The representation of sex workers in South African media: Danger, morals and human rights
<p class="Abstract"><span>The ideological construct of gender typically positions women below men, and “others” certain types of women even more, especially those distinguished from idealised femininity by aspects of their sexuality. This paper explores the representation of se...
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doaj-0929a21c420340e887ab5b81eef3ecca2020-11-25T03:15:26ZafrStellenbosch UniversityStellenbosch Papers in Linguistics Plus1726-541X2224-33802015-09-01460194310.5842/46-0-618597The representation of sex workers in South African media: Danger, morals and human rightsSally Hunt0Beatrice Hubbard1English Language and Linguistics, Rhodes UniversityEnglish Language and Linguistics, Rhodes University<p class="Abstract"><span>The ideological construct of gender typically positions women below men, and “others” certain types of women even more, especially those distinguished from idealised femininity by aspects of their sexuality. This paper explores the representation of sex work and sex workers in the South African media in 2009 and 2010, a time during which there was an increase in news coverage of sex work during the 2010 FIFA World Cup. Analysis of the two data sets revealed that sex work is still often perceived as immoral and dangerous, and that sex workers – overwhelmingly represented as women – are criminalised for their actions while client agency is largely obscured, which is in line with previous studies of South African newspapers. However, a strong liberal representation of sex workers was also found in one data set, which advocates the decriminalisation of sex work in the context of human rights. The use of the term “sex work” and its derivatives, rather than “prostitution”, was found to index this progressive stance.</span></p>http://spilplus.journals.ac.za/pub/article/view/618sex work, corpus linguistics, critical discourse analysis, South African media |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
Afrikaans |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Sally Hunt Beatrice Hubbard |
spellingShingle |
Sally Hunt Beatrice Hubbard The representation of sex workers in South African media: Danger, morals and human rights Stellenbosch Papers in Linguistics Plus sex work, corpus linguistics, critical discourse analysis, South African media |
author_facet |
Sally Hunt Beatrice Hubbard |
author_sort |
Sally Hunt |
title |
The representation of sex workers in South African media: Danger, morals and human rights |
title_short |
The representation of sex workers in South African media: Danger, morals and human rights |
title_full |
The representation of sex workers in South African media: Danger, morals and human rights |
title_fullStr |
The representation of sex workers in South African media: Danger, morals and human rights |
title_full_unstemmed |
The representation of sex workers in South African media: Danger, morals and human rights |
title_sort |
representation of sex workers in south african media: danger, morals and human rights |
publisher |
Stellenbosch University |
series |
Stellenbosch Papers in Linguistics Plus |
issn |
1726-541X 2224-3380 |
publishDate |
2015-09-01 |
description |
<p class="Abstract"><span>The ideological construct of gender typically positions women below men, and “others” certain types of women even more, especially those distinguished from idealised femininity by aspects of their sexuality. This paper explores the representation of sex work and sex workers in the South African media in 2009 and 2010, a time during which there was an increase in news coverage of sex work during the 2010 FIFA World Cup. Analysis of the two data sets revealed that sex work is still often perceived as immoral and dangerous, and that sex workers – overwhelmingly represented as women – are criminalised for their actions while client agency is largely obscured, which is in line with previous studies of South African newspapers. However, a strong liberal representation of sex workers was also found in one data set, which advocates the decriminalisation of sex work in the context of human rights. The use of the term “sex work” and its derivatives, rather than “prostitution”, was found to index this progressive stance.</span></p> |
topic |
sex work, corpus linguistics, critical discourse analysis, South African media |
url |
http://spilplus.journals.ac.za/pub/article/view/618 |
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