Christina Elizabeth Firpo 
Black Market Business [EPUB ebook] 
Selling Sex in Northern Vietnam, 1920–1945

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Black Market Business is a grassroots social history of the clandestine market for sex in colonial Tonkin. Lively and well told, it explores the ways in which sex workers, managers, and clients evaded the colonial regulation system in the turbulent economy of the interwar years. Christina Elizabeth Firpo argues that the confluence of economic, demographic, and cultural changes sweeping late colonial Tonkin created spaces of tension in which the interwar black market sex industry thrived. The clandestine sex industry flourished in sites of legal inconsistency, cultural changes, economic disparity, rural-urban division, and demographic shifts. As a nexus of the many tensions besetting late colonial Tonkin, the black market sex industry serves as a useful lens through which to examine these tensions and the ways they affected marginalized populations. More specifically, an investigation of this black market shows how a particular population of impoverished women—a group regrettably understudied by historians—experienced the tensions.

Drawing on an astonishingly diverse and multilingual source base, Black Market Business includes detailed cases of juvenile prostitution, human trafficking, and debt bondage arrangements in sex work, as well as cases in Tonkin’s bars, hotels, singing houses, and dance clubs. Using GIS technology and big data sets to track individual actors in history, it serves as a model for teaching new methodological approaches to conducting social histories of women and marginalized people.

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Tabella dei contenuti

Introduction: Late Colonial Vietnam and the Development of the Black Market
1. The Geography of Vice: Spatial Dimensions of Clandestine Sex Wor
2. Venereal Diseases: Policing the Sources of Infection
3. Unfree Labor: Debt Bondage and Human Trafficking
4. Adolescent Sex Work: Poverty and Its Effects on Children
5. Đào Singers: New Ways to Police Female Performance Art
6. Taxi Dancers: Western Culture and the Urban-Rural Divide
Conclusion: Patterns of Clandestine Sex Industries into the Postcolonial Era

Circa l’autore

Christina Elizabeth Firpo is Professor of History at California Polytechnic State University. She is author of The Uprooted, awarded the 2017 International Convention of Asian Scholars Colleague’s Choice Book.

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Lingua Inglese ● Formato EPUB ● Pagine 276 ● ISBN 9781501752667 ● Dimensione 7.6 MB ● Casa editrice Cornell University Press ● Città Ithaca ● Paese US ● Pubblicato 2020 ● Scaricabile 24 mesi ● Moneta EUR ● ID 7629898 ● Protezione dalla copia Adobe DRM
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