TY - JOUR
T1 - From protests to politics
T2 - Sex work, women's worth, and ciudad Juárez modernity
AU - Wright, Melissa W.
N1 - Funding Information:
I would like to thank Estela Madero for her invaluable assistance on this project. I would also like to thank the many women who allowed me to interview them and poke my nose into their business. I cannot name them publicly. I am indebted to Nan Woodruff, who read more than her share of drafts and helped me figure out this project. I also would like to thank Don Mitchell, Vicky Lawson, Rosalba Robles, Sarah Hill, Patricia Price, Vinay Gidwani, David Harvey, Guadalupe de Anda, and the anonymous reviewers for their insights. I also appreciate the steady support of Beth Parsons, and my many friends in Ciudad Juárez/El Paso who help me in more ways than they can imagine. This research was partially funded by the National Science Foundation, the College of Earth and Mineral Sciences and the College of Liberal Arts at Penn State University, and the College of Arts and Sciences at the University of Georgia.
PY - 2004/6
Y1 - 2004/6
N2 - This paper combines ethnographic research with discourse analysis to discuss how the protests of women sex workers in downtown Ciudad Juárez also represent protests against a larger urban economy that valorizes the disappearance of women from urban space. In Ciudad Juárez today, these disappearances are taking place as women and girls vanish from the publicity regarding progress in the maquiladora industry. The disappearances occur as more women and girls are kidnapped and murdered, and the disappearances occur as the police remove sex workers from the downtowns of border cities long famous for prostitution. While these different types of disappearances are not equivalent - to be denied access to public space is not the same as to be kidnapped and murdered - they are knit together through a discourse deployed by the city's political and corporate elites that equates the removal of women from public space with urban development and industrial progress. By combining ethnographic research with discourse analysis, and Marxist with feminist critique, I am following the lead of several geographers who regard discourses as "sociospatial circuits" that are productive of urban, economic, and cultural landscapes. This approach allows for an analysis of how the women sex workers' efforts to reappear in public space represents a protest, with potential for creating political alliances with other activists, against those invested in generating value from the disappearance of women across the Ciudad Juarez industrial and urban landscape.
AB - This paper combines ethnographic research with discourse analysis to discuss how the protests of women sex workers in downtown Ciudad Juárez also represent protests against a larger urban economy that valorizes the disappearance of women from urban space. In Ciudad Juárez today, these disappearances are taking place as women and girls vanish from the publicity regarding progress in the maquiladora industry. The disappearances occur as more women and girls are kidnapped and murdered, and the disappearances occur as the police remove sex workers from the downtowns of border cities long famous for prostitution. While these different types of disappearances are not equivalent - to be denied access to public space is not the same as to be kidnapped and murdered - they are knit together through a discourse deployed by the city's political and corporate elites that equates the removal of women from public space with urban development and industrial progress. By combining ethnographic research with discourse analysis, and Marxist with feminist critique, I am following the lead of several geographers who regard discourses as "sociospatial circuits" that are productive of urban, economic, and cultural landscapes. This approach allows for an analysis of how the women sex workers' efforts to reappear in public space represents a protest, with potential for creating political alliances with other activists, against those invested in generating value from the disappearance of women across the Ciudad Juarez industrial and urban landscape.
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U2 - 10.1111/j.1467-8306.2004.09402013.x
DO - 10.1111/j.1467-8306.2004.09402013.x
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:24744445323
SN - 0004-5608
VL - 94
SP - 369
EP - 386
JO - Annals of the Association of American Geographers
JF - Annals of the Association of American Geographers
IS - 2
ER -