Jump to content

Male prostitution: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
[pending revision][pending revision]
Content deleted Content added
External links: link cleanup
Line 49: Line 49:
The term "rentboy" is derived from the fact that the boys rent themselves out. A man who does not regard himself as gay, but who is prepared to have sex with male clients for money, is sometimes called "[[gay for pay]]" or "rough trade". Male prostitutes offering services to female customers are sometimes known as "gigolos".
The term "rentboy" is derived from the fact that the boys rent themselves out. A man who does not regard himself as gay, but who is prepared to have sex with male clients for money, is sometimes called "[[gay for pay]]" or "rough trade". Male prostitutes offering services to female customers are sometimes known as "gigolos".


Clients, especially those who pick up prostitutes on the street or in bars, are sometimes called [[john (prostitution)|"johns]]" or "tricks". Those working in prostitution sometimes refer to their trade as "turning tricks".
Clients, especially those who pick up prostitutes on the street or in bars, are sometimes called [[john (prostitution)|"johns]]" or "tricks". Those working in prostitution sometimes refer to their trade as "turning tricks". This is a very dirty and unhealthy way of making money, but it can help when you need extra cash.


==Male prostitution in other cultures and periods==
==Male prostitution in other cultures and periods==

Revision as of 20:47, 6 November 2010

Prostitution is the practice of engaging in sexual acts for money. Male prostitutes are also known as "male escorts", "gigolos," "rent-boys," and "hustlers".[1] Compared to female sex workers, male sex workers have been far less studied by researchers, and while studies suggest that there are differences between the ways these two groups look at their work, more research is needed.[2]

Slang

Common English slang terms for male prostitutes include "escorts", "rent-boys" "models" and "masseurs". The term "hustler" is rarely used any more, due to its demeaning connotations.

Slang terms from other regions include: Template:Multicol

  • hímringyó, meaning "male whore" (Hungarian)
  • taxi boys (Argentina and Chile)
  • escort (Chile)
  • pinguero, jinetero (Cuba)
  • cachero, puto, prostituto (Ecuador)
  • garoto de programa, meaning "program boy", michê, michet, gigolô (Brazil)
  • flete, gigolo or gigolón (Peru)
  • Prostituto (Portugal); for comparison, the word used for female prostitutes is prostituta
  • jigolo, tokmakçı (Turkey)

Template:Multicol-break

  • chichifo (pl. chichifos), puto, prostituto, chacal, mayate (Mexico)
  • callboys (Germany and in the Philippines)
  • boys (Tunisia)
  • Masajista, puto (Colombia)
  • Stricher (Germany; Stricher is a potentially more derogatory term, compared to callboy)
  • 鸭子 → yāzǐ, meaning "duck" (Mainland China)
  • gigolò, puttano, marchettaro (Italy)
  • chapero, prostituto, puto, gigolo (Spain)

Template:Multicol-break

  • Tapins (France), gigolo (France, Germany and many other countries), escorte (France and Quebec)
  • Trækkerdreng meaning "boy that walks the streets" (Denmark)
  • жиголо – zhyholo (Ukraine)
  • жиголо – zhigolo (Bulgaria and Russia)
  • жиголо – žigolo (Serbia)
  • ζιγκολό – zingolo (Greece)
  • 男娼 – danshou 売り専/ウリ専 – urisen (lit. "exclusively sold") (Japan)
  • شرموط – Sharmoot (Arabic)

Template:Multicol-break

  • zhigolo (Albania)
  • żigolo, żigolak, męska dziwka (male whore) (Poland)
  • 남창(男娼) – namchang, meaning "male prostitute" (South Korea)
  • Sanky Panky,Bugarron (Dominican Republic)
  • escorta, puto (Puerto Rico)
  • kucing (Garong), meaning "cat" (Indonesia)
  • rattopoika, meaning "pastime boy" (Finland)
  • trai bao ("bought boy"), trai gọi ("call boy"), đĩ đực ("male prostitute") (Vietnam)
  • anak ikan, gigolo (Malaysia)

Template:Multicol-end

The term "rentboy" is derived from the fact that the boys rent themselves out. A man who does not regard himself as gay, but who is prepared to have sex with male clients for money, is sometimes called "gay for pay" or "rough trade". Male prostitutes offering services to female customers are sometimes known as "gigolos".

Clients, especially those who pick up prostitutes on the street or in bars, are sometimes called "johns" or "tricks". Those working in prostitution sometimes refer to their trade as "turning tricks". This is a very dirty and unhealthy way of making money, but it can help when you need extra cash.

