This book considers sex worker representation in the news, where the public draws their understanding of the industry in the absence of lived interaction with it. Using New Zealand as a case study, the author encourages emerging acceptability based on neoliberal postfeminist discourses of choice, desire, authenticity, and personal responsibility.
This book considers sex worker representation in the news, where the public draws their understanding of the industry in the absence of lived interaction with it. Using New Zealand as a case study, the author encourages emerging acceptability based on neoliberal postfeminist discourses of choice, desire, authenticity, and personal responsibility.
Preface and Acknowledgements Chapter 1: Introduction Sex and Work Sex work in New Zealand Sex work as work Researcher positionality Stigma and the Sex Industry What is stigma? How is stigma applied to sex work? How does this stigma affect sex workers? What approaches exist to resist this stigma? Sex Work in the News Media The role of the media People don't know sex workers, but they watch TV Media analysis and news media New Zealand's media landscape Chapter 2: Objects of Study Existing Research into Media Representations Naming the Sex Working Subject Who Speaks and Who is Spoken About Discursive Slippage and Questions of Voice Images and Motifs of Sex Work Chapter 3: Intertextuality and Responding to Stigma In/Visibility as Acceptability Normative Identity Categories and Community The Sex Worker as Disease Vector Sex Work and the Assumption of Violence The Constrained Nature of Intertextual Narratives Chapter 4: Comparative Acceptability Cisgender and Transgender Sex Workers: Vu
Preface and Acknowledgements Chapter 1: Introduction Sex and Work Sex work in New Zealand Sex work as work Researcher positionality Stigma and the Sex Industry What is stigma? How is stigma applied to sex work? How does this stigma affect sex workers? What approaches exist to resist this stigma? Sex Work in the News Media The role of the media People don't know sex workers, but they watch TV Media analysis and news media New Zealand's media landscape Chapter 2: Objects of Study Existing Research into Media Representations Naming the Sex Working Subject Who Speaks and Who is Spoken About Discursive Slippage and Questions of Voice Images and Motifs of Sex Work Chapter 3: Intertextuality and Responding to Stigma In/Visibility as Acceptability Normative Identity Categories and Community The Sex Worker as Disease Vector Sex Work and the Assumption of Violence The Constrained Nature of Intertextual Narratives Chapter 4: Comparative Acceptability Cisgender and Transgender Sex Workers: Vu
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