Des femmes, des hommes et des rumeurs. Hommes machos et femmes stigmatisées/antes dans une ville de tourisme sexuel

This article focuses on gossip about Dominican women sexual labor as an entry point into documenting shifting gender relations and ideologies in Sosúa, a sex tourist destination frequented primarily by German tourists. In Sosúa sexscape, new meanings of masculinity have emerged alongside women earni...

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Main Author: Denise Brennan
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Genre, Sexualité et Société 2011-06-01
Series:Genre, Sexualité et Société
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/gss/1716
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spelling doaj-c790da525e594066891e99d7724f6d4f2020-11-25T00:45:41ZfraGenre, Sexualité et SociétéGenre, Sexualité et Société2104-37362011-06-01510.4000/gss.1716Des femmes, des hommes et des rumeurs. Hommes machos et femmes stigmatisées/antes dans une ville de tourisme sexuelDenise BrennanThis article focuses on gossip about Dominican women sexual labor as an entry point into documenting shifting gender relations and ideologies in Sosúa, a sex tourist destination frequented primarily by German tourists. In Sosúa sexscape, new meanings of masculinity have emerged alongside women earning capacity. While sex workers must temper their displays of monetary gains so as to not compromise their reputations as mothers sacrificing for their children, men openly enjoy freedom from gender ideologies that make demands on them to appear as hard working and sacrificing fathers. In this sexual economy, men even can flaunt their unemployment. Their laziness and/or dependency are recast as macho. Here is one industry where poor Dominican women have the opportunity to make significant earnings and to jump out of poverty, yet their labor strategies do not necessarily ensure a reconfiguration of gender roles and ideologies that works in their favor. Rather, migrant men in Sosúa enjoy such a reworking that lowers expectations for them, while women are caught in a set of increased expectations.http://journals.openedition.org/gss/1716masculinitygossipsex tourismwomen laborglobalizationexoticism
collection DOAJ
language fra
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Denise Brennan
spellingShingle Denise Brennan
Des femmes, des hommes et des rumeurs. Hommes machos et femmes stigmatisées/antes dans une ville de tourisme sexuel
Genre, Sexualité et Société
masculinity
gossip
sex tourism
women labor
globalization
exoticism
author_facet Denise Brennan
author_sort Denise Brennan
title Des femmes, des hommes et des rumeurs. Hommes machos et femmes stigmatisées/antes dans une ville de tourisme sexuel
title_short Des femmes, des hommes et des rumeurs. Hommes machos et femmes stigmatisées/antes dans une ville de tourisme sexuel
title_full Des femmes, des hommes et des rumeurs. Hommes machos et femmes stigmatisées/antes dans une ville de tourisme sexuel
title_fullStr Des femmes, des hommes et des rumeurs. Hommes machos et femmes stigmatisées/antes dans une ville de tourisme sexuel
title_full_unstemmed Des femmes, des hommes et des rumeurs. Hommes machos et femmes stigmatisées/antes dans une ville de tourisme sexuel
title_sort des femmes, des hommes et des rumeurs. hommes machos et femmes stigmatisées/antes dans une ville de tourisme sexuel
publisher Genre, Sexualité et Société
series Genre, Sexualité et Société
issn 2104-3736
publishDate 2011-06-01
description This article focuses on gossip about Dominican women sexual labor as an entry point into documenting shifting gender relations and ideologies in Sosúa, a sex tourist destination frequented primarily by German tourists. In Sosúa sexscape, new meanings of masculinity have emerged alongside women earning capacity. While sex workers must temper their displays of monetary gains so as to not compromise their reputations as mothers sacrificing for their children, men openly enjoy freedom from gender ideologies that make demands on them to appear as hard working and sacrificing fathers. In this sexual economy, men even can flaunt their unemployment. Their laziness and/or dependency are recast as macho. Here is one industry where poor Dominican women have the opportunity to make significant earnings and to jump out of poverty, yet their labor strategies do not necessarily ensure a reconfiguration of gender roles and ideologies that works in their favor. Rather, migrant men in Sosúa enjoy such a reworking that lowers expectations for them, while women are caught in a set of increased expectations.
topic masculinity
gossip
sex tourism
women labor
globalization
exoticism
url http://journals.openedition.org/gss/1716
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