Revista Colombiana de Ciencias Sociales (Jul 2017)

“Dangerous women”: Discursive practices of the Chilean State in relation to prostitution, sex trade and sex work

  • Jacqueline Espinoza-Ibacache,
  • Lupicinio Íñiguez-Rueda

DOI
https://doi.org/10.21501/22161201.2230
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 2
pp. 388 – 411

Abstract

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The article investigates the discursive practices of the Chilean State in relation to women who practice prostitution, sex trade or sex work. We perform an analysis based on the studies made on discourse about the issue, from pragmatic and realizative perspectives of the language. From the 18 regulations and laws we identify acts of speech, such as implicatures or indirect reference and interdiscourses. In the results we present three categories as we call them: definitions, prescriptions and transformations. The definitions are used to describe an activity and the intervention agents. Prescriptions materialize the discourse through obligations and instructions dictated to impose social control. And the transformations, which is related to the first and the second, creates a new situation regarding the activity through the updating of mechanisms and the definition of new subjects. We conclude that the rules produce discursive practices for the social control of the bodies of prostitutes and sex workers, placing them in the line of abnormality, in this way they define a behavioral guide for the rest of women. © Revista Colombiana de Ciencias Sociales.

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