Exotic Dance and Other Stories of Transformations– An Ethnographic Study in Swedish Strip Clubs
Abstract
The main question of this thesis is how in the social world of stripping the dominant order of symbolic
values is renegotiated and exotic dancers undertake processes of transformation. The aim of the study
is to look deeper inside those changes, and show how they are contextual to the reality in which they
take place. The research has been conducted through participant observations and interviews with ten
strippers in two strip clubs of a Swedish city from November 2014 to May 2015.
Dancers subjectivize themselves through a personal redefinition of dominant narratives. How do they
relate to the public display of female erotica and what consequences do they face for breaking the
accepted standards of respectability? Their projection of femininity is one based in the embodied
imaginary of an ‘exaggerated’ working class femininity, and this sheds light on the performative nature
of gender, and how it is marked by class. Furthermore, narratives about nakedness are also
renegotiated: in performance the stripped body is naturalized and re-sexualized. Finally, strippers
personally redefine bodily intimacy and accessibility.
The transformative potential of striptease is put into practice in the lived experiences of strippers, and,
at the same time, it remains a ‘potential’ because it does not manage to reach beyond the segregated,
‘abnormal’ space of the club, into the performers’ and audience’s wider social worlds. I suggest that a
feminist alliance between sex workers and sex workers’ theorists is needed in order to overcome the stigma that surrounds striptease and to eventually liberate its subversive potential.
Degree
Student essay
View/ Open
Date
2015-09-09Author
Pedri, Sara
Keywords
Striptease
exotic dance
feminism
subjectivation
sexuality
respectabil
Series/Report no.
Master's thesis
Language
eng