ABSTRACT

Drawing on original empirical data with men who buy sex, this book takes a fresh look at the relationships clients have with female sex workers. The core questions that form the backbone of the research are not only the expected inquiry into 'why men buy sex', but also into the sociological and psychological processes that men encounter in order to enter an assumed 'deviant' sexual behaviour as part of their everyday lives.

These sociological processes of finding, negotiating and buying sexual services are complicated by the stigma directed towards men who buy sex. Exactly how do men behave with sex workers; what are their relationships like; what emotions are involved and can intimacy be bought?

Questioning the dichotomy made between commercial and non-commercial relationships, the data suggests that intimacy and commerce are compatible. Managing secrecy, stigma and the consumption of intimacy takes this book into some of the more challenging theoretical areas of masculinity and emotional consumption in contemporary society.

Drawing some parallels from the author's earlier book Sex Work: A Risky Business, the book offers insights into why engagement in commercial sex is prolific as sexual culture is transformed in late modernity.

chapter |12 pages

The genesis of the study

chapter |25 pages

Researching men who buy sex

chapter |24 pages

Client conduct

Motivations, markets and morality

chapter |26 pages

Buying sex online

Virtual regulation

chapter |24 pages

Buying intimacy

Pleasure, commerce and the self

chapter |21 pages

Against respectability

Stigma, secrecy and the self

chapter |29 pages

Criminalizing the customer

Moral messages

chapter |25 pages

Moral panic

The ‘punter' as danger