1st Edition

Sex and the City: Geographies of Prostitution in the Urban West Geographies of Prostitution in the Urban West

By Philip Hubbard Copyright 2001
    272 Pages
    by Routledge

    272 Pages
    by Routledge

    This title was first published in 2000:  Prostitution has always played a crucial symbolic role in the definition of moral and sexual standards and, as such, the figure of the prostitute has been paradigmatic in the history of the sex and the city. Focusing on the geographies of female prostitution in Western societies, this book explores the nature of sites of sex work and the ways they shape the lives of prostitutes (and their clients). In so doing, the book aims not simply to present a static "mapping" of sex work, but seeks to highlight how these public and private ssites are struggled over, with prostitutes often resisting the strategies of social and legal control designed to regulate their working practices. The book consequently engages with a number of contemporary debates in social, cultural and gender geography surrounding the importance of public and private spaces in producing (and reproducing) gender, sex and bodily identities.

    Introduction.  1. Prostitution, Sex Work and Power.  2. Sexuality and Space: The Moral Geography of Heterosex.  3. Immoral Geographies: The Prostitute as an Urban 'Other'.  4. Space, Law and Public Order: Policing the Spaces of Prostitution.  5. Community Protest, Citizenship and the Paranoid Public.  6. Sites of Sex Work, Spaces of Resistance?  7. Conclusion.