Geographic racializing and the (re)colonization of Vancouver during the sex work “crisis”
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.25071/f89gfa57References
Anderson, K. J. (1991). Vancouver’s Chinatown: Racial discourse in Canada, 1875 – 1980. McGill-Queen’s University Press.
Carter, S. (1993). Categories and terrains of exclusion: Constructing the “Indian woman” in the early settlement era in Western Canada. Great Plains Quarterly, 13(3), 147 – 161. https://www.jstor.org/stable/23531720
City of Vancouver. (2001). A newcomer’s guide to the city of Vancouver. City Publications Collections (Box 150-B-03, File 20), City of Vancouver Archives.
Hunt, S. (2013). Decolonizing sex work: Developing an intersectional Indigenous approach. In E. van der Meulen, E. M. Durisin, & V. Love (Eds.), Selling sex: Experience, advocacy, and research on sex work in Canada (pp. 82 – 100). UBC Press.
Perry, A. (2001). On the edge of empire: Gender, race, and the making of British Columbia, 1849 – 1871. University of Toronto Press.
Ross, B. L. (2012). Outdoor brothel culture: The un/making of a transsexual stroll in Vancouver’s West End, 1975 – 1984. Journal of Historical Sociology, 25(1), 126 – 150.
Ross, B. L. (2018). Whorganizers and gay activists: Histories of convergence, contemporary currents of divergence, and the promise of non-normative futures. In E. M. Durisin, E. van der Meulen, & C. Bruchert (Eds.), Red light labour: Sex work regulation, agency, and resistance (pp. 256 – 271). UBC Press.