Embodying Normalcy: Women Exiting Sex Work and the Boundaries of Transformation Hilla Nehushtan 1 # Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature 2020 Abstract Studies have illustrated the role of the body as an improvable project that constitutes an important part of an individuals self-identity and social life. For marginalized groups, the body project proves to be meaningful in gaining social respectability and negotiating stigma and visibility. While literature on rehabilitation and recovery has highlighted identity processes and the remake of moral subjectivities, current sociological and feminist literature has focused on embodied displays during recovery, but only in limited ways. Carefully researching dental carewhich holds cultural meanings of beauty and social class, as well as medical meaningsreveals not only the stigmatized characters of embodied aspects, but also the ways embodied transformation is imagined and fantasized, as well as its boundaries. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork conducted at a rehabilita- tion hostel for women exiting sex work, I consider how the women embodied the negotiation of their identities on a normal-abnormal axis through the ways in which they experienced their lack of teeth due to drug abuse. First, dental restoration is imagined as the embodiment of normalcy: women view caring for their appearance and dental repair as important steps towards rejoining mainstream society. Second, dental restoration is revealed as meaningful both in real lifefor the job market and ones financial well- beingand as a fantasy, where it is imagined as an enhancer of a persons potential to achieve a higher degree of beauty and success. At the same time, some women identify the boundaries of this transformation: dental restoration is recognized as temporary and removable, which subverts the imagined promise of transformation and calls into ques- tion the distinction between the pre- and post-rehabilitated body. Keywords Embodied experience . Exiting sex work . Transformation . Imagination and fantasy . Gender Qualitative Sociology https://doi.org/10.1007/s11133-020-09449-w * Hilla Nehushtan Hilla.nehushtan@mail.huji.ac.il 1 Department of Sociology and Anthropology, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Mt. Scopus, 9190501 Jerusalem, Israel