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Sex and the city: branding, gender and the commodification of sex consumption in contemporary retailing

Martin, Amber; Crewe, Louise

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Authors

Amber Martin

Louise Crewe



Abstract

This paper explores the changing spatiality of the sex retail industry in England and Wales, from highly regulated male orientated sex shops, pushed to the legislative margins of the city and social respectability, towards the emergence of unregulated female orientated ‘erotic boutiques’ located visibly in city centres. This is achieved through an exploration of the oppositional binaries of perceptions of sex shops as dark, dirty, male orientated, and ‘seedy’ and erotic boutiques as light, female orientated and stylish, showing how such discourses are embedded in the physical space, design and marketing of the stores and the products sold within them. More specifically, the paper analyses how female orientated sex stores utilise light, colour and design to create an ‘upscaling’ of sexual consumerism and reflects on what the emergence of up-scale female spaces for sexual consumption in the central city might mean in terms of theorisations of the intersectionality between agency, power, gender and class. The paper thus considers how the shifting packaging and presentation of sex-product consumption in the contemporary city alters both its acceptability and visibility.

Citation

Martin, A., & Crewe, L. (in press). Sex and the city: branding, gender and the commodification of sex consumption in contemporary retailing. Urban Studies, 54(3), 582-599. https://doi.org/10.1177/0042098016659615

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Jun 1, 2016
Online Publication Date Jul 28, 2016
Deposit Date Jul 10, 2016
Publicly Available Date Jul 28, 2016
Journal Urban Studies
Print ISSN 0042-0980
Electronic ISSN 1360-063X
Publisher SAGE Publications
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 54
Issue 3
Pages 582-599
DOI https://doi.org/10.1177/0042098016659615
Keywords Consumption; Retailing; Sex shop; Brands; The city; Space; Gender
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/798683
Publisher URL http://usj.sagepub.com/content/early/2016/07/27/0042098016659615

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