Sex Workers Unite: A History of the Movement from Stonewall to SlutWalk

Author:   Melinda Chateauvert
Publisher:   Beacon Press
ISBN:  

9780807061237


Pages:   272
Publication Date:   10 March 2015
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Not available   Availability explained


Our Price $45.00 Quantity:  
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Sex Workers Unite: A History of the Movement from Stonewall to SlutWalk


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Full Product Details

Author:   Melinda Chateauvert
Publisher:   Beacon Press
Imprint:   Beacon Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.30cm , Height: 1.40cm , Length: 22.70cm
Weight:   0.381kg
ISBN:  

9780807061237


ISBN 10:   0807061239
Pages:   272
Publication Date:   10 March 2015
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Inactive
Availability:   Not available   Availability explained

Table of Contents

CONTENTS   INTRODUCTION 1   CHAPTER 1 “THE REVOLUTION IS FINALLY HERE!” Sex Work and Strategic Sex   CHAPTER 2 “THOSE FEW CAME ON LIKE GANGBUSTERS” Prostitution and Sisterhood   CHAPTER 3 “MY ASS IS MINE!” Call Off Your Old Tired Ethics   CHAPTER 4 “RESISTING THE VIRUS OF REPRESSION” Disease Vectors and Sexual Experts   CHAPTER 5 “ASSEMBLY-LINE ORGASMS” Organizing the Sex Market   CHAPTER 6 “FUCK THE PIGS!” Public Sex and Police Violence   CHAPTER 7 SLUTS UNITE! Disrupting Whorephobia and Slut-Shaming   ACKNOWLEDGMENTS   NOTES   SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY   INDEX

Reviews

Sex Workers Unite does the invaluable work of showing us what a responsible and effective movement might look like, centering the voices and strategies of sex workers themselves in order to restore our best future to the realm of the possible. --Feministing [Chateauvert's] portraits of individual activists and advocacy groups are well drawn, proving that humanization through story, not philosophical debates about personhood and privacy, will win this campaign... Chateauvert makes a strong case that 'engaging in sexual commerce should not be grounds for disenfranchisement.' --Publishers Weekly The breadth of the material impressively commemorates the movement's decades long struggle. --Kirkus Reviews Sex Workers Unite is path-breaking in its claims about the expansive legacy of sex worker activism, and one hopes it will serve as a starting point for an even more expansive analysis. --San Francisco Chronicle [T]he book makes important contributions to histories of feminism, lgbtq politics, and social movements and clears a path for further studies of these important topics. --The Journal of American History The sheer depth and breadth of study evident in the book ensures its usefulness as a resource. But Sex Workers Unite is much more than a collection of facts and figures, however comprehensive. Chateauvert displays a deft hand with subtle ideas. --Tits and Sass Readers will learn a great deal about contemporary sex workers rights organizing in the United States (and a little bit about Canada) by exploring this book. --A Kiss for Gabriela Chateauvert's writing is blunt, honest and overwhelmingly liberal. Her dry but positive discussion of sex work and its employees aims to educate the reader. Her mission is to prove that those in the sex work industry are not deviants, addicts or victims. They are people making conscious choices who deserve equal civil rights and legal representation. She wants their stories told, their histories documented, and their allies counted. --Edge This is an important book--not only for understanding the history of the movement but also for debunking myths about sex workers. --Dr. Joycelyn Elders, former US surgeon general From the movement's beginning with street-walking cop-fighting trans women at Stonewall at Compton's Cafeteria through feminist betrayal and the AIDs crisis all the way to today's sex work activists and artists who make this labor visible, Sex Workers Unite is a fact-driven, street-smart history. This book is crucial. --Michelle Tea, author of Valencia In this definitive history, Chateauvert recounts the many challenges and successes of the sex workers' rights movement, and shows us how much farther we have to go to guarantee everyone's fundamental rights to sexual privacy and self-determination. --Anthony D. Romero, executive director, American Civil Liberties Union With a historian's eye for the illuminating detail and the street fighter's passion for her cause, Melinda Chateauvert offers a sassy journey through the worlds of 'Working Girls and Boys, ' black, brown, and white, trans, gay, and straight. Against rescuers and abolitionists, Sex Workers Unite recovers the collective action and labor organizing of sex workers for better conditions, living wages, cultural freedom, and social justice. --Eileen Boris, Hull Professor of Feminist Studies, University of California Santa Barbara and co-editor of Intimate Labors: Cultures, Technologies, and the Politics of Care From the Hardcover edition.


Sex Workers Unite does the invaluable work of showing us what a responsible and effective movement might look like, centering the voices and strategies of sex workers themselves in order to restore our best future to the realm of the possible. -- Feministing [Chateauvert's] portraits of individual activists and advocacy groups are well drawn, proving that humanization through story, not philosophical debates about personhood and privacy, will win this campaign... Chateauvert makes a strong case that 'engaging in sexual commerce should not be grounds for disenfranchisement.' -- Publishers Weekly The breadth of the material impressively commemorates the movement's decades long struggle. -- Kirkus Reviews Sex Workers Unite is path-breaking in its claims about the expansive legacy of sex worker activism, and one hopes it will serve as a starting point for an even more expansive analysis. -- San Francisco Chronicle The sheer depth and breadth of study evident in the book ensures its usefulness as a resource. But Sex Workers Unite is much more than a collection of facts and figures, however comprehensive. Chateauvert displays a deft hand with subtle ideas. -- Tits and Sass Readers will learn a great deal about contemporary sex workers rights organizing in the United States (and a little bit about Canada) by exploring this book. -- A Kiss for Gabriela Chateauvert's writing is blunt, honest and overwhelmingly liberal. Her dry but positive discussion of sex work and its employees aims to educate the reader. Her mission is to prove that those in the sex work industry are not deviants, addicts or victims. They are people making conscious choices who deserve equal civil rights and legal representation. She wants their stories told, their histories documented, and their allies counted. -- Edge This is an important book--not only for understanding the history of the movement but also


Author Information

Melinda Chateauvert is an activist who has been involved in many grassroots campaigns to change policies and attitudes about sex and sexuality, gender and antiviolence, and race and rights. As a universityprofessor she has taught courses on social justice organizing, the civil rights movement, and gender and sexuality. She is a fellow at the Center for Africana Studies at the University of Pennsylvania.

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