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・ Emily Deschanel
・ Emily Devenport
・ Emily Diamond
・ Emily Diana Watts
・ Emily Dickinson
・ Emily Dickinson International Society
・ Emily Dickinson Museum
・ Emily DiDonato
・ Emily Dix
・ Emily Dole
・ Emily Dolvin
・ Emily Donahoe
・ Emily Donelson
・ Emily Douglas
・ Emily Drumm
Emily Dubberley
・ Emily Dunn
・ Emily Dunn (actress)
・ Emily Dwyer
・ Emily E. Sloan
・ Emily Eavis
・ Emily Echols
・ Emily Eden
・ Emily Edwards
・ Emily Elbert
・ Emily Elizabeth Carpenter
・ Emily Elizabeth Douglas
・ Emily Elizabeth Holman
・ Emily Elizabeth Parsons
・ Emily Evan Rae


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Emily Dubberley : ウィキペディア英語版
Emily Dubberley

Emily Dubberley (born 1974, Cheltenham) is a British author and journalist
specialising in sex and relationships. She founded women's sex website (Cliterati ) in 2001 and went on to found ''Scarlet'' magazine in September 2004, editing the first ten issues before becoming editor-at-large. She has written 24 internationally selling books since 2004.
==Career==

Dubberley studied Social Psychology at Loughborough University, specialising in sexuality and covering topics including male and female attitudes to pornography and whether women want their sexual fantasies to come true. She was also sabbatical editor of the Students' Union newspaper and the founder of the Freefest Student Union music festival.
She spent the first decade of her career in the marketing industry, helping found the Student Broadcast Network, and becoming marketing manager for the Barfly group.
After being shortlisted for the Cosmopolitan Journalism Scholarship, and the Company Fiction Writer Award, she founded (Cliterati ) in 2001, a text-based sex website for women offering erotica, advice and features. She has subsequently been nominated for three Erotic Awards: Best Campaigner; Best Book (Brief Encounters: The Woman's Guide to Casual Sex) and Best Film (Lover's Guide 3D).
Dubberley was founding editor of ''Scarlet'', a sex magazine for women that launched in September 2004. She has written for numerous publications including ''More'', ''New Woman'', ''Elle'', ''Men's Health'', ''Forum'', ''The Guardian'', ''Penthouse'', ''The Star'' and ''Glamour'', and has had articles syndicated worldwide. She was heavily involved with a writer's website, abctales, which launched in around 2000.
She wrote the five most recent Lovers' Guide videos, edited the ''Lovers' Guide'' magazine and helped create (loversguide.com ). She also wrote for the Joan Rivers Position on Channel 5. Throughout 2006 she wrote and presented a monthly podcast show Sex Talk With Emily Dubberley for (Audible.co.uk ), which she followed with a series of erotic anthologies. Dubberley was also editor of EK (Erotic Knave) magazine and sex agony aunt for ''Look'' magazine for five years.
Currently, Dubberley runs urban gardening website (Groweatgift.com ) and arts and science organisation (Forestofthoughts.co.uk ), helps organise (Brighton Science Festival ), is a freelance journalist and writes fiction and non-fiction books. In 2008, after her mother's successful treatment for breast cancer, Dubberley created (Burlesque Against Breast Cancer ), a charity campaign seeking to raise money for Macmillan Cancer Support. The BABC programme includes ''Ultimate Burlesque'', an erotic anthology co-edited by Dubberley and Alyson Fixter and published by (Xcite Books ), and a burlesque fundraising ball held in Brighton in November 2008. This was followed by a new anthology, ''Ultimate Decadence'', again co-edited by Dubberley with Alyson Fixter and Sarah Berry, and published by (Xcite Books )
On 1 July 201, she appeared on This Morning defending erotica from journalist, Samantha Brick in light of the popularity of 50 Shades of Grey. She won the debate with 87% of the viewer vote, arguing "One of the advantages of erotica is that it can help spread a safer sex message. It’s about education. BDSM isn’t to be taken lightly but then, neither is any other kind of sex."
In 2012, she updated (Cliterati.co.uk ), introducing new columnists including Dr Malcolm VandenBurg, Susan Quilliam (co-author of the Joy of Sex) and Ophelia Bitz (founder of controversial cabaret collective and events organisation, ArtWank!)The new site expanded content to include reviews, news and events, science, style, history and culture alongside the features, advice and erotic stories. The site remains free.

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