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Body & Society
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Excess, Scarcity and Desire among Drug-Using Sex Workers

MarÕa E. Epele

Department of Anthropology, University of California at Berkeley

In the street life of the Mission District in San Francisco, two opposite ways of understanding the female ownership of the body circulate among women who are drug-using sex workers: sexual slavery and women's liberation. This article analyzes how both models obfuscate the manner in which lack and scarcity govern the economy of needs and desires when drug abuse intersects with sex work. Lack and scarcity are shown to pervade not only economic resources but also drug-related gratification, bodily well-being, sexual desire and body commitment during sexual practices. Even though both women and men are involved in this economy, there is an `artificial scarcity' of drug-related gratification for women. Controlling women's ability to close this circuit, men reinstate and reproduce the gender stereotypes that dominate in the street culture.

Key Words: body commodification • consumption • desire • drugs • gender domination • pleasure • sex work

Body & Society, Vol. 7, No. 2-3, 161-179 (2001)
DOI: 10.1177/1357034X0100700209


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