in the United States and overseas. Her concerns focused on poverty, drug use, and HIV. She also was a video artist and produced award-winning documentaries on "women's issues and gay/lesbian issues", according to her BAYSWAN biography.
A former prostitute, Leigh devoted herself to campaigning on behalf of those in the "sex work industry", a term she coined as the title for a panel discussion she attended at a feminist anti-pornography conference in 1978.
The term is now generally used by public health officials, academic researchers, and others.
"Carol defined sex work as a labour issue, not a crime, not a sin," Marquez said. "It is a job done by a million people in this country who are stigmatised and criminalised by working to support their families."
"Ultimately, Leigh argued that until sex workers are included in the conversations about feminism, sexuality and legality -- conversations from which they have historically been excluded -- sex workers will remain fragmented rather than collective, and stigmatization will abound," said a tweet on Thursday from SWARM (Sex Worker Advocacy and Resistance Movement), which describes itself as a sex worker-led collective founded in the United Kingdom in 2009.
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