Katalog Plus
Bibliothek der Frankfurt UAS
Bald neuer Katalog: sichern Sie sich schon vorab Ihre persönlichen Merklisten im Nutzerkonto: Anleitung.
Dieses Ergebnis aus ERIC kann Gästen nicht angezeigt werden.  Login für vollen Zugriff.

Sex Workers as 'Concrete Others': Possibilities and Perils

Title: Sex Workers as 'Concrete Others': Possibilities and Perils
Language: English
Authors: Spring, Lauren; Wunderlee, Alice; Werhun, Andrea
Source: Canadian Journal for the Study of Adult Education. Nov 2019 31(2):115-122.
Availability: Mount Saint Vincent University. e-mail: cjsaerceea@gmail.com; Web site: https://cjsae.library.dal.ca/index.php/cjsae
Peer Reviewed: Y
Page Count: 8
Publication Date: 2019
Document Type: Journal Articles; Reports - Descriptive
Descriptors: Foreign Countries; Sexuality; Females; Visual Arts; Feminism; Social Distance; Occupations; Museums
Geographic Terms: Canada
ISSN: 1925-993X
Abstract: Sex workers have long served as muses for some of the world's best-known artists. Though we see these women, exposed in various states of undress, on the walls of many of the world's most famous museums, they remain relatively anonymous. Visitors who stop to read the panels accompanying these works are rarely encouraged to reflect on questions about how exploitation empowerment might be observed through an intersectional lens, the role of sex work in society today, and what the defiant or vulnerable expressions on these women's faces might tell us about their relationships to the artists wielding paintbrushes and a different kind of power. This article outlines a recent pedagogical experiment at the Art Gallery of Ontario in which a small group of former and current sex workers engaged in a feminist hack of the institution's European Modern galleries. Drawing on Hamington's (2004) feminist ethics of care, a key component of which is to highlight the experiences of "concrete others" so that they are "no longer known only as abstract agents who are interchangeable with any others" (Hamington, 2004, p. 43), the participants in this study critiqued the labels accompanying two works of art depicting sex workers, and imagined what could be written instead if those with real-life experience in the profession were to interpret these canvasses for the general public. While Hamington's assessment that "knowledge creates the potential for care" (p. 43) may be correct, we argue that special considerations must be taken when it comes to applying a feminist ethics of care to sex-worker populations.
Abstractor: As Provided
Entry Date: 2019
Access URL: https://cjsae.library.dal.ca/index.php/cjsae/article/view/5481/4558
Accession Number: EJ1238320
Database: ERIC