This sensitive and perceptive book provides a much needed antidote to the many myths and misconceptions around the sex industry and its workers. The workers emerge as neither victims nor heroes, but as engaged and insightful social actors.
Sex Workers in the Maritimes Talk Back is not only highly original, but a timely and important contribution to the literature. The authors have listened to what workers in the sex industry have to say, and bring their vital voices into the discourse. (Christine Bruckert, author of
Taking It Off, Putting It On: Women Working in the Strip Trade)
Hard-hitting in its analysis, ethical and nuanced in its use of interview material, Sex Workers in the Maritimes Talk Back is an excellent book. Finally, there’s a study of prostitution in the Maritimes, which also contributes to and extends the global dialogue. A truly engaging read.
(Shannon Bell, author of
Reading, Writing, and Rewriting the Prostitute Body)
Sex workers are not uncommon "objects" of study for academics and policy makers. Policies that impact sex work and theories about the lives of sex workers are often developed without sex workers' input and may reinforce existing stigma. Fieldwork studies on the topic are rare, as are perceptions that sex workers are capable of their own analyses of the social and political world in which they work. Leslie Ann Jeffrey and Gayle MacDonald interview sex workers in three Maritime cities and those who work around them: police, health-care providers, community workers/advocates, members of neighbourhood associations, and politicians. Perceptions and analyses of violence and safety, health and risk, politics and policy, media influence, and the public are presented through the words of sex workers and contrast sharply with commonly held opinions. Given recent Parliamentary recommendations to decriminalize prostitution, "Sex Workers in the Maritimes Talk Back" represents a timely shift to public discussions about sex work.
Engaging and accessible, this book will be of interest to public policy practitioners, students of social and political science, community advocates, police, and sex workers and their families.