Male prostitution in other cultures and periods

Male prostitution has been found in all advanced cultures.[3] The practice in the ancient world of the selling of sexual favors by men or women in sacred shrines, or sacred prostitution, is attested to in the Old Testament.[3]

Prostitutes in ancient Greece were generally slaves, as prostitutes could lose their civic rights.[3] A well known case is Phaedo of Elis who was captured in war and forced into slavery and prostitution, but was eventually ransomed to become a pupil of Socrates and give his name to Plato's Phaedo. Ancient Greece and ancient Rome both saw the existence of male brothels.[3]

Work as a same-sex male prostitute in the Medieval Islamic world was similarly restricted to social "inferiors" such as boys and slaves, and while frequenting prostitutes was considered a sin, the practice nevertheless occurred.[4]

Historical evidence from court records and vice investigations shows male prostitution in what is now the United States as early as the late 17th century. With the expansion of urban areas and aggregation of gay communities toward the end of the 19th century male/male prostitution became more apparent, and included baths, brothels such as the Paresis Hall in the Bowery district of New York, and prostitution bars in which so-called "fairies" solicited other men for sex and received a commission for selling drinks.[5]

  • Bacchá – in northern Turkic-speaking areas of Central Asia, an adolescent of twelve to sixteen who was a performer practiced in erotic songs and suggestive dancing and was available as a sex worker.
  • Hijra a physically male or intersex person who may enter into prostitution. However not all Hijras are prostitutes, many consider themselves to have a female identity in a male body and accept this as a sacred condition or gift. They dress as women and dance at weddings, child births, and other happy occasions. Many Hijras in Pakistan consider themselves to be quite religious as well.
  • Jinetero – literally "horse jockey" (i.e. someone who "rides" tourists), this is a term used to describe Cuban male prostitutes (female prostitutes are called "jinetera").
  • Kagema – young male prostitutes in Edo period of Japan whose clients were largely adult men.
  • Sanky-panky – a male sex worker in the Caribbean who solicits on beaches and has clients of both sexes.

Present-day male prostitution

The following categorization of the male prostitute is not exhaustive:

Online

Professional escorts tend to advertise independently on male escorting websites, or else through an escorting agency.

Most major U.S. cities have weekly gay-oriented newspapers or magazines. Various people who are frequently willing to engage in prostitution, often advertise in the backs of these publications.

Streets, bars, and clubs

Street prostitutes solicited clients in such places as 53rd and 3rd, also known as "The Four Corners", in New York, Santa Monica Boulevard in Los Angeles, Piccadilly Circus, in London, "The Wall" in Sydney's Darlinghurst, The Drug Store and Rue Saint Anne in Paris, Polk Street Gulch in San Francisco, Willow Avenue and Easton Avenue, County Route 527 (New Jersey) in Franklin Township, New Jersey and Taksim Square in Istanbul. Some male prostitutes work in public spaces like bus terminals, parks or rest stops. Bars, such as Cowboys and Cowgirls and Rounds in New York, Numbers in Los Angeles and go-go bars in Patpong were all popular venues for male prostitution.

Most big cities have an area where male prostitutes regularly make themselves available to potential clients driving by in cars. The informal name of such an area varies by the city. These areas tend to be dangerous for both the client and the prostitute, since they're subject to surveillance and arrest by law enforcement.

Bathhouses and sex clubs

Male prostitutes may attempt to work in gay bathhouses or sex clubs, but prostitution is usually prohibited in such places, and known prostitutes are often banned.

Male brothels

A male prostitute may also work in a male brothel or "stable." This is common in South-East Asia (Thailand, Manila) and may also be found in some larger U.S. cities. The pimp is relatively rare in male prostitution in the West, where most prostitutes generally work independently or, less frequently, through an agency.[3]

In November 2005, Heidi Fleiss announced that she had partnered with brothel owner Joe Richards to turn Richards' existing Cherry Patch Ranch brothel in Crystal, Nevada into an establishment that would employ male prostitutes and cater exclusively to female customers, a first in Nevada (see Prostitution in Nevada).[6] These plans were later abandoned.

Until 2009 when it outlawed all prostitution, Rhode Island was the only U.S. State to allow male sex workers to work legally.[7] (See also: Prostitution in Rhode Island.)

In order to work in a legal brothel in Nevada, a cervical exam is required by law; therefore males are technically not allowed to work as prostitutes. In late 2009 the owner of the Shady Lady Ranch brothel challenged this provision before the Nye County Licensing and Liquor Board and prevailed.[8] The brothel then proceeded to hire a male prostitute to serve female customers.[9]

In the UK, male brothels are advertised as massage parlours. Theoretically it is still unlawful to run a 'disorderly house' but the last prosecution on this basis was in 1990 against a gay sauna in Streatham.[10]

In January 2010, a luxurious brothel for gay men was opened in an industrial part of Zurich, the first gay brothel in Switzerland.[11]

Sex tourism

In contrast to most of the other venues sex tourism in regards to male prostitution caters mainly to mostly female clients with the exception of Thailand. Women travel to Southern Europe (Italy, Greece, Croatia, Spain and Tunisia), to the Caribbean Basin (Jamaica, Barbados, Dominican Republic, and Martinique), Genoa and Kenya in Africa, Bali, Indonesia and Phuket in Thailand to enjoy sex tourism. Nepal, Morocco, Fiji, Ecuador and Costa Rica are less popular. Here, women travel to specific locations to enjoy a holiday and find a "temporary boyfriend" who will provide escort services as not only a dining companion, tourist guide, dancing companion/instructor and often procurer of softer illicit drugs like marijuana and ecstasy, but also to provide sex services.[citation needed] German women frequent Sosua in the Dominican Republic, Greece, and Morocco. The Japanese prefer Bali in Indonesia and Canadians and Scandinavian females seem to be open market consumers. The women are of every age but are predominantly middle-aged women looking for a romance and sex.[12] Male prostitution is increasingly visible in India. Gigolo service in India is growing.[13] But there are cases of harassment of client women by gigolos.[14]

Risks

As in all forms of prostitution, the male prostitute and his client can face a number of risks and problems: health-related including sexually transmitted diseases, drug-use, physical abuse; legal/criminal including solicitation, drug and age of consent laws; societal/familial social stigma, rejection by family and friends, gay-bashing (in the case of male-male prostitution), loss of job; and emotional including sense of exploitation or of leading a "double-life", loss of affect, self-destructiveness. Teenagers and runaways engaging in sex work are particularly at risk. For clients, risk may come from being robbed, or, much more rarely, being blackmailed or physically injured.[3]

When male prostitutes steal from their male clients or take money without "putting out" sexual services, it is sometimes referred to as "rolling a john".

Research suggests that the degree of violence against male prostitutes is somewhat lower than for female sex workers. Men working on the street and younger men appear to be at greatest risk of being victimized by clients. Conversely, the risk posed to clients of male sex workers (in terms of being "rolled") seems to be less than many imagine. This is especially true when clients hire male sex workers from an established agency or when they hire men who have been consistently well reviewed by previous clients.

In the United States, prostitution is illegal except for some rural counties in Nevada which allow licensed brothels. However, in order to work in a brothel in Nevada a cervical exam is required, so until a change was made in 2009 men could not legally work as prostitutes.[15]

Stigma

The difference in age, in social status and in economic status between the hustler and his client is also a major source of social criticism.[16] This same social stigma may also be attached to amorous relationships that do not involve prostitution, but which may be seen by society as a form of "quasi" prostitution. The older member of the relationship may be qualified as a "sugar daddy" or "sugar momma"; the young lover may be a "kept boy" or "boy toy".[17] In the gay community, the members of this kind of couple are sometimes called "dad" and "son" (without implying incest). This social disdain for age/status disparity has been less pronounced in certain cultures at certain historical times (see "Male prostitution in other cultures and periods", above).

Academic and feminist studies

The topic of male prostitution has not been overlooked in academic studies by feminist theorists. In a study by feminist theorists Justin Gaffney and Kate Beverley, the insights gained from research on male sex workers in central London allows comparison between the experiences of the 'hidden' population of male prostitutes and the traditionally subordinate position of women in a patriarchal society. Gaffney and Beverley argue that like women, for male sex workers, hegemonic and patriarchal constructs ensure that they also occupy a subordinated position within society.[18]

In contrast, social theorists writing from a poststructural critical theory perspective have claimed that unlike women, for male sex workers, hegemonic misogynistic social constructs ensure that they are seen by "johns" as less likely to take on submissive roles. Based on a series of interviews, Douglas Langston finds the attitude of "johns" and underground male sex workers on gender relations 'remarkably misogynistic,' and compares their attitude to that of the fiction and Christian apologetics of C.S. Lewis. Langston argues that both express a remarkably similar misogyny to the point of male homoerotism, and fetishization of patriarchal domination, especially over subjects seen by other members of society as less likely to take on submissive roles.[19]

The male prostitute or hustler is a frequent literary and cinematic stereotype in the West from the 1960s onwards, especially in movies and books with a gay perspective, in which he may be a stock character, often portrayed either as a tragic figure (as in the film Mysterious Skin in which a male prostitute has a history of molestation) or as an impossible object of love or an idealized rebel. Though less frequent in the cinema and in novels, the male prostitute with an exclusively female clientele (the "gigolo" or "escort") is generally depicted as less tragic than the gay hustler. The film My Own Private Idaho, starring Keanu Reeves and River Phoenix, focuses upon the friendship between two male prostitutes. Rob Schneider stars as a gigolo in his slapstick farce Deuce Bigalow: Male Gigolo and its sequel. Another well known movie featuring male prostitutes is Midnight Cowboy.

