Author: Heather Branstetter
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coercion & criminality (morality and sex work part four)
That’s right, she was a Rosie the Riveter. So were MANY of these women. We should really revise our collective understanding of Rosie the Riveter and think more about what happened to the actual women those images stand in for: many were in the sex industry both before and after the war. After all the…
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the madam next door
This past Monday I drove to Charlottesville to be interviewed for the nationally-distributed public radio show With Good Reason. It was interesting—and a little weird—to do what the producer Kelley called “performing a conversation.” You can listen to the show here (I’m the first 16 minutes or so): [soundcloud url=”https://api.soundcloud.com/tracks/194578165″ params=”color=79a4d1&show_artwork=false” width=”100%” height=’166′ iframe=”true” /] And here is a transcript featuring my…
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a trojan horse. (morality and sex work part three)
This is the third (and final?) post in my Morality and Sex Work mini-series. The inspiration for the title comes from the famous story in Greek mythology about “cunning Odysseus” (his epithet in the ancient Greek is m’tis, which is also translates to mean “crafty” or “skilled”) hatching a plan to offer a giant wooden horse as an…
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“just like any other business”? (morality and sex work part two)
From time to time, Wallace makes it onto another one of those “cool small towns in America” lists, here, #38. Although this latest list celebrates the “rich history and culture” you find in small towns, it fails to plug the Oasis Bordello Museum, which was mentioned in Travel + Leisure’s 2012 list and Budget Travel’s 2009 list (which also features my current town,…
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masters of sex, serial, and telling real people’s stories (morality and sex work part one)
“You pretended to have an orgasm? Is that a common practice among prostitutes?” “It’s a common practice amongst anyone with a …
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locations of wallace brothels 1891-1991: podcast episode, maps, and transcript
“I don’t remember at all how I eventually found out that this was a thriving red-light district and had steady business, but when it was payday at the mines the place was really jumping.”