"For readers seeking insight into how strip club labor is organized in a predominantly white, working-class club that serves alcohol, Strip Club provides a generous dose of ethnographic detail." -- Kari Lerum * American Journal of Sociology *
"In this well-researched, engagingly written book, sociologist Price-Glynn examines the processes through which men and women wield, negotiate, and contest power in a strip cluba gendered organization. Through a combination of methodological approachesincluding in-depth interviews with strippers, patrons, and other employees; the author masterfully allows the reader entry into a subculture in which gender relations, power, and definitions of masculinity routinely are constructed, reconstructed, and challenged." -- J.R. Mitrano * Choice Magazine *
"Reads like a novel with a detailed cast of characters! With stripper poles an increasingly ubiquitous fixture in the media, there remains surprisingly little scholarship written about the day-to-day lives of people working in strip bars. PriceGlynn reveals the grit beneath the popvideo cliche in Strip Club, offering the reader an insiders gaze on the employees of the Lions Den. Strip Club exposes a taken for granted sexism we need to be reminded of in our Girls Gone Wild culture." -- Bernadette Barton,author of Stripped: Inside the Lives of Exotic Dancers
"The second I entered The Lions Den, passing the doorman through darkened hallways toward a parquet dancing stage, PriceGlynns rich description brought me into the dilapidated and ironically profitable (for some) world of the strip club. Her deeply affecting observations make us keenly aware of the social practices that perpetuate gross inequalities. Her ethnography is both brutally honest, and sociologically sophisticated in its examination of both the fragility and tenacity of social rankings based on gender, sex, and social class." -- Lisa Jean Moore,coeditor of The Body Reader:Essential Social and Cultural Readings
"Price-Glynn has a real knack for what anthropologists and sociologists call 'thick description,' thereby ably transporting readers into the setting of this particular sexual subculture." * CHOICE *
"Price-Glynn contrasts the aspirations of the strippers with the clubs design, rules, expectations, and practices, all of which served to exploit their labor. She argues that without listening to sex workers and addressing their abuse and lack of power, feminists will never take the real battlethe one against structural oppressionto the ring." * Ms. Magazine *