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The Gendered Proletariat (Hardback)  | Released: 01 Mar 2019

By: Swati Ghosh (Author)   Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA

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Sex workers are not factory labourers, wage workers, or domestic labour. Why, then, should they be considered a ‘gendered proletariat’? What constitutes ‘work’ in sex work? The book answers these questions through a political-economic analysis of prostitution, situated in the context of the Sonagachi movement in Kolkata, West Bengal. Using... Read More

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Author:

Swati Ghosh

Publisher Name:

Oxford University Press, USA

Language:

English

Binding:

(Hardback)

About The Book
Sex workers are not factory labourers, wage workers, or domestic labour. Why, then, should they be considered a 'gendered proletariat'? What constitutes 'work' in sex work? The book answers these questions through a political-economic analysis of prostitution, situated in the context of the Sonagachi movement in Kolkata, West Bengal. Using Marxian categories of use value and exchange value and its dual in concrete labour and abstract labour, this book analyses why the incorporation of the prostitute in a worker-citizen complex is always incomplete. It traces the history of prostitution in India through the colonial and postcolonial period, along with the transformation of the role of state from penal to a watch-care model of surveillance. With respect to a sex worker's rights, the book presents a critical observation on agency that the movement claims to have obtained.About the Author: Swati Ghosh, Associate Professor and Director, Department of Economics, Women's Studies Centre, Rabindra Bharati University Swati Ghosh teaches Economics at the Faculty of Arts, Rabindra Bharati University, Kolkata, West bengal. She also teaches courses at the Department of Economics, University of Calcutta. She has contributed to books on issues of gender, labour and development. Her publications include articles in Social Text, Economic and Political Weekly, Hecate, Identity Culture and Politics, and Sarai Reader. She is twice recipient of the Social Science Research Council (US), South Asia Regional Fellowship, in 2004 and 2005. She also writes in Bengali and has translated the book Science and Indian Culture by J.B.S. Haldane into Bengali.

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