https://doi.org/10.1177/1350508418812554
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DOI: 10.1177/1350508418812554
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Becoming cosmopolitan women
while negotiating structurally limited
choices: The case of Korean migrant
sex workers in Australia
Bronwen Dalton and Kyungja Jung
University of Technology Sydney, Australia
Abstract
International labor mobility holds the promise that one can become a cosmopolitan citizen of
the world. But this interpretation of mobility rarely features in research and media focused on
Asian women who travel and engage in sex work. In both arenas, the dominant narrative is that
migrant sex workers are poor, the victims of sex trafficking, and pose a risk to public health.
This narrative is laced with Orientalist overtones of the Asian sex worker as the alluringly exotic
‘other’, passive and particularly vulnerable, and in need of rescue. However, the interviews of 11
Korean women sex workers based in Sydney, Australia, challenge this narrative. These women
engaged in a transnational quest to become cosmopolitan citizens of the world, albeit making
logical choices from structurally limited options shaped by their multiple identities as women,
sex workers, and Korean, and their relative precarious position in the Australian labor market.
Their stories highlight how migration and work can be an agentic process of self-expression
and self-actualization of identity. This identity has emerged against the backdrop of shifting
meanings and practices of social reproduction in Korea, a country that has experienced a highly
compressed transition from developing, to modern capitalist state. Theoretically, the article
draws on post-colonial feminist theory to shed light into the conflicting views on migrant sex
workers in existing research, by focusing on the women’s voices, which have been neglected
or silenced.
Keywords
Cosmopolitanism, gender, migrant labor, migration, post-colonial feminism, sex work, women’s
agency
Corresponding author:
Bronwen Dalton, University of Technology Sydney, Ultimo, NSW 2070, Australia.
Email: bronwen.dalton@uts.edu.au
Article
812554ORG 0 0 10.1177/1350508418812554OrganizationDalton and Jung
research-article 2018