Simon has written a PhD thesis mapping gay subjectivity through both cultural and biological lenses. His work avoids rhetoric that closets or substitutes for non-heterosexual identity, instead providing concrete examples that represent or unveil this discourse. He generates an alternate anthropology using data from human anatomy analyses and psychodynamic tests, providing meaning and space for people to openly live as gay in a culture where closeting is unnecessary. His thorough, diligently researched papers and thesis speak a common language between the humanities and sciences.