Fantasy's Legal, Reality's Not
"In this prostituting society, we ALL have to hustle,
and I'd rather suck cock than kiss ass!"
Margo St. James
Heterosexism is alive and well as it glares upon forms of sexuality which
are not the romantic, monogamous, heterosexual idea. In spite of this "ideal,"
and legal and cultural sanctions against "deviancy," women throughout
our country continue to offer sexual services for cash. Countless men flock to
women who'll give them emotional validation through erotic release, and as a relief
from themselves, in exchange for money. Two of the most empowering things to a
majority of men in our society are sex and money. Sex is a commodity to the male
psyche. For many, paying cash for erotic attention is part of the ritual in receiving
such pleasure.
Why are men compelled, as well as encouraged, to go to sex workers? Many
men don't know how to relate to women with their clothes on. They fear the ego
smashing episodes of rejection. Males desire and want women to take responsibility
for giving and receiving pleasure. They feel more free to explore sexual fantasies
with willing, anonymous women. They don't want sex to be "too serious,"
and they don't have the time, energy or emotion for a relationship. One might
consider prostitutes, in generations before and after the industrial revolution,
as unproclaimed, undeclared feminists. They didn't leap into marriage or find
reproduction their highest calling; they didn't become or want to be pure-and-holy;
they didn't join convents. They remained emotionally independent of men. They
still do.
To say that all sex workers/prostitutes have a feminist awareness is,
of course, as flawed as stating that all women lawyers work in feminist terms.
To say that all or most prostitutes were victims of incest, child abuse, or male
brutality is also as much a mistake as saying that most female nurses choose their
profession out of suffering the loss of their parents at an early age, and because
of this trauma some of them developed a fetish for giving enemas. Some people
formed careers in "prostitution" in the various ways which are legal.
This includes audio-erotic tape recordings, skin-flicks or sex-movies, modeling
for private, nude photography sessions, entertaining for stag parties, or dancing
and undulating in the now popular male strip shows. They work in "peep shows"-nude
in cubicles on the other side of the one-way mirror for the anonymous men speaking
to them on the telephone. They pose their bodies to titillate the readers of Playgirl
and Playboy type magazines. They talk "dirty" to the men and women who
"Dial-a-Hunk."
Society shuts its eyes to the fact that more than likely, the man or
woman who works as this kind of 'telephone solicitor' may occasionally make personal
and sexual contact with persons who call. They may have sex with a caller out
of mutual desire and curiosity, or simply for money. Another misconception myth
is in men and women's delusion that female sex workers are constantly wanton and
exuding erotic passion. But prostitutes do not "have to" have orgasms
nor are they especially expected to. This is like demanding that a bartender get
drunk with you! A sex worker's passion is infrequently requested. Many sex workers
may put on an "act" and "fake it" in order that a "customer's"
request be satisfied. Most often, however, a woman will pretend rapture- orgasm
to get him excited and "off," and out the door, just as thousands of
wives do all the time!
The strange paradox is that doing sex for money or gifts or trade is
not in itself illegal. Wives and partners of men do it all the time! It's been
going on forever! It is the soliciting and selling, the verbal mention and offerings
of sex for money, which is illegal. Thanks to Puritanism and religious dogma barking
for centuries, this is a (victimless) crime. Women who prostitute sexsell it,
rent it, use it to make money on their own behalf and without pimps or agentsdo
so for many reasons. Throughout the world women have worked outside male controlled,
legally sanctioned, socially acceptable ways. To make and have moneyready cashis
the top-line reason for doing prostitution work. For some, being a sex worker
is empowering; for another it is simply a means to an endsurvival. To another
it may be contempt for this economic system and certainly a quick, if not easy,
way to make money. For many women it is their manifested disgust towards the kinds
of employment and wages extended to women. Many women hang up a useless college
degree and go into prostitution work.
Whatever the reasonsall validprostitution work is an opportunity
for women to take a dominant role working on their terms, on their territory,
under their conditions, and within their direction. They most assuredly relish
the comfort of not having to contend with abusive employers or male bosses propositioning
them for sexfor "free," of course. Sex workers across the spectrum
do not so much exploit their bodies and gender as they exploit the double standard,
sexual repression, hypocrisy, homophobia, men's sexual fears, and men's awe
of female sexuality. "Whores" and "madonnas" don't really
exist. "Wicked" women are created out of society and the human mind.
by Clitora E. Cummings