Department of Sociomedical Sciences, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University Irving Medical Center, New York, NY, USA.
Department of Sociomedical Sciences, Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health, 722 West 168th Street, 9th Fl., New York, NY, 10032, USA.
Arch Sex Behav. 2022 Jul;51(5):2711-2730. doi: 10.1007/s10508-021-02266-4. Epub 2022 Jun 8.
Technological advances like the Internet and Internet-enabled devices, such as smartphones, and the dating and hookup websites and apps available to the users of them, have transformed the nature, organization, and practice of sex work in fundamental ways. Some scholars have argued that these changes have contributed to a normalization of male exchange sex (i.e., providing sex in exchange for money, drugs, shelter, or goods), and in so doing, have diminished the stigma historically associated with it. However, little empirical research has focused on how male sex workers (MSWs), including those engaged in what might be called informal or incidental or casual sex work and primarily use dating/hookup websites and apps not designed for commercial to meet clients experience and manage stigma. To help fill this gap, we analyzed interview data from 180 MSWs who engaged in exchange sex and met their client on dating/hookup websites and apps. Most participants felt that sex work was still highly stigmatized in society at large, but many also felt it was generally accepted-if not completely normalized-within the gay community. Nevertheless, many struggled with the emotional impact of engaging in a stigmatized practice and most employed one or more of the following stigma management strategies: information management, distancing, discrediting the discreditors, asserting no other option existed, and challenging or reframing stereotypes and narratives. These findings indicate that MSWs, even those engaged in informal or incidental sex work, who meet clients on dating/hookup websites and apps are still strongly affected by sex work-related stigma and seek to manage it in various ways. Future research should investigate the sources of internalized stigma among this under-studied population of sex workers.
科技进步,如互联网和支持互联网的设备(如智能手机),以及用户可使用的约会和交友网站和应用程序,从根本上改变了性工作的性质、组织和实践。一些学者认为,这些变化促进了男性有偿性交易(即提供性服务换取金钱、毒品、住所或商品)的正常化,从而减少了与之相关的耻辱感。然而,很少有实证研究关注男性性工作者(MSWs),包括那些主要使用并非专为商业目的而设计的约会/交友网站和应用程序来寻找客户的性工作者,他们如何体验和管理耻辱感。为了帮助填补这一空白,我们分析了 180 名从事有偿性交易并通过约会/交友网站和应用程序与客户见面的男性性工作者的访谈数据。大多数参与者认为性工作在整个社会中仍然受到高度污名化,但许多人也认为在同性恋群体中,性工作普遍被接受——即使不是完全正常化。然而,许多人仍在努力应对从事受污名化行为的情感影响,大多数人采用了以下一种或多种耻辱管理策略:信息管理、保持距离、诋毁诋毁者、声称别无选择,以及挑战或重新构建刻板印象和叙述。这些发现表明,即使是在约会/交友网站和应用程序上与客户见面的从事非正式或偶然性行为工作的男性性工作者,仍然受到与性工作相关的耻辱感的强烈影响,并试图以各种方式对其进行管理。未来的研究应该调查这个性工作者群体中内化耻辱感的来源。