Sex, Work and Sex Work: Eroticizing Organization

Couverture
Routledge, 2 sept. 2003 - 368 pages

Sex is much more rife in the workplace than many would think according to this fascinating and controversial new book. It argues that not only does sexuality pervade every aspect of organizations, but also that organization pervades every aspect of our sexuality.

This two-way conceptualization lends the book a two-part structure, covering firstly the ways in which organizational behaviour is shaped through issues such as male managers' experience of violence, organizational constructions of sexual harassment, and professionals who work with sex offenders. The second part of the book examines how sex is organized for commercial purposes, and considers sex work as an industry which can be analyzed as any other, with important insights for normal organizing. Key features of the book include sections on:

* organizing as sexual activity
* connecting desire, the erotic, the abject and organization
* the 'hidden' penetration of organization processes by sexuality
* the 'dark side' of sex and organization and the importance of transgression
* the double effect of discursive and material placing
* organizing sexuality within prostitution
* prostitution as a complex and varied industry.

Fascinating and informative, this controversial book is a valuable source of information for postgraduates and researchers in the fields of business, management and sexuality and gender studies.

 

Table des matières

Violence masculinity and management
19
Power gender and industrial relations
49
Sexual harassment
71
Working with sex offenders
98
Sadomasochism and organization
126
Reeroticizing the organization
151
Reading organization into sex
185
Discourse and desire in sex work
187
Context and career in sex work
225
Material variations in sex work
241
The temporal organization of sex work
272
Conclusion
287
Notes
292
Bibliography
314
Author index
342
Subject index
347

Consumption and the management of identity in sex work
206

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À propos de l'auteur (2003)

Brewis, Joanna; Linstead, Stephen

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