Tuesday, 10 September 2019

‘I’m Not a Bloody Slave, I Get Paid and if I Don’t Get Paid Then Nothing Happens’: Sarah’s Experience of Being a Student Sex Worker

an article by Jessica Simpson (City, University of London, UK) and Sarah Smith (Student, Sex worker, UK) published in Work, Employment and Society Volume 33 Issue 4 (August 2019)

Abstract

Sex work remains a contentious area of debate.

Whether or not sex work is considered to be a form of labour is in itself contested.

As discussion is often about rather than with sex workers, this article brings Sarah’s experiences of being both a student and a sex worker, in two different areas of the UK, to centre stage.

This candid account highlights the precarious and competitive nature of being self-employed within the current neoliberal climate, as well as the similarities sex work shares with other ‘mainstream’ forms of labour particularly within the ‘gig economy’. Existing research has focused on how/why students enter the sex industry leaving a gap in the literature regarding what happens after university in this context.

It appears from Sarah’s account that leaving sex work behind may not be as straightforward as she had originally anticipated, for reasons other than just making money.

Full text (PDF 10pp)


No comments: