‘Whore stigma’ as a transformative experience: altered cognitive expectations among Jewish-Israeli street-based sex workers

Abstract While the scholarship on sex work is substantial, it neglects to explore whether sex work and associated stigma affect sex workers’ cognitive expectations. Drawing on observations of street-based sex work as well as in-depth interviews with Jewish-Israeli sex workers, this study suggests that because stigma is a moral experience that threatens and often destroys what really matters to stigmatised individuals, it leads to recurrent disappointments, which, in turn, may alter sex workers’ cognitive expectations. Sex workers learn to see certain life goals, including maintaining healthy social relationships and a workspace free of violence and humiliation, as unobtainable. However, they also begin to see other aspects of their lives, such as economic autonomy, as achievable through sex work. Tracing how whore stigma becomes a transformative experience allows us to add another layer to the heretofore suggested link between the structural, cultural and individual aspects of stigmatisation.

[1]  E. Goffman Stigma; Notes On The Management Of Spoiled Identity , 1964 .

[2]  M. Hernández-Ávila,et al.  Prevalence, Incidence, and Determinants of Syphilis in Female Commercial Sex Workers in Mexico City , 1996, Sexually transmitted diseases.

[3]  D. Amir,et al.  The Politics of Prostitution: The politics of prostitution and trafficking of women in Israel , 2004 .

[4]  T. Kong What It Feels Like for a Whore: The Body Politics of Women Performing Erotic Labour in Hong Kong , 2006 .

[5]  Bruce G. Link,et al.  Culture and stigma: adding moral experience to stigma theory. , 2007, Social science & medicine.

[6]  M. Fry,et al.  The experience of living with chronic illness for the haemodialysis patient: An interpretative phenomenological analysis , 2014 .

[7]  G. Pheterson The Prostitution Prism , 1996 .

[8]  S. Linstead,et al.  ‘The Worst Thing is the Screwing’ (2): Context and Career in Sex Work , 2000 .

[9]  A. Kleinman What Really Matters: Living a Moral Life Amidst Uncertainty and Danger , 2006 .

[10]  M. Barnard Violence and vulnerability: conditions of work for streetworking prostitutes , 1993 .

[11]  Melissa Farley,et al.  “Bad for the Body, Bad for the Heart”: Prostitution Harms Women Even if Legalized or Decriminalized , 2004 .

[12]  J. Hocking,et al.  Sex workers talk about sex work: six contradictory characteristics of legalised sex work in Melbourne, Australia , 2013, Culture, health & sexuality.

[13]  R. Pates Liberal Laws Juxtaposed with Rigid Control: an Analysis of the Logics of Governing Sex Work in Germany , 2012 .

[14]  J. H. van de Wijgert,et al.  Joining and leaving sex work: experiences of women in Kigali, Rwanda , 2012, Culture, health & sexuality.

[15]  M. Gould Race and Theory: Culture, Poverty, and Adaptation to Discrimination in Wilson and Ogbu* , 1999 .

[16]  C. Beyrer,et al.  ‘If you have children, you have responsibilities’: motherhood, sex work and HIV in southern Tanzania , 2015, Culture, health & sexuality.

[17]  C. Williamson,et al.  Understanding the Experiences of Street Level Prostitutes , 2003 .

[18]  D. Addiss,et al.  Health-related stigma among women with lymphatic filariasis from the Dominican Republic and Ghana. , 2009, Social science & medicine.

[19]  M. Hernández-Ávila,et al.  Sex masks: The double life of female commercial sex workers in Mexico City , 1996, Culture, medicine and psychiatry.

[20]  S. Venkatesh,et al.  A “Perversion” of Choice , 2008 .

[21]  S. Linstead,et al.  ‘The Worst Thing is the Screwing’ (1): Consumption and the Management of Identity in Sex Work , 2000 .

[22]  Emma Head,et al.  The ethics and implications of paying participants in qualitative research , 2009 .

[23]  H. Wagenaar,et al.  Prostitution as Morality Politics or Why It Is Exceedingly Difficult To Design and Sustain Effective Prostitution Policy , 2012 .

[24]  Arthur Kleinman,et al.  'Face' and the embodiment of stigma in China: the cases of schizophrenia and AIDS. , 2008, Social science & medicine.

[25]  Sing Lee,et al.  "What matters most:" a cultural mechanism moderating structural vulnerability and moral experience of mental illness stigma. , 2014, Social science & medicine.

[26]  K. Turner,et al.  Systematic review of interventions to reduce illicit drug use in female drug-dependent street sex workers , 2015, BMJ Open.

[27]  Helen Shaw,et al.  Mainstreaming LEADER Delivery of the RDR in Cumbria: An Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis , 2010 .

[28]  Dawn Joseph,et al.  Qualitative research methods in mental health and psychotherapy: A guide for students and practitioners , 2011, QMiP Bulletin.

[29]  R. Ottman,et al.  What's at stake? Genetic information from the perspective of people with epilepsy and their family members. , 2011, Social science & medicine.

[30]  Ronald Hitzler,et al.  Life-World-Analytical Ethnography , 2015 .

[31]  Ellen E. Foley Regulating sex work: subjectivity and stigma in Senegal , 2017, Culture, health & sexuality.

[32]  P. Pyett,et al.  Difficult Relations: Sex Work, Love and Intimacy , 1999 .