Authors
Panteá Farvid, Rebekah Nathan, Juliana Riccardi, Abigail Whitmer
Publication date
2023/11/30
Journal
Consent: Gender, power and subjectivity
Publisher
Chapter 16. Taylor & Francis
Description
Social, political, legal and interpersonal understandings of what constitutes sexual consent (and consent in general) have become much more nuanced in the contemporary context. Much of this deepened understanding and engagement owes a great debt to ongoing feminist research and theorizing at the fulcrum of gender, power, sexuality and subjectivity. In this chapter, we examine how consent might be understood in the context of a specific form of technologically mediated sex work that is typically referred to as" camming" or online cam modeling. To do this, we first outline how consent has been understood by feminists in the realm of (largely) heterosexuality, how this may be expanded to include broader domains of negotiation within intimacy (ie, within the relationship, but beyond the interpersonal/immediate sexual contact), followed by the examination of consent and sex work from diverse feminist theoretical orientations. After this, we give a brief overview of what" camming" is and how it unfolds, drawing on empirical research that engages with the contours of the practice (and its reported benefits and drawbacks for cam models). Lastly, we tease out how consent might be conceptualized in this domain, by offering an expanded framework of consent, but one that is" constrained" by the context (s) within which camming occurs (drawing on lived experiences of cam models), no matter how much agency is exercised. We engage with the contextual (sociopolitical and structural), vocational (the nuances of the sex work industry), mediated (online), interpersonal (relationship with others), and intrapersonal (relationship with the self) components …
Total citations
Scholar articles
P Farvid, R Nathan, J Riccardi, A Whitmer - Consent: Gender, power and subjectivity, 2023