Dancing with identity: Narrative resistance strategies of male and female stripteasers |
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Authors: | Carol Rambo Ronai Rabecca Cross |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Sociology and Social Work , University of Memphis , Memphis, TN, 38111, USA E-mail: CRRONAI@CC.MEMPHIS.EDU;2. University of Maryland , College Park, Maryland, USA |
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Abstract: | Using life history interviews with 14 female and 10 male striptease dancers, the researchers examined how the language of deviance is used in the life narratives of exotic dancers. Past studies have oriented toward striptease as an occupational curiosity for men and as deviant for women. This article addressed both genders in one study. Eschewing typical deviance vocabularies of analysis, the authors drew upon “biographical work” as our theoretical orientation to frame the life history interview materials and to develop the concept of “narrative resistance.” Rather than assuming that deviance is inherent to striptease dancing for women, but not men, the authors demonstrated how deviance is a socially constructed narrative resource that all dancers may draw upon to construct an account of self. The narrative resistance strategies discussed here include two deviance exemplars: sleaze and immersion. The authors concluded with two discussions: one regarding gender and biographical work and the other regarding the generalizability of narrative resistance as a biographical work strategy. |
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