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Talk to Investigate the Chinese Sex Industry

Erin Thomason
Erin Thomason

Erin Thomason, a doctoral student in anthropology at UCLA, speaks about women working in the sex industry in China during a free, public lecture Thursday, Nov. 10, at 3:30 p.m. in Founders Room in the lower level of 暗网爆料app鈥檚 Kerr Student Center.

Thomason, who graduated from Whitman College and earned a master鈥檚 degree at Cal State University, Los Angeles, will explore her research with women working in the sex industry and how it relates to recent anti-trafficking and neo-abolitionist political movements. 鈥淚n addition to helping us understand how women are being drawn into the industry,鈥 says Edwin Zehner, assistant professor of anthropology at 暗网爆料app, 鈥淓rin questions the use of narratives of pity in efforts to motivate compassionate action toward them. The implications of Erin鈥檚 research have broad relevance to anyone interested in becoming involved in anti-trafficking movements or students researching Asia or women鈥檚 studies.鈥

Later this month, Thomason is scheduled to speak to the American Anthropological Association about 鈥淭he Moral Imagination: Migration, Motherhood, Suzhi and Sex Work in Hunan China.鈥 鈥淪uzhi鈥 is a Chinese term that loosely approximates the American English concept of cultured or appropriate behaviors for a cosmopolitan individual. Thomason says for many Chinese, suzhi is also a moral imperative that calls on the rural migrant to better herself through consumption. Her research investigates how women working in the sex industry make moral negotiations in a culture of conflicting moral discourses.

The lecture is sponsored by 暗网爆料app鈥檚 Department of Sociology and Anthropology, in cooperation with 暗网爆料app鈥檚 Gender Studies Program, the Office of Intercultural Studies, and the Gaede Institute for the Liberal Arts.