See also

References

  1. ^ Clark, Tracy (8 August 2009). "Are they "Hung"?". Salon. Retrieved 2009-10-17.
  2. ^ (Weitzer 2000, p. 8)
  3. ^ a b c d e f Dynes, Wayne R. (1990), "Prostitution", Encyclopedia of Homosexuality, Chicago: St. James Press, Vol 2, pp. 1054–1058, ISBN 1558621474 {{citation}}: Unknown parameter |nopp= ignored (|no-pp= suggested) (help)
  4. ^ Dunne, Bruce (1998), "Power and Sexuality in the Middle East", Middle East Report (206), Middle East Research and Information Project: 8, doi:10.2307/3012472, JSTOR 10.2307/3012472, retrieved 2008-01-30. {{citation}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help) "male prostitutes were understood to submit to penetration for gain rather than pleasure; and boys, "being not yet men, could be penetrated without losing their potential manliness." That an adult male might take pleasure in a subordinate sexual role, in submitting to penetration, was deemed "inexplicable, and could only be attributed to pathology."; "Sex with boys or male prostitutes made men "sinners" but did not undermine their public position as men or threaten the important social values of female virginity or family honor."
  5. ^ Heather Lee Miller, Prostitution, Hustling, and Sex Work.
  6. ^ Jonann Brady, "Are Women Ready for the 'Stud Farm'?", ABC News, Nov. 18, 2005. [1]. "Fleiss plans makeover for Nevada brothel" Associated Press. Nov. 15, 2005. USA Today
  7. ^ Arditi, Lynn (31 May 2009). "'Behind Closed Doors" How RI Decriminalized Prostitution". Providence Journal.
  8. ^ Brothel to get the bucks, Las Vegas Review-Journal, 2010-01-06
  9. ^ Nevada brothel hires nation's first legal 'prostidude', Associated Press, 2010-01-22
  10. ^ Hall, David (17 August 1994). "Working boys: London's male brothels offer a more lucrative way for young men to ply their trade than the streets and a more discreet service to the discerning customer". The Independent.
  11. ^ "Gay-Bordell in Zürich eröffnet", Tages Anzeiger (in German), 2010-01-18
  12. ^ Sánchez Taylor,J.1997.‘Marking the Margins:Research in the Informal Economy in Cuba and the Dominican Republic’.Discussion Papers in Sociology,No.S97/1. [2]
  13. ^ Kate Muir (30 June 2008). "The gigolo tales". Itgo.in. Retrieved 2009-10-17.
  14. ^ Women land in gigolo trap, Times of India, 11 Dec 2006
  15. ^ Whitehill, Shimcha (11 June 2009). "Nevada Brothel Owners Want To Legalize Male Prostitution". Associated Press.
  16. ^ see, for example, European Network Male Prostitution ACTIVITY REPORT november 2003 (pdf file), "Practical experiences of Men in Prostitution" (Sweden, Denmark, Stockholm), pp. 23–26: "All [the] interviewed men [in Denmark] are aware of societies’ negative perception of prostitution and do whatever possible to cover up. As a result they live double lives and create more and more distance from close relations and the wider society. Isolation and sufferance from not having anybody to share prostitution experiences with is profound. Some men describe[d] how the clients are their main or only social relation to society, and consider the relations as sexual friendships or the customers as father figures."
  17. ^ see Dynes, supra, for a discussion of the fine line between "kept boys" and prostitution.
  18. ^ Justin Gaffney & Kate Beverley, “Contextualizing the Construction and Social Organization of the Commercial Male Sex Industry in London at the Beginning of the Twenty-First Century,” ‘’Feminist Review’’, No. 67, Sex Work Reassessed (Spring, 2001), pp. 133–141.
  19. ^ Langston, Douglas (2001). Conscience and Other Virtues: From Bonaventure to Macintyre Penn State Press.

Bibliography

For novels about male prostitution, see Male prostitution in the arts.