Prostitution has been considered by feminists as, alternatively, a
gendered relation, an issue of sexuality, and a kind of
labor. In this article, I argue for an integrated feminist
analysis of sex work that focuses on the first and third of these, leaving
the second in the background. I argue that this reconstructed feminist
analysis must reject the moralism and determinism of the gendered
critique, and radicalize the economic critique. It must also, I suggest,
orient itself toward consideration of prostitution as a symptom or
function of various masculinities. In all cases, feminism has
considered sex work as a question or problem of women's
agency and sexuality. Reversing this standard feminist approach offers
important new directions for empirical research, and denaturalizes
prostitution as an inevitable feature of human life. This denaturalization
radicalizes the otherwise traditional policy debate over prostitution by
allowing for a more revolutionary critique of the relations of domination
that both govern and constitute sex work as a stigmatized, hierarchical,
and exploitative practice.I would like to
thank Kate Baldwin, John Christman, Brandon Fogel, Traci Levy, William
Roberts, Michael Zuckert, and four anonymous reviewers for Politics
& Gender for their helpful criticism and insightful commentary on
previous drafts of this article. Conversations with Terri Horning proved
invaluable to its theoretical development.