ABSTRACT

Drawing on more than fifty interviews in both the US and the Netherlands, Wendy Chapkis captures the wide-ranging experiences of women performing erotic labor and offers a complex, multi-faceted depiction of sex work. Her expansive analytic perspective encompasses both a serious examination of international prostitution policy as well as hands-on accounts of contemporary commercial sexual practices. Scholarly, but never simply academic, this book is explicitly grounded in a concern for how competing political discourses work concretely in the world--to frame policy and define perceptions of AIDS, to mobilize women into opposing camps, to silence some agendas and to promote others.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

part |58 pages

Sex Wars

chapter |30 pages

The Meaning of Sex

chapter |26 pages

Sexual Slavery

part |61 pages

Working It

chapter |28 pages

The Emotional Labor of Sex

chapter |31 pages

Locating Difference

part |86 pages

Strategic Responses