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First published online November 8, 2011

Tainted love: From dirty work to abject labour in Soho’s sex shops

Abstract

This article is based on ethnographic research carried out in sex shops – retail premises selling sex toys, clothing and accessories, as well as sexually explicit books and films – located in London’s Soho. Drawing on the concept of ‘dirty work’, it explores not only the ways in which the various taints associated with dirty work – physical, social and moral – are lived and experienced, but also the allure of this particular type of work for those who perform it, and particularly of Soho as a work place. In doing so, the article extends the study of dirty work by drawing attention to two related themes that emerged from the research – first, the performance of what might be termed ‘abject labour’; that is, work that invokes a simultaneous attraction and repulsion for those who undertake it, and second, the significance of location and place in understanding the lived experience of work and the meanings with which particular types of work are imbued. The discussion concludes by arguing that teasing out the inter-relationship between these two themes – of simultaneity (of repulsion and desire) and setting – enables us to better understand interconnections between the meanings attached to particular types of work, and the specific locations in which they take place.

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Published In

Article first published online: November 8, 2011
Issue published: November 2011

Keywords

  1. abjection
  2. dirty work
  3. London
  4. organizational space and place
  5. sex shops
  6. Soho
  7. taint and taint management

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Authors

Affiliations

Melissa Tyler

Notes

Melissa Tyler, Essex Business School, University of Essex, Wivenhoe Park, Colchester CO4 3SQ, UK. Email: [email protected]
Melissa Tyler is a Reader in Management at the University of Essex. Her work on gender and feminist theory, sexuality and the body, and emotional and aesthetic forms of labour has been published in various international journals and edited collections. Melissa is an Associate Editor of Gender, Work & Organization, and a co-editor (with Philip Hancock) of International Journal of Work, Organization and Emotion. Her current research is on feminism, embodiment and retro-marketing; emotional and aesthetic labour in the children’s culture industries; and gender, ageing and sexuality in the workplace. [Email: [email protected]]

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