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Winner of the 2022 Research Publication Book Award from the
Association of Chinese Professors of Social Sciences in the United
States. Based on ethnographic research with victims of intimate
partner violence since 2014, this book brings to the forefront
women's experiences of, negotiations about, and contestations
against violence, and men's narratives about the reasons for their
violence. Using an innovative methodology - online chat groups, it
foregrounds the role of history, structural inequalities, and the
cultural system of power hierarchy in situating and constructing
intimate partner violence. Centering on men and women's narratives
about violence, this book connects intimate partner violence with
invisible structural violence - the historical, cultural,
political, economic, and legal context that gives rise to and
perpetuates violence against women. Through examining the ways in
which women's lives are constrained by various forms of violence,
hierarchy, and inequality, this book shows that violence against
women is a structural issue that is historically produced and
politically and culturally engaged.
The recognition of women's human rights to migrate and work as sex
workers is disregarded and dismissed by anti-trafficking discourses
of rescue in the latest United Nation's definition of trafficking.
This volume explores the life experiences, agency, and human rights
of trafficked women in order to shed light on the complicated
processes in which anti-trafficking, human rights and social
justice are intersected. In these articles, the authors critically
analyze not only the conflation of trafficking with sex work in
international and national discourses and its effects on migrant
women, but also the global anti-trafficking policy and the root
causes for the undocumented migration and employment. Featuring
case studies on eleven countries including the US, Iran, Denmark,
Paris, Hong Kong, and south east Asia and offering perspectives
from transnational migrant population, the contributors
rearticulate the trafficking discourses away from the state control
of immigration and the global policing of borders, and reassert the
social justice and the needs, agency, and human rights of migrant
and working communities. This book will be of interest to students
and scholars of politics, gender studies, human rights, migration,
sociology and anthropology.
The recognition of women's human rights to migrate and work as sex
workers is disregarded and dismissed by anti-trafficking discourses
of rescue in the latest United Nation's definition of trafficking.
This volume explores the life experiences, agency, and human rights
of trafficked women in order to shed light on the complicated
processes in which anti-trafficking, human rights and social
justice are intersected. In these articles, the authors critically
analyze not only the conflation of trafficking with sex work in
international and national discourses and its effects on migrant
women, but also the global anti-trafficking policy and the root
causes for the undocumented migration and employment. Featuring
case studies on eleven countries including the US, Iran, Denmark,
Paris, Hong Kong, and south east Asia and offering perspectives
from transnational migrant population, the contributors
rearticulate the trafficking discourses away from the state control
of immigration and the global policing of borders, and reassert the
social justice and the needs, agency, and human rights of migrant
and working communities. This book will be of interest to students
and scholars of politics, gender studies, human rights, migration,
sociology and anthropology.
This volume is the result of the many years the authors have spent
conducting ethnographic field research with sex workers, conversing
with other researchers, and, perhaps most importantly, developing a
deep sense of empathy for the sex worker participants in the
research as well as the colleagues who carry out this work with the
goal of advancing social justice. They have a combined total of
twenty-five years' experience carrying out research with sex
workers, and this extensive period of time has given them ample
opportunity to reflect upon the topic of ethics. Sex work, defined
as the exchange of sexual or sexualized intimacy for money or
something of value, encompasses a wide range of legal and illegal
behaviors that present researchers with key ethical challenges
explored in the volume. These ethical challenges include: *
Research methodology * Distinguishing research from activism *
Navigating the politically and ideologically charged environments
in which researchers must remain constantly attuned to the legal
and public policy implications of their work * Possibilities for
participatory sex work research processes * Strategies for
incorporating participants in a variety of collaborative ways Sex
work presents a unique set of challenges that are not always well
understood by those working outside of anthropology and disciplines
closely related to it. This book serves an important function by
honestly and openly reviewing strategies for overcoming these
ethical challenges with the end goal of producing path-breaking
research that actively incorporates the perspectives of research
participants on their own terms. Ever attuned to the reality that
research on sex work remains a deeply political act, Ethical
Research with Sex Workers: Anthropological Approaches aspires to
begin a dialogue about the meanings and practices ascribed to
ethics in a fraught environment. Drawing upon a review of published
scholarly and activist work on the subject, as well as on
interviews with researchers, social service providers, and sex
workers themselves, this volume is an unprecedented contribution to
the literature that will engage researchers across a variety of
disciplines, such as academics and researchers in anthropology,
sociology, criminal justice, and public health, as well as
activists and policymakers.
Tongzhi, which translates into English as "same purpose" or "same
will," was once widely used to mean "comrade." Since the 1990s, the
word has been appropriated by the LGBT community in China and now
refers to a broad range of people who do not espouse
heteronormativity. Tongzhi Living, the first study of its kind,
offers insights into the community of same-sex-attracted men in the
metropolitan city of Dalian in northeast China. Based on
ethnographic fieldwork by Tiantian Zheng, the book reveals an array
of coping mechanisms developed by tongzhi men in response to rapid
social, cultural, and political transformations in postsocialist
China. According to Zheng, unlike gay men in the West over the past
three decades, tongzhi men in China have adopted the prevailing
moral ideal of heterosexuality and pursued membership in the
dominant culture at the same time they have endeavored to establish
a tongzhi culture. They are, therefore, caught in a constant
tension of embracing and contesting normality as they try to create
a new and legitimate space for themselves. Tongzhi men's attempts
to practice both conformity and rebellion paradoxically undercut
the goals they aspire to reach, Zheng shows, perpetuating social
prejudice against them and thwarting the activism they believe they
are advocating.
Sex work continues to provoke controversial legal and public policy
debates world-wide that raise fundamental questions about the
state's role in protecting individual rights, status quo social
relations, and public health. This book unites ethnographic
research from China, Canada, and the United States to argue that
criminalization results in a totalizing set of negative
consequences for sex workers' health, safety, and human rights.
Such consequences are enabled through the operations of an
exclusionary regime, a dense coalescence of punitive forces that
involves both governance, in the form of the criminal justice
system and other state agents, and dynamic interpersonal encounters
in which individuals both enforce and negotiate stigma-related
discrimination against sex workers. Chapter Two demonstrates how
criminalization harms sex workers by isolating their work to
potentially dangerous locations, fostering mistrust of authority
figures, further limiting their abilities to find legal work and
housing, and restricting possibilities for collective rights-based
organizing. Criminalized sex workers report police harassment,
seizure of condoms, and adversarial police-sex worker relations
that enable others to abuse them with impunity. Chapter Three
describes how sex workers negotiate these restrictions on their
rights and personal autonomy via their arrest avoidance and client
management strategies, self-treatment of health issues, selective
mutual aid, rights-based organizing, and entrenchment in sex work
or other criminalized activities. Chapter Four describes how
researchers working in countries or locales that criminalize sex
work face ethical concerns as well as barriers to their work at the
practical, institutional, and political levels.
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Gender in Chinese Music (Paperback)
Rachel Harris, Rowan Pease, Shzr Ee Tan; Contributions by Rachel Harris, Rowan Pease, …
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R955
Discovery Miles 9 550
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Gender in Chinese Music draws together contributions from
ethnomusicologists, anthropologists, and literary scholars to
explore how music is implicated in changing notions of masculinity,
femininity, and genders "in between" in Chinese culture. Village
ritualists, international classical pianists, pop idols, and
professional mourners -- whether they perform in temples, on
concert stages, or in TV shows, Chinese musicians continually
express and negotiate their gendered identities. Gender in Chinese
Music brings together contributions from ethnomusicologists,
anthropologists, and literary scholars to explore how gender is not
only manifested in the diverse musical traditions of Chinese
culture but also constructed through performing and observing these
traditions. Individual chapters examine unique music cultures
ranging from those of courting couples in China's heartlands to
ethnic minority singers in the borderlands, and from Ming-period
courtesans to contemporary karaoke hostesses. The book also
features interviews with musicians, music industry workers, and
fans talking about gender. With its wide-ranging subject matter and
interdisciplinary approach, this volume will be an important
resource for researchers and students interested in how music is
implicated in the changing notions of masculinity, femininity, and
genders "in between." Contributors: RuardAbsaroka, Rachel Harris,
Stephen Jones, Frank Kouwenhoven, Olivia Kraef, Joseph Lam, Rowan
Pease, Antoinet Schimmelpenninck, Hwee-San Tan, Shzr Ee Tan, Xiao
Mei, Judith Zeitlin, Tiantian Zheng. Rachel Harris is Reader in the
Music of China and Central Asia at SOAS, University of London.
Rowan Pease is Senior Teaching Fellow at SOAS, University of
London. Shzr Ee Tan is Senior Lecturer in Music at Royal Holloway,
University of London.
In China today, sex work cannot be untangled from the phenomenon of
rural-urban migration, the entertainment industry, and state power.
In Red Lights, Tiantian Zheng highlights the urban karaoke bar as
the locus at which these three factors intersect and provides a
rich account of the lives of karaoke hostesses-a career whose name
disguises the sex work and minimizes the surprising influence these
women often have as power brokers. Zheng embarked on two years of
intensely embedded ethnographic fieldwork in her birthplace,
Dalian, a large northeastern Chinese seaport of over six million
people. During this time, Zheng lived and worked with a group of
hostesses in a karaoke bar, facing many of the same dangers that
they did and forming strong, intimate bonds with them. The result
is an especially engaging, moving story of young, rural women
struggling to find meaning, develop a modern and autonomous
identity, and, ultimately, survive within an oppressively
patriarchal state system. Moving from her case studies to broader
theories of sex, gender, and power, Zheng connects a growth in
capitalist entrepreneurialism to the emergence of an urban sex
industry, brilliantly illuminating the ways in which hostesses,
their clients, and the state are mutually created in postsocialist
China.
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