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[ecrea] Sexography - Nicholas de Villiers
Sat Jul 29 15:35:03 GMT 2017
A new publication from University of Minnesota Press
Free postage to UK customers
http://www.combinedacademic.co.uk/sexography
**
*Sexography***
*Sex Work in Documentary***
/Nicholas de Villiers///
"Nicholas de Villiers’s deeply felt and sharply focused transcultural
purview of documentary representations of sex work is all the more
urgent at a historical moment that threatens to close down not only
desire and difference but also documentary’s historical aspirations
toward democracy and social justice. The critical questions he raises
extend far beyond the narrow bounds of the selected films as he behooves
us to join him in trying to answer them."—Thomas Waugh, Concordia University
"Unlike former work focusing on prostitutes as characters in film,
Nicholas de Villiers launches an entirely new discourse around the
motivations, inventions, and methods of sex worker cinema in this
groundbreaking book. His integration of perspectives of both
non-sex-worker filmmakers and films made by sex workers is absolutely
crucial. In a book that's been a long time coming, de Villiers embraces
the 'whore’s eye view' of experiential makers and presents an inquiry
that is central to investigations of politics, political art, and
empowerment."—Carol Leigh, producer of /Outlaw Poverty, Not Prostitutes/
The turn of the twenty-first century has witnessed an eruption of
nonfiction films on sex work. The first book to examine a cross-section
of this diverse and transnational body of work, /Sexography/ confronts
the ethical questions raised by ethnographic documentary and interviews
with sexually marginalized subjects. Nicholas de Villiers argues that
carnal and cultural knowledge are inextricably entangled in ethnographic
sex work documentaries.
De Villiers offers a reading of cinema as a technology of truth and
advances a theory of confessional and counterconfessional performance by
the interviewed subject who must negotiate both loaded questions and
stigma. He pays special attention to the tactical negotiation of power
in these films and how cultural and geopolitical shifts have affected
sex work and sex workers. Throughout, /Sexography/ analyzes the films of
a range of non–sex-worker filmmakers, including Jennie Livingston, Pier
Paolo Pasolini, Shohini Ghosh, and Cui Zi’en, as well as films produced
by sex workers. In addition, it identifies important parallels and
intersections between queer and sex worker rights activist movements and
their documentary historiography.
De Villiers ultimately demonstrates how commercial sex is intertwined
with culture and power. He advocates shifting our approach from
scrutinizing the motives of those who sell sex to examining the motives
and roles of the filmmakers and transnational audiences creating and
consuming films about sex work.
*Nicholas de Villiers*is associate professor of English and film at the
University of North Florida. He is the author of /Opacity and the
Closet: Queer Tactics in Foucault, Barthes, and Warhol/ (Minnesota, 2012).
University of Minnesota Press | March 2017| 288pp | 9781517900151 | PB |
£24.99*
20% discount with this code: CSL317SWID**
*Price subject to change.
**Offer excludes the USA, South America and Australia.
Author and independent bookshop blog - Bookscombined.com
<https://bookscombined.com/>
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