Constructing identities through discourse: Examining the textual representation of prostituted women in post-apartheid South Africa

dc.article.end-page143
dc.article.start-page1
dc.contributor.authorLandman, Tiaan A.
dc.date.accessioned2024-05-02T12:07:36Z
dc.date.available2024-05-02T12:07:36Z
dc.date.issued2021
dc.description.abstractThe current study explores the intersectional social identities of four ‘prostituted women’ in post-apartheid South Africa as they are represented through discourse. The socio-cognitive model of critical discourse studies is employed to explore the way in which their social identities are represented through texts. These texts were retrieved from the online blog of a non-profit organisation, Embrace Dignity (2019), which advocates for the rights of women and girls. The texts were written to represent the personal experiences of four black women who identify as ‘prostituted’. This study found, through the engagement with biopolitical and intersectional feminist theory, that conditions which are paramount to a ‘social death’ are often proliferated for the subjects at the intersection of their gender, sex, sexual, and racial identities. Furthermore, these conditions are often concealed through the guise of class. The subjects make meaning of their social identities through a range of experiences, which are facilitated by sociohistorical systems of oppression aimed to disenfranchise feminised and blackened bodies in South Africa. These systems of oppressions are communicated through discourses of Bantu education, unskilled labour, violence, sexual perversion, limited access to services, marginal citizenship, geography, movement, and displacement, as well as a discourse of care, to name a few. The study found that these discourses are fostered and realised through the political project of domination, enforced by white heteropatriarchy that was institutionalised by the apartheid government. The study further indicates how the women who are represented by the texts, have been positioned within contexts that suppress their lives. This study emphasises the importance of exploring the intersectional social identities of black prostituted women in order to appropriately support the women within this community and their voices.
dc.description.librarianMM2024
dc.facultyFaculty of Humanities
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10539/38415
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherUniversity of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg
dc.rights©2021 University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg
dc.schoolHuman and Community Development
dc.subjectBiopolitics
dc.subjectCritical discourse analysis
dc.subjectIntersectionality
dc.subjectProstituted women
dc.subjectSex work
dc.subjectPost-apartheid South Africa
dc.subject.otherSDG-5: Gender equality
dc.subject.otherSDG-10: Reduced inequalities
dc.titleConstructing identities through discourse: Examining the textual representation of prostituted women in post-apartheid South Africa
dc.typeDissertation
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