Julia O'Connell Davidson has woven a fascinating tapestry, combining meticulous portraiture with bold design. Based on careful and wide-ranging ethnographic study of prostitution across a variety of cultures, but framed within a strong structural analysis of power relations, this is a powerful picture of the limits to the agency of women and children in a world of continuing inequalities and exploitation. Jeffrey Weeks, Professor of Sociology, South Bank University, London
O'Connell Davidson draws imaginatively on labour process analysis, feminism, psychoanalysis and political theory to unpick the power relations in prostitution and the many discursive levels at which it is understood and rationalised...Her book is beautifully written and never obtuse, challenging and morally committed...it is among the very best studies we have, not only on prostitution but more generally on work, gender and sexuality. Jackie West, Work, Employment and Society.
Part I Dimensions of Diversity.
1. Power, Consent and Freedom.
2. Patterns of Pimping.
3. Independent Street Prostitution.
4. Independent Prostitution and Tourism.
5. Power and Freedom at the Apex of the Prostitution Hierarchy.
Part II Prostitution and the Eroticization of Social Death.
6. Narratives of Power and Exclusion.
7. Eroticizing Prostitute Use.
8. Through Western Eyes: Honour, Gender and Prostitute Use.
9. Diversity, Dialectics and Politics.
Notes.
References.
Index.