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This collection brings together established and exciting new voices to shed light on the language of and about sex work, offering an empirically nuanced understanding of commercial sex through language.

While there is burgeoning literature on sex work in the social sciences, there has been little work to date centering it from a linguistic perspective. Chapters make the case for language as central to sex work practices and the transactions of intimacy in the negotiation of services, promotional strategies and the performance of desire. Featuring insights from diverse geographic contexts, the chapters critically reflect on different dimensions of language and sex work, including sex work, gender and desire; online sex work; sex work and race; sex worker advocacy; and the language of victimization and exploitation. The volume illuminates the ways in which commercial sex work is negotiated in embodied linguistic interaction and attendant issues of power, identity, gender, race and desire.

This book systematizes the body of growing knowledge around language and sex work from an interdisciplinary lens. It is key reading for scholars, policymakers and activists in sociolinguistics and discourse analysis, as well as fields such as anthropology, sociology, criminology and health and social care.



This collection brings together established and exciting new voices to shed light on the language of and about sex work, offering an empirically nuanced understanding of commercial sex through language.

Contents

List of Figures

Notes on contributors

1 Speaking of sex work: Setting a research agenda

BENEDICT J. L. ROWLETT AND RODRIGO BORBA

2 Why do you think a woman cant enjoy sex as much as a man can?:
Discourses of womens sexual desire, pleasure and agency in an online sex
work forum

HOLLIE MCILHONE, ROBERT LAWSON, MATT GEE AND PELHAM CARTER

3 The pleasure of pleasing: a corpus-assisted small stories approach to male
clients affective identity constructions of heterosexual desire in PunterNet
reviews

SAGREDOS CHRISTOS

4 Im not a faggot, Im a man: How male sex workers doing masculinity
talking sex

CIRUS RINALDI, MARCO BACIO AND RICCARDO CALDARERA

5 Polyvalent attribution and the discursive construction of Blackwomens
sexual labor in The Boondocks

DEANDRE MILES-HERCULES AND MARIAH WEBBER

6 Good evening you sex-hungry crowd!: Discursive-corporeal performances and
strategies of a black male sex worker on X/Twitter

GLENDA CRISTINA VALIM DE MELO

7 The narratives she lives by: Identity, intersection and agency in the many
roles of a Filipina sex worker in Hong Kong

BENEDICT J. L. ROWLETT AND JASON POLLEY

8 Sissy hypno in a trans-affirming register: Shifting semiotics of
pornography online

MAUREEN KOSSE AND KIRA HALL

9 Computable desires: Platformed sex work and the datafication of intimacy

EDUARDO MARTINS

10 Resisting discrimination against sex work/ers: A Critical Discourse
Analysis of comments on YouTube

EVELIN NIKOLOVA

11 Sex workers place of enunciation: A Materialist Discourse Analytical
approach

MARIA FERNANDA MOREIRA, KARINE DE MEDEIROS RIBEIRO AND LAURO BALDINI

12 Hyperbole for advocacy: Stereotypical and subversive sex work in Naty
Menstruals writing

JOSE ANTONIO JÓDAR-SĮNCHEZ

13 The dynamics of agency in sex work: Discursive constructions of violence
in transnational contexts

JILL MCCRACKEN AND RAN HU

14 Foreign, illegal prostitutes and New Zealand working girls: Sex
workers as villains and victims in media discourse

MATILDA NEYLAND

15 I am not a victim of anything: Minors identified as victims of human
trafficking in Italy

TRINE MYGIND KORSBY

Index
Benedict J.L. Rowlett is Associate Professor in the Academy of Language and Culture at Hong Kong Baptist University.

Rodrigo Borba is Associate Professor and Director of the Interdisciplinary Graduate Programme in Applied Linguistics at the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro.