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Whores and Other Feminists

Psychology Press (1997)

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  1. Constructing Eroticized Latinidad: Negotiating Profitability in the Stripping Industry.Cristina Khan - 2019 - Gender and Society 33 (5):702-721.
    Through the analysis of an 18-month ethnography at an exotic dance club located in the Northeastern United States, I uncover how Latina exotic dancers manage their participation in exotic dance by deploying constructions of Latinidad as embodied cues. I focus on Playpen’s weekly event, “Latina Night,” to demonstrate how racialized, sexualized, and gendered constructs relative to Latinidad are produced and regulated in this exotic dance setting. Study participants draw on embodied markers to negotiate how their bodies are read. Those markers (...)
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  • Emotional Consumption: Mapping Love and Masochism in an Exotic Dance Club.R. Danielle Egan - 2005 - Body and Society 11 (4):87-108.
    This article introduces and explores the concept of emotional consumption through an analysis of an exotic dance club in the New England area. Through understanding how regular customers consume the services offered in an exotic dance club, I show how consuming service labor differs dramatically from consuming objects of exchange. Emotional consumption involves psychosocial dynamics, which emerge from the intersubjective relationships between the consumer and the dancer who is providing a service. In this exchange, the consumer engages in an interaction (...)
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  • Will the Real Sex Slave Please Stand Up?Julia O'Connell Davidson - 2006 - Feminist Review 83 (1):4-22.
    This paper critically explores the way in which ‘trafficking’ has been framed as a problem involving organized criminals and ‘sex slaves’, noting that this approach obscures both the relationship between migration policy and ‘trafficking’, and that between prostitution policy and forced labour in the sex sector. Focusing on the UK, it argues that far from representing a step forward in terms of securing rights and protections for those who are subject to exploitative employment relations and poor working conditions in the (...)
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  • If no means no, does yes mean yes? Consenting to research intimacies.Julia O'Connell Davidson - 2008 - History of the Human Sciences 21 (4):49-67.
    This article reflects on some ethical dilemmas presented by an ethnographic study of prostitution that I conducted in the 1990s. The study drew one research subject into a long and very close relationship with me, and though she was an active and fully consenting participant in the research, she was also objectified within both the field relationship and the textual products it generated. This kind of contradiction has been recognized and discussed as a more general problem for ethnography by feminist (...)
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  • Trafficking, Migration, and the Law: Protecting Innocents, Punishing Immigrants.Wendy Chapkis - 2003 - Gender and Society 17 (6):923-937.
    The Trafficking Victims’ Protection Act of 2000 has been presented as an important tool in combatingthe exploitation and abuse of undocumented workers, especially those forced into prostitution. Through a close reading of the legislation and the debates surrounding its passage, this article argues that the law makes strategic use of anxieties over sexuality, gender, and immigration to further curtail migration. The law does so through the use of misleading statistics creating a moral panic around “sexual slavery,” through the creation of (...)
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  • Dancing on the Möbius Strip: Challenging the Sex War Paradigm.Bernadette Barton - 2002 - Gender and Society 16 (5):585-602.
    The feminist sex wars have been characterized by debates between radical feminists and sex radical feminists about women's experiences of empowerment versus oppression in the sex industry. Based on a qualitative study of the experiences of exotic dancers, this article introduces a new theoretical paradigm to the feminist sex wars that values the contributions of both sex radicals and radical feminists. It articulates a twofold temporal dimension of sex workers' experiences: how women's feelings of pleasure and empowerment gradually decline over (...)
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