Journal Article10.1177/13634607231201736
Avoidance and empowerment: How do sex workers navigate stigma?
Toni Daniel,Jessica Lamb,Christine Campbell +2 more
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Citations
Sex Work Stigma as a Partial Mediator Between Social Support and Depressive Symptoms Among Vulnerable Women Engaged in Sex Work in Southern Uganda
Joshua Kiyingi,Susan S Witte,Proscovia Nabunya,Edward Nsubuga,Phionah Namatovu,Larissa Jennings Mayo-Wilson,Ozge Sensoy Bahar,Scarlett L. Bellamy,Fred M Ssewamala +8 more
Negotiated authenticity: An ethnographic study by an onlyfans girl
Melody Benjamin
TL;DR: This ethnographic study of Onlyfans explores "negotiated authenticity," where creators and subscribers collaborate to create a satisfying fantasy of authenticity, challenging conventional understanding of sex work as a relational and creative performance of the self.
“Even When I was on the Street, I Still Didn’t Want to Give Myself the Label of ‘Prostitute’”: Sex Trade Survivor Mentors’ Narrative Constructions of Their Past Involvement in the Sex Trade
Dodish-Adi Kali,Menny Malka +1 more
TL;DR: This study explores how Sex Trade Survivor Mentors in Israel construct narratives about their past involvement in the sex trade, revealing three story types: dominant (shame and concealment), alternative semi-professional (hope and bonding), and alternative public-social (survival and inspiration), advocating for narrative approaches in clinical practice.
References
On our own terms : the working conditions of internet-based sex workers in the UK
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used data from a survey of 240 internet-based sex workers (members of the National Ugly Mug reporting scheme in the UK) and discussed the working conditions of this type of work.
Comment on Kemper's "Social Constructionist and Positivist Approaches to the Sociology of Emotions"
Abstract: To conserve space for the publication of original contributions to scholarship, the comments in this section must be limited to brief critiques. They are expected to address specific errors or flaws in articles and reviews published in the AJS. Comments on articles are not to exceed 1,500 words, those on reviews 750 words. Longer or less narrowly focused critiques should be submitted as articles. Authors of articles and reviews are invited to reply to comments, keeping their replies to the length of the specific comment. The AJS does not publish commenters' rebuttals to authors' replies. We reserve the right to reject inappropriate or excessively minor comments.
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Different stage, different performance: The protective strategy of role play on emotional health in sex work
TL;DR: It is argued that in an occupation which is highly stigmatised and in which depersonalisation as an aspect of burn-out has been reported as a common occurrence, the ability to draw on strategies which require "deep acting" provides a healthy estrangement between self and role and can be seen as protective.
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But the kids are okay: motherhood, consumption and sex work in neo-liberal Latin America
TL;DR: It is suggested that sex workers in Costa Rica's tourism sector work to survive, but they also demonstrate significant personal ambition and aim not only to increase their own consumption levels, but crucially to get ahead.
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Culturally competent health care for sex workers: an examination of myths that stigmatize sex work and hinder access to care
TL;DR: The objective of the current review is to educate clinicians on sex work and describe the unique struggles faced by FSSW and vulnerability factors clinicians must consider, and advance a research and culturally competent clinical training agenda that can optimize mental health care engagement and utilization within the sex work community.