Freshly Printed - allow 10 days lead
Couldn't load pickup availability
Prophylactic Rights
Sex Work, HIV/AIDS, and Anti-Trafficking in India
Explores the emergence of the sex worker subjectivity at the intersection of HIV/AIDS prevention and anti-trafficking surveillance programs.
Simanti Dasgupta (Author)
9781009235501, Cambridge University Press
Hardback, published 28 November 2024
328 pages
23.5 x 15.8 x 2.5 cm, 0.62 kg
'Prophylactic Rights is a meticulously researched and engagingly written analysis of the government's surveillance of sex workers in the context of neoliberal market reforms in India. Simanti Dasgupta's critical contributions are to identify the many connections between anti-trafficking measures and HIV/AIDS prevention, and to advance the emerging conversation between medical and legal anthropology. Dasgupta sensitively documents the complexity of lived experiences of women sex workers, illustrating how sex workers are both constructed as new subjects of governmentality and inspired to exercise collective agency through contemporary labor rights. Prophylactic Rights is a must-read for all those interested in feminist anthropology, medical anthropology of HIV/AIDS, and the anthropology of human rights.' Richard Ashby Wilson, University of Connecticut School of Law
Based on ethnographic work with Durbar Mahila Samanwaya Committee in Sonagachi, the iconic red-light district in Kolkata, Prophylactic Rights examines the emergence of labour rights at the intersection of HIV/AIDS and anti-trafficking. The primary disciplinary contribution of this book lies in bridging medical and legal anthropology through a corporeal understanding of sex work rights. It addresses the following questions: How does the labour rights narrative emerge through everyday negotiations with an epidemic and the law and what congeries of history, public health policies, legal regimes, and techniques of subjection and subversion impede and impel the labour movement? The book will fill a gap in existing research by investigating what it means to be a sex worker in Sonagachi struggling for labour rights based on their lived experiences and bring focus to their struggles for rights and acknowledgement as equal members of society.
Acknowledgements
List of images
Introduction: The Karmi [Worker]: From Pesha (Prostitution) to Kaaj (Sex Work)
1. The Laboring Gatar: The Body Between Suffering and Risk
2. Condom-Wallis [Condom Sellers] and Condom Narratives
3. The Politics of Victimhood: Pachar and Trafficking
4. The Mela, Unfreedom and Mobility
Epilogue: Another Virus, Another Lockdown with Tarun Basu
Bibliography
Index.
Subject Areas: Gender studies, gender groups [JFSJ]
