This article interrogates the common sex worker rights’ slogan “sex work is real work,” a claim that yokes sex worker struggles to labor struggles worldwide. This article argues that US-based sex worker rights activism, which relies on the labor rights framework to confront stigma and criminalization, is unable to undo how racial capitalism constructs sex work as not a legitimate form of work. While labor protections are important, sex work offers opportunity for the development of antiwork potentials. Many people engaging in sexual performance or trading sex are already creating spaces where sex work itself exceeds analysis as a job. By foregrounding sex workers’ lived experiences and the theoretical moves of antiracist anticapitalism, antiwork politics, queer liberationists, and disability justice, this article locates sex workers at the nexus of important forms of subjugated knowledge crucial for undermining the criminalization of marginalized people.
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July 1, 2021
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Research Article|
July 01 2021
“Sex Work Is Star Shaped”: Antiwork Politics and the Value of Embodied Knowledge
Vanessa Carlisle
Vanessa Carlisle teaches queer studies at California State University in Northridge and writes about sexuality and power, sex work, and liberatory social movements. Her essay “How to Build a Hookers Army” appears in We Too: Essays on Sex Work and Survival (2020), and her novel Take Me with You is forthcoming. Visit www.vanessacarlisle.com for more information on her writing, speaking, and trainings.
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South Atlantic Quarterly (2021) 120 (3): 573–590.
Citation
Vanessa Carlisle; “Sex Work Is Star Shaped”: Antiwork Politics and the Value of Embodied Knowledge. South Atlantic Quarterly 1 July 2021; 120 (3): 573–590. doi: https://doi.org/10.1215/00382876-9154927
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