4.1 Article

Stigma, invisibility and unattainable 'choices' in sex work

期刊

SEXUALITIES
卷 25, 期 8, 页码 1006-1020

出版社

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/13634607211060503

关键词

prostitution; prostitution decriminalization; neoliberal postfeminism; sex work

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This article examines media discourses in New Zealand regarding the depiction of sex workers, drawing on theories of neoliberal postfeminism, to establish a more acceptable mode of sex work for certain women. These discourses place pressure on sex workers to make the "correct" choices and attribute the consequences of stigma and harassment to personal responsibility.
Sex work in New Zealand was decriminalized by the Prostitution Reform Act 2003. News media is one of the key sites where stigma against sex workers is reproduced, negotiated and can be resisted. Depictions of sex workers in New Zealand vary significantly according to where and how they work. News media texts which discuss modes of sex work constructed as less acceptable sometimes call for sex workers to change how and where they work, typically to modes of work which would make them less visible, in the sense of removing them from public space or of making them invisible as sex workers. The 'solutions' for these sex workers are typically proposed by outsiders to the industry, who generally do not acknowledge the benefits, drawbacks and barriers which sex workers perceive to be attached to different ways of working. The demands placed upon sex workers to make the correct 'choice' about how and where to work recall neoliberal discourses of entrepreneurialism and further marginalize women who fail to engage in sex work in the 'correct' manner. This article examines these media discourses with reference to theories of neoliberal postfeminism, to establish how these discourses function to establish a mode of sex work most accessible to white, middle class, cisgender women as more 'acceptable'. The concomitant effect of these discourses is to blame sex workers who disproportionately suffer the effects of stigma and harassment for their own ill-treatment, invoking ideas of 'personal responsibility'.

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