Type | Thesis or Dissertation - Honours in Psychology |
Title | Sex Workers’ Discursive Constructions of Intimate Partner Violence |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2014 |
URL | http://www.knowledgeco-op.uct.ac.za/sites/default/files/image_tool/images/155/187_thesis_A Gorven_IPV & sex workers.pdf |
Abstract | While intimate partner violence (IPV) is a pervasive problem in all spheres of society, sex workers encounter especially harrowing abuse by their boyfriends and husbands. Thus far, their experiences have not been well understood. Grounded in intersectional feminist theory, this qualitative study explored how sex workers construct their experiences of IPV. Four semi-structured focus group discussions were conducted with South African female sex workers. Based on the method of Foucauldian discourse analysis advanced by Willig (2008), it was found that the groups broadly drew on two discourses of heterosexual intimate relationships. Firstly, a patriarchal discourse pervaded descriptions of how their partners see the women as possessions that should be silent, subordinate and faithful. Although some men use sex workers as ‘money-making machines’, sex work is often in direct conflict with a partner’s ‘ownership’, prompting jealousy, possessiveness and abuse. By positioning this as abusive and irrational, the participants unanimously advocated for female agency and empowerment. Secondly, the talk heavily utilised a discourse of transaction – where the male financially provides for the woman in exchange for sex, reproduction and domestic duties. Interestingly, participants constructed male abuse as a lack of financial support, or as an inversion of ‘normal’ relationship economics, where the sex worker supports her partner. At times, sex work was used to create a new discourse of female economic agency, as it enables women to earn their own money. On the other hand, sex work still involves being paid (and, sometimes abused) by male clients. This study deconstructs the discourses that are implicated in sex workers’ experiences of IPV and the positions made available to them. It goes on to suggest implications for our theoretical understandings of IPV, support strategies for sex workers who experience IPV and ways to challenge and change unhelpful discourses that feed abusive intimate relationships. |
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