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BARE: on women, dancing, sex, and power
BARE on women dancing sex and power
Author: Elisabeth Eaves
"...no one is neutral about female bodies. If they aren't sex objects used to sell every conceivable good, they are political objects causing bitter debate on how to manage their fecundity. And where not sexual or political, they are imbued with society's ideals and fears, turned into Miss Liberties, Virgin Marys, and Wicked Witches. Everyone ha...  more »
ISBN-13: 9781199194565
ISBN-10: 1199194565
Publication Date: 10/2002
Pages: 295
Rating:
  • Currently 4.5/5 Stars.
 1

4.5 stars, based on 1 rating
Publisher: Alfred A. Knopf
Book Type: Hardcover
Other Versions: Paperback
Members Wishing: 0
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review
Read All 3 Book Reviews of "BARE on women dancing sex and power"

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reviewed BARE: on women, dancing, sex, and power on + 37 more book reviews
Interesting book exploring the world of exotic dancers in a non-judgmental way. Motivations, behaviors, etc. Exploitative vs empowering.
Chakitty avatar reviewed BARE: on women, dancing, sex, and power on + 67 more book reviews
From Publishers Weekly:
The term "feminist stripper" may be ironic, but it's "not an oxymoron," journalist Eaves explains, as she looks back on her own experiences working naked. In 1996, Eaves was in serious debt, dreaming of graduate school but unable to make house payments with her boyfriend, whom she no longer wanted to marry. She could keep working temp jobs or try stripping, which she knew paid more, although she didn't know what to think about it. Had these women "found a sort of freedom" she lacked? Peep show dancing was a revelation; it gave her control, as it was her body that had the power to give men the sexual release they desperately craved. While this sexual power was "exhilarating," it left Eaves somewhat "disappointed," confirming some of her low expectations of men. Given that most of the male (and a few female) lovers of the various strippers in this book found it impossible not to resent their partner's work, relationship strains emerge as one of the few real hazards of this apparently lucrative occupation. True, Eaves draws mostly on the experience of working at Seattle's Lusty Lady, a women-run business with better politics than the average sleazy strip joint, but her point remains: if stripping is a dangerous occupation for women, it's not the customers who're the threat, it's what it does to a woman's head. Eaves manages to avoid moralizing in favor of reportage, and despite the title's ominous promise, keeps the philosophizing to a minimum. BOMC, QPB, Venus and Inbook alternate selections.
reviewed BARE: on women, dancing, sex, and power on + 82 more book reviews
Interesting peek into the lives of strippers.


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