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Researching Sex Work: Doing Decolonial, Intersectional Narrative Analysis

The Emerald Handbook of Narrative Criminology

ISBN: 978-1-78769-006-6, eISBN: 978-1-78769-005-9

Publication date: 7 October 2019

Abstract

This chapter makes a case for a decolonial, intersectional approach to narrative criminology. It argues that in growing contexts of deepening inequalities, research approaches that humanise people on the margins and that explicitly centre questions of social justice are ever more urgent. This chapter explicates a decolonial, intersectional narrative analysis, working with the data generated in interviews with women sex workers on their experiences of violence outlining how a decolonial, intersectional, narrative analysis may be accomplished to analyse the intersections of power at material, representational and structural levels. The chapter illustrates the importance of an intersectional feminist lens for amplifying the complexity of women sex workers' experiences of gendered violence and for understanding the multiple forms of material, symbolic and institutionalised subordination they experience in increasingly unequal and oppressive contexts. It ends by considering the contributions decolonial, intersectional feminist work can offer narrative criminology, especially the emerging field of narrative victimology.

Keywords

Citation

(2019), "Researching Sex Work: Doing Decolonial, Intersectional Narrative Analysis", Boonzaier, F., Fleetwood, J., Presser, L., Sandberg, S. and Ugelvik, T. (Ed.) The Emerald Handbook of Narrative Criminology, Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 467-491. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-78769-005-920191037

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2019 Floretta Boonzaier