Anakena Paddon
SOC 400
Bodies and Labor
This
week’s theme explores the flux and international trade of human labor and
workforce, in various sectors of the formal or informal economies. The articles
focused on sex tourism and domestic workers, examining the expectations and
presuppositions we may have about these groups.
I
began by reading Thomas Fuller’s article titled “A Thai City of Sleaze Tries to
Clean Up”. In it, Fuller sets the scene for a red light district, which
surpasses the cliché and expected versions of Las Vegas and Amsterdam. This
article set the scene for the other readings, because it subtly highlighted the
relationship between power and politics and the sex trade. In fact, the
dependency of the city of Pattaya on sex tourism in order to remain
economically sustainable began after US military forces left the country. The
country is attempting now to “reach for respectability” and is doing so not by
striving to eradicate the trade of prostitution and sex tourism (60% of
tourists in Thailand are men). Local police forces know it is impossible to
fully eradicate an age-old trade, and are instead looking at shining a light on
different aspects the country can offer (parasailing and shopping, for
example).
At
first, I had trouble finding the connection with the inclusion of the article
by Parrenas, about migrant Filipina domestic workers because all of the others
focus heavily on sex tourism and prostitution. Parrenas’ article looks at her
ethnographic work in Los Angeles and in Rome, interviewing migrant Filipina
workers (these destinations were selected because Italy and the USA are the
largest destinations of Filipino workers). She conducted 46 interviews in Rome
and 26 in Los Angeles, and concentrated her efforts on conversations with Filipina
women who work in the reproductive labor sector. Reproductive labor encompasses
the labor needed to sustain a productive labor force – this means care of the
elderly, of children, of adults etc…
Because
these types of services cost money, usually only class-privileged women can
afford to hire other women to do cleaning, care for children, cook, shop etc…
This is when I realized the connection between this article and the others:
power. The tension surrounding the power struggles in sexual relationship/exploitative
situations is similar to the one expressed here, with the migrant workers and
their employers. Most of the women immigrants are trained professionals back in
the Philippines, but emigrate to the USA and Western Europe for a chance at
earning more.
Interestingly,
they replicate the power struggles once they return to the Philippines – many of
the interviewed women said that once they made enough money to return home, all
the aspired to was to be comfortable enough to hire their own domestic worker.
This maintenance of the “hierarchy of womanhood” as it is referred to by
Parrenas is based off of race, class and nationality. She points out that women
in Western countries are assumed to be more liberated but we must remember that
the only reason they have the availability and time to take the same positions
as men is because they can afford to hire other women to do their housework and
childcare for them.
This
power struggle and the standards of women’s roles and sexuality is something
that is also explored in the article on Female Sex Tourism. In it, the author
discusses the double-standard set-up in sex tourism: we call male sex tourists “sex
tourists”, which carries with it the connotations of “sleaziness” set up in the
Fuller article, as well as notions of exploitation. However, when women operate
as the sex tourist, we call the phenomenon “romance tourism”.
The
author seemed to struggle with this dichotomy – on the one hand, there is the
idea that women cannot exploit or sexually abuse a man, and therefore the
similar acts of sex tourism are romanticized and belittled less as an abusive
situation. On the other hand, I found the description of romance tourism very
different from how I imagine male sex tourism. The women are described as
taking their Caribbean boy-toys around the island, to restaurants, treating
them more like escorts than prostitutes. The conversation recorded between the
older woman and her sex worker, saying that there was to be no furthering of a
relationship, that it was all physical, is a step in the “Sex trade” that I do
not imagine occurring between a male consumer and a female prostitute.
I
think the female sex tourism industry is very interesting, because I do agree with the statement that it is
dangerous to degender prostitution. But at the same time, we cannot assume that
the young men and boys who cater to older Western women in search for a few
days of sun and fun are complicit and willing actors. I cannot help but assume
that they are also feeding into a system of power where gender perhaps doesn’t
dictate the most powerful but race and social class.
Davidson
and Taylor’s article “Fantasy Island” also examines the power relations
established between sex customers and sex workers, introducing their work with
the statement that sex customers often seek out workers who are of a different
race, nationality and class than theirs.
The
authors compare the fantasies offered as realities in sex tourism with the
fantasies in pornographic films. The concluding thoughts of the article
highlight – once more – this theme of power
particularly coming from the West. Western sex tourists dictate, as the
consumers, what the sex workers can offer in terms of services. This only
serves to heighten their power struggle.
Articles
like this counter the kind of cultural counter-globalization we’ve seen, partly
with features such as Lagaan, which seem to indicate a new trend. The power struggles
at play here seem to only confirm and maintain the power in Western, white,
wealthy circles, ensuring the subordination of both men and women in poorer
countries.
Your focus on "power" is very relevant, and your connection to Laagan shows that Western influence is actually having a large impact whether we like to accept it or not. Resisting it is a nice thought but unlikely.
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