The stigmatisation of sex workers

During the 16 days of activism campaign to end violence against women and children, some thought needs to be given to adult sex workers, who experience violence on a number of levels: from police, agency bosses, clients and on a domestic level like other women. Sex workers are isolated and stigmatised and this prevents them from being able to access the protection services of the police. It also means that law enforcement agencies often discriminate against sex workers, denying them assistance when they experience violence and crime.

Stigma can be defined as a brand, a mark of shame or a stain on one’s character. Social stigmatisation of an act entails severe disapproval from society for behaviour that is considered to be outside the bounds of social norms.

The normative message that society has traditionally given to women is that sex is only acceptable within marriage or at least within a significant relationship. [1] This message can be understood as part of society’s attempt to keep women’s sexuality controlled within the bounds of marriage. Sexual relationships that do not occur within marriage, or at least within a committed relationship, are seen as deviating from this social norm. The further a relationship is from the norm-setting nuclear family the more likely it is to be categorised as “abnormal”.

Thus, for example, unmarried heterosexual couples are still close enough to this norm to be considered nominally acceptable, while homosexual relationships fall further outside of the norm and are thus often seen as “suspect”. Sex with a stranger, as part of an economic transaction, is as far away from the norm as you can get.[2]

Selling sex is thus seen as “abnormal” and therefore morally wrong and sex workers as a group are stigmatised.[3] It is significant, however, that the resultant “whore” stigma does not only apply to sex workers and is often attached to any woman that is sexually assertive or seen as impure or unchaste.[4] Gail Pheterson speaks of the “whore” stigma as a stigma that aims to silence and degrade those that it targets, emphasising their “shameful differentness”.

This stigma also prevents women from “freely exploring, experiencing and naming their own sexuality for fear of being called a whore”.[5] The sex workers in this study spoke of their “shameful differentness” and of their own experience of feeling stigmatised.

“I don’t think anyone is born a prostitute, so I think at any given time, doesn’t matter whether she has been brought up ill treated or abused or whatever, she never actually has that image in her mind of her doing that you know... because society condemns it... you still look in the mirror and you still know that you are inevitably you are still selling your body for money... so you have got inner conflict already you know trying to lift your spirit and not breaking yourself down.”

“I know that people believe - that there’s that perception out there - that prostitutes are filthy.”

For one participant one of the main things that she finds difficult about her work is coming to understand what she does and justifying it to herself. Another participant spoke of her feelings of guilt after having been with a client and how it makes one question one’s worth as a person:

“You have all got a conscience and conscience means that you will, that after you have been with a client you obviously will feel dirty. You feel like am I worth this or whatever? Especially, especially when how the clients, some of the clients do treat you ..... You will finish a booking, sometimes when you have finished a booking you just have to get out.”

At the same time, one of the participants speaks articulately about how being involved in sex work allowed her to think more critically about this kind of stigma and how she has started to explore her own sexuality:

“I’ve come to terms with my own sexuality, I think. I’ve definitely sort of realised that it is just, well in my opinion, a physical act of pleasure. It’s OK for a woman to actually enjoy sex. There I’ve grown in leaps and bounds, but just coming from ... a conservative upbringing, you know as a woman you are brought up not to sleep around. And then you’re a slut and a whore and so on...”

Consequences of stigma

The way in which the participants quoted above speak about themselves illustrates how stigma can sometimes become internalised. Often the perceptions that others have of us can become the perceptions that we have of ourselves. Resisting the internalisation of these derogatory perceptions is difficult and it can be easier just to accept these insulting labels than to challenge them.[6]

Persons engaged in sex work are often blamed for social problems or perceived as victims.[7] Some of the myths and stereotypes that exist about sex workers are that they are dirty and spread disease, that they all come from dysfunctional families, that they all abuse drugs and alcohol, that sex work is always associated with or the cause of other crimes, or that sex workers are women that need a sexual outlet.

Participants in the study use some of these stereotypes to describe themselves when they talk about themselves as “dirty”, or when they make the assumption that sex workers come from families where they are ill treated and sexually abused. They also expressed their awareness of the condemnation of society, as well as their own feelings of guilt and self blame for doing the work they do:

“I think it’s sort of coming to understand or justifying what you do. And then sort of coming to terms with it. And forgiving yourself or you can sugarcoat it any which way you like, and justify it as much as you can, but it still is what it is, you know.”

“... many a times we feel down and... we feel broken because of the type of business we’re in...” “They just, we all just feel that we are not, we are not good enough, you know, and that makes you just let yourself go. I know I’ve let myself go... I just felt I wasn’t worthy of anybody...”

Participants in the study also spoke about experiencing feelings of guilt and self-judgment, particularly when they had just started doing sex work. A number of researchers describe this internalised stigma as one of the worst dangers that people engaged in sex work face and they assert that it is mainly stigma that causes psychological distress for sex workers.[8] One participant describes this experience as follows:

“What I really find difficult is the stigma, the stigma that gets attached to you, by society. They don’t understand why, and people... That’s the thing that I find the worst is the stigma of the work.”

Some of the psychological consequences of internalised stigma are difficulties with self-esteem, feelings of shame, despair and powerlessness.[9] A participant in the study spoke of people she works with who become depressed as a result of the stigma attached to the work and who then use drugs as a means of escape:

“Yes there is, self esteem, just because you’re in the industry, you don’t, yes this is probably the last thing that a lot of people will consider doing, okay... As we feel dirty when we have been with a client, some of my colleagues, or ex colleagues that actually went into a depression. Like in the sense of, this is not really for me and, and their way is also to cut it off, doing like abuse in order for you to escape from what you are doing...”

Research has shown that one of the main strategies employed by sex workers to cope with stigma is distancing. One of the distancing techniques used by some sex workers is to avoid referring to what they do directly, referring to it as “working” and never directly mentioning the sexual aspect of their work.[10]

This has also been our experience, with some sex workers preferring to speak of themselves as “working girls” rather than “sex workers”, thereby distancing themselves from the sexual nature of the work they do in the way that they speak about the work.

Most of the women we work with also use a pseudonym as their working name. Taking on a different name when working is another distancing strategy that allows sex workers to separate their identity when working from their private selves. A sex worker interviewed in Campbell’s study explains it in this way:

“My street name is not the name I take home with me. At home I am just an ordinary person like my name is...” [11]

Participants in this research also spoke of keeping their work identity and their home identity separate from each other.

“Ek is nie ‘n hoer nie. Hierbinne doen ek my werk. As ek buitekant toe gaan, is ek ‘n hele ‘different’ tipe mens. Ek vat nie eers ‘n man se nommer buite nie...”

[I am not a ‘whore’. I do my work here inside this place. When I go outside, I am a totally different person. I don’t even take a man’s number outside this place...]

When people are stigmatised for doing something, it is natural for them to attempt to hide the activity or the attribute for which they are being stigmatised and to attempt to pass as “normal”.[12] But hiding is not always effective as a strategy to cope with stigma. Passing for “normal” requires constant alertness to ensure that you don’t expose yourself and so can create additional anxiety and isolation. Although our experience at SWEAT shows that some sex workers are open about the work they do, many hide the nature of their work. Eleven of the seventeen participants in this research spoke about the difficulty of keeping the work they do a secret from family and friends as well as more generally in their everyday interactions. A participant in the study indicated that hiding the work she does is important to protect her children, who are still at school, from stigma.

“No one knows I do this work. First of all, it’s like, when I leave this house, it’s like I’ve got my own life outside.”

“Nobody knows in the community that I am doing this kind of a job...”

“Difficulties in my personal life, is basically the fact that we have to lie about this. And people do start asking questions. It gets a bit tough...”

“No. We don’t actually describe this work to people. You lie.”

“And some people say, what type of work do you do and then you feel a little afraid to say, no, I’m a sex worker and then you just say, I work under (name of an organisation)... Do you understand? And because you don’t want to have people looking down on you...”

Participants also spoke of their constant worry and anxiety that someone they know will find out about the work that they do:

“... hoping that your parents doesn’t find out, friends doesn’t find out, that kind of thing, you know.”

“Other things worrying me, is basically people coming in here that may know me or my family. Probably one of the main things...”

“So you’re always lying and making up excuses... ‘Where you going?’ ‘I’m going to work.’ ...especially with your friends as well, when they wanna drop you off at work. Now you have to let them drop you at the hotel. And then you have to walk, always check, not actually running yet. Hoping no one’s gonna see you.”

This was confirmed by participants in the study who spoke of their fear that a member of their family would drive past while they were standing in the road, working. Those working at agencies said that they worried about their boyfriend walking in at the agency where they work. This constant need for subterfuge can have an isolating effect on sex workers.

One participant indicated that she purposefully doesn’t initiate contact with people in order to avoid having to constantly lie or to deceive them about what she does.

“You don’t allow someone in your life. I cut most of my friends, most of my family. And of course it’s not something ... You can’t explain where you’re going, you can’t make friends when you’re in this business. There’s always lying, deceiving. And I don’t like that, that you can’t. So while you’re in this business you’re actually very cut off from the world and people. You don’t really actually make friends or allow people, as you would if you weren’t in the business. I love making friends, but you just don’t. You actually reflect being a bad friend or, but you’re not really, you just don’t know how to tell them, or you don’t want to tell them, or you think they won’t be able to handle it, so you don’t go there. You just avoid friendships at all costs.”

Participants spoke of the kinds of stresses that the hidden nature of their work also places on their personal relationships. Two participants spoke about difficulties with trust in their personal relationships:

“Yes. I guess because we’ve both been in the industry, and we know the emotional stress that it leaves behind, in the personal relationships, it kind of messes you around. Trusting-wise. That kind of thing.” “You struggle trusting men... As you should. Alsostanding behind the door as well you know... if you understand what I mean. You’re doing something that you don’t actually want other people to know. Therefore they can’t trust you 100% and therefore you won’t trust them 100% because you are deceiving them in the first place.”

Difficulties were also experienced by participants in hiding what they do from their intimate partner although, as one participant says, it is a difficult situation to cope with, whether your partner knows about the work you do or not:

“I think that every girl that works in this industry that has either families that know about it or has a partner, and if the partner knows about it, it makes it even worse. I think it makes it difficult if the partner doesn’t know about it. Because then you sort of, you’ve got to watch what you do, your times, you know the whole story. And I’ve got such empathy for them. I can imagine it’s like not easy at all. And if you have a partner that knows about it, there’s always, always little fights and tiffs and things like that.”

Sometimes hiding the work they do makes it very complicated for sex workers to manage their personal and social lives. For one participant this means planning her social life in order to keep the people in her life who know of the work she does completely separate from those who do not know:

“I don’t have any friends of the past that have stayed in my life that I’ve kept this from... Friends that don’t know are the friends that I’ve met while I’m in the industry. And that gets a bit tricky because then you have to start lying about what you do, your working hours, where you’re working, what do you do, that kind of stuff. So that’s a bit tricky. ... Try not to intermingle the friends because then everybody’s got to be on their toes and nobody really, everybody likes to relax. Say if I go out and have a braai or something I’ll only invite the friends that know, what each other do cause it’s ... more relaxed.”

Managing a life where you hide the work you do is not only stressful, but it also makes it more difficult to use normal sources of social support like family or friends if you have a problem or something that you need to talk about.[13] A participant in this study spoke of not being able to share even day-to-day difficulties with family or friends:

“In sex work even the girls downstairs in the street, some of them don’t have some people to speak to... Because obviously their family doesn’t know what they’re doing, and you can’t actually go and speak to your mother regarding what happened at work, as if you’ve got sort of a normal job... So you can’t go to your mother, oh this happened on the streets today. I’m sure she will chuck you out of your, out of the house.”

• This is an extract from a report by Nicole Fick of the Sex Worker Education and Advocacy Taskforce entitled “Coping with stigma, discrimination and violence: Sex Workers talk about their experiences”. The full report is available on

• Please send comments to [email protected] or comment online at www.pambazuka.org

References

[1] Goffman, 1968; Pheterson, 1998)
[2] Augustin, 2001
[3] Alexander, 1998
[4] Pheterson, 1998
[5] Alexander, 1998: 184
[6] Erikson, Butters, McGillcuddy & Halgren, 2000
[7] Erikson et al, 2000; Pheterson, 1998
[8] Erikson et al, 2000; Vanwesenbeeck, 2001; Benoit & Millar, 2001
[9] Goffman, 1968; Moane, 2003
[10] Campbell, 2000
[11] Campbell, 2000
[12] Goffman, 1968
[13] El Bassel cited in Vanwesenbeeck, 2001