scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

What's Wrong with Prostitution? Evaluating Sex Work

Christine Overall
- 01 Jul 1992 - 
- Vol. 17, Iss: 4, pp 705-724
Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
Good Girls/Bad Girls: Sex Trade Workers and Feminists Face to Face as discussed by the authors is a full transcript of a 1985 Toronto conference at which Canadian feminists and workers in the sex trade discussed sex work.
Abstract
T HI S ARTICLE originated from the recognition of two problems concerning the nature, meaning, value, and circumstances of prostitution within capitalist patriarchy. The first of these problems is the apparent conflict between some sex trade workers and many feminists in regard to the acceptability of prostitution. Women who work in the sex trade industry often feel condemned and rejected by many feminist women. One sex worker, for instance, writes resentfully of "the apparently immutable feminist party-line that [sex] work was degrading and oppressive to women," adding that feminists and sex trade workers "are split into good girls and bad girls-just like society's Good Women and Whores. Only this time the fears of moral inferiority and uncontrollable sexuality are couched in feminist political language."1 This notion is echoed in the anthology published by the Toronto Women's Press, Good Girls/Bad Girls: Sex Trade Workers and Feminists Face to Face, a partial transcript of a 1985 Toronto conference at which Canadian feminists and workers in the sex trade discussed sex work.2 Both great good will and anger are palpable among the participants. The workers did not want others to speak authoritatively about their lives; they resented the assumption that their work was necessarily demeaning and never freely chosen. Instead they defended their "right" to be prostitutes and the value, dignity, and liberty of the work, which

read more

Citations
More filters
Book

Paradoxes of gender

TL;DR: Lorber as discussed by the authors argues that gender is a product of socialization, subject to human agency, organization, and interpretation, and that it is a social institution comparable to the economy, the family, and religion in its significance and consequences.
Book

The Purchase of Intimacy

TL;DR: In this paper, a review of payment practices, legal disputes, and recent legal theory illustrates the weakness of the first two views and the desirability of further pursuing the third alternative.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of Mothers' Parental Efficacy Beliefs and Promotive Parenting Strategies on Inner-City Youth

TL;DR: In this article, the effects of parental efficacy on promotive parenting strategies, children's self-efficacy, and children's academic success in adverse environments were investigated, and it was found that mothers' parental efficacy is a stronger predictor of children' selfefficacy and academic success than in disadvantaged family and environmental contexts.
Journal ArticleDOI

Tricks of the Trade: What Social Workers Can Learn about Female Sex Workers through Dialogue

TL;DR: How and why the women entered the sex industry is discussed, how they talk about and define what they do (with a significant focus on emotional labor) from their perspective, the intersections of race and class in their work experiences, and agency as it applies to their personal and professional lives.
Journal ArticleDOI

Exploring the promises of intersectionality for advancing women's health research.

TL;DR: This paper will draw on recently emerging intersectionality research in the Canadian women's health context in order to explore the promises and practical challenges of the processes involved in applying an intersectionality paradigm.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Charges against prostitution: An attempt at a philosophical assessment

Lars O. Ericsson
- 01 Apr 1980 - 
TL;DR: The debate over prostitution is probably as old as prostitution itself as mentioned in this paper, and the discussion of the oldest profession is as alive today as it ever was. But while the scientific and literary discussion is very much alive, the philosophical discussion of it seems never even to have come to life.
Journal ArticleDOI

Should Feminists Oppose Prostitution

Laurie Shrage
- 01 Jan 1989 - 
TL;DR: Because sexuality is a social construction, individuals as individuals are not free to experience eros just as they choose as discussed by the authors, yet the extraction and appropriation of surplus value by the capitalist represents a choice available, if not to individuals, to society as a whole, so too sexuality and the forms taken by eros must be seen as at some level open to change.