Journal article
Where do good girls have sex? Space, risk and respectability in Chennai
- Abstract:
- This paper examines discourses about sexual risk and respectability in the South Indian city of Chennai, through an ethnographic study of young women’s participation in practices of public sex. Focusing on middle-class women located at the heart of neoliberal and national fantasies of the ‘good life’, it makes two arguments. First: the paper unpacks the ways in which urban publics have been stigmatised as ‘unsafe’ for respectable women. It demonstrates that in practices of publicly-located sex, young women subvert this. They instead see private and commercial spaces – which have been celebrated as the locus of their liberation – as places of surveillance and discipline. Second: the paper interrogates how spatial governmentalities produce regimes of legitimacy that accrue to particular sexual acts. It argues that what ‘counts’ as sex is also determined geographically: by where the sex act occurs and what geographies of discipline and imaginaries of risk and respectability it evokes in its location. Both arguments draw attention to the ways in which contemporary discourses about the ‘risk’ of urban publics evoke the logics of development within which the construct of respectable femininity is located.
- Publication status:
- Published
- Peer review status:
- Peer reviewed
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- Files:
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-
(Preview, Accepted manuscript, pdf, 303.5KB, Terms of use)
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- Publisher copy:
- 10.1080/0966369X.2020.1770204
Authors
- Publisher:
- Routledge
- Journal:
- Gender, Place and Culture More from this journal
- Volume:
- 28
- Issue:
- 7
- Pages:
- 999-1018
- Publication date:
- 2020-05-29
- Acceptance date:
- 2020-04-19
- DOI:
- EISSN:
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1360-0524
- ISSN:
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0966-369X
- Language:
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English
- Keywords:
- Pubs id:
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1100703
- Local pid:
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pubs:1100703
- Deposit date:
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2020-04-19
- ARK identifier:
Terms of use
- Copyright holder:
- Informa UK Limited
- Copyright date:
- 2020
- Rights statement:
- © 2020 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
- Notes:
- This is the accepted manuscript version of the article. The final version is available online from Routledge at: https://doi.org/10.1080/0966369X.2020.1770204
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