Health Communication and Citizenship Among Sex Workers in Mysore, India: Beyond “Centers” and “Margins”

In the last couple of decades, there has been a significant turn toward critical and “culture-centered” approaches to health communication. Through the lens of critical ethnography, this paper aims to unsettle dominant Eurocentric and exclusionary notions of citizenship tied to a legislative and jur...

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Main Authors: Shamshad Khan, Robert Lorway, John O'Neil, Akram Pasha, Sushena Reza-Paul
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2019-11-01
Series:Frontiers in Communication
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fcomm.2019.00062/full
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spelling doaj-0e6519bff33741f5a51dd5ee9ecd2f372020-11-25T02:37:38ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Communication2297-900X2019-11-01410.3389/fcomm.2019.00062472796Health Communication and Citizenship Among Sex Workers in Mysore, India: Beyond “Centers” and “Margins”Shamshad Khan0Robert Lorway1John O'Neil2Akram Pasha3Sushena Reza-Paul4Department of Communication, University of Texas at San Antonio, San Antonio, TX, United StatesDepartment of Community Health Sciences, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, MB, CanadaFaculty of Health Sciences, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, BC, CanadaAshodaya Samithi, Mysore, IndiaDepartment of Community Health Sciences, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, MB, CanadaIn the last couple of decades, there has been a significant turn toward critical and “culture-centered” approaches to health communication. Through the lens of critical ethnography, this paper aims to unsettle dominant Eurocentric and exclusionary notions of citizenship tied to a legislative and juridical framework of rights—as entitlements and obligations emanating from the “nation-state.” Instead, by focusing on the communicative practices of members of Ashodaya Samithi, a sex worker collective responding to local forms of discrimination and violence and susceptibility to the HIV infection, we disrupt dichotomous notions of political “centers” and “margins” by emphasizing how local forms of resistance and transnational alliance building constitute complex socialities that enable sex workers to navigate risks, demand services, expand their rights and freedoms, while fulfilling individual and collective responsibilities. We argue that, in the “developing” world, emergent forms of citizenship are more likely to be found not in some concentrated center of cultural authority like the nation-state, or its ancillaries, but in more dispersed sites where postcolonial struggles may appear as uncivil, coarse, insurgent, impure, ambiguous, marginal, and thus threatening to more purified, populist portraits of nationhood redrawn by politicians and health officials. This paper highlights alternative voices often blocked by the dominant discourse, thereby potentially recentering health communication in marginalized spaces. By juxtaposing field data and theory, this paper also aims to demonstrate how to engage in critical health communication research with rigor and quality.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fcomm.2019.00062/fullcritical health communicationcitizenshipsex workersIndiaHIV/AIDS
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Shamshad Khan
Robert Lorway
John O'Neil
Akram Pasha
Sushena Reza-Paul
spellingShingle Shamshad Khan
Robert Lorway
John O'Neil
Akram Pasha
Sushena Reza-Paul
Health Communication and Citizenship Among Sex Workers in Mysore, India: Beyond “Centers” and “Margins”
Frontiers in Communication
critical health communication
citizenship
sex workers
India
HIV/AIDS
author_facet Shamshad Khan
Robert Lorway
John O'Neil
Akram Pasha
Sushena Reza-Paul
author_sort Shamshad Khan
title Health Communication and Citizenship Among Sex Workers in Mysore, India: Beyond “Centers” and “Margins”
title_short Health Communication and Citizenship Among Sex Workers in Mysore, India: Beyond “Centers” and “Margins”
title_full Health Communication and Citizenship Among Sex Workers in Mysore, India: Beyond “Centers” and “Margins”
title_fullStr Health Communication and Citizenship Among Sex Workers in Mysore, India: Beyond “Centers” and “Margins”
title_full_unstemmed Health Communication and Citizenship Among Sex Workers in Mysore, India: Beyond “Centers” and “Margins”
title_sort health communication and citizenship among sex workers in mysore, india: beyond “centers” and “margins”
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Communication
issn 2297-900X
publishDate 2019-11-01
description In the last couple of decades, there has been a significant turn toward critical and “culture-centered” approaches to health communication. Through the lens of critical ethnography, this paper aims to unsettle dominant Eurocentric and exclusionary notions of citizenship tied to a legislative and juridical framework of rights—as entitlements and obligations emanating from the “nation-state.” Instead, by focusing on the communicative practices of members of Ashodaya Samithi, a sex worker collective responding to local forms of discrimination and violence and susceptibility to the HIV infection, we disrupt dichotomous notions of political “centers” and “margins” by emphasizing how local forms of resistance and transnational alliance building constitute complex socialities that enable sex workers to navigate risks, demand services, expand their rights and freedoms, while fulfilling individual and collective responsibilities. We argue that, in the “developing” world, emergent forms of citizenship are more likely to be found not in some concentrated center of cultural authority like the nation-state, or its ancillaries, but in more dispersed sites where postcolonial struggles may appear as uncivil, coarse, insurgent, impure, ambiguous, marginal, and thus threatening to more purified, populist portraits of nationhood redrawn by politicians and health officials. This paper highlights alternative voices often blocked by the dominant discourse, thereby potentially recentering health communication in marginalized spaces. By juxtaposing field data and theory, this paper also aims to demonstrate how to engage in critical health communication research with rigor and quality.
topic critical health communication
citizenship
sex workers
India
HIV/AIDS
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fcomm.2019.00062/full
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