Book description
How the law harms sex workersâand what they want instead Do you have to endorse prostitution in order to support sex worker rights? Should clients be criminalized, and can the police deliver justice? In Revolting Prostitutes , sex workers Juno Mac and Molly Smith bring a fresh perspective to questions that have long been contentious. Speaking from a growing global sex worker rights movement, and situating their argument firmly within wider questions of migration, work, feminism, and resistance to white supremacy, they make it clear that anyone committed to working towards justice and freedom should be in support of the sex worker rights movement.
Recommended on 1 episode:
Can We Change Our Sexual Desires? Should We?
âFeminists have long dreamed of sexual freedom,â writes Amia Srinivasan. âWhat they refuse to accept is its simulacrum: sex that is said to be free, not because it is equal, but because it is ubiquitous.â
Srinivasan is an Oxford philosopher who, in 2018, wrote the viral essay âDoes Anyone Have the Right to Sex?â Her piece was inspired by Elliot Rodgerâs murderous rampage and the misogynist manifesto he published to justify it. But Srinivasanâs inquiry opened out to larger questions about the relationship between sex and status, what happens when weâre undesired for unjust reasons and whether we can change our own preferences and passions. The task, as she frames it, is ânot imagining a desire regulated by the demands of justice, but a desire set free from the binds of injustice.â I love that line.
Srinivasanâs new book of essays, âThe Right to Sex,â includes that essay alongside other challenging pieces considering consent, pornography, student-professor relationships, sex work and the role of law in regulating all of those activities. This is a conversation about topics we donât always cover on this show, but that shape the world we all live in: Monogamy and polyamory, the nature and malleability of desire, the interplay between sex and status-seeking, what it would mean to be sexually free, the relationship between inequality and modern dating, incels, the feminist critique of porn, how the internet has transformed the sexual culture for todayâs young people and much more.
(One note: This conversation was recorded before the Supreme Court permitted a Texas law prohibiting abortions after six weeks, arguably ushering in the post-Roe era. Weâre working on an episode that will discuss that directly.)
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Revolting Prostitutes: The Fight for Sex Workers' Rights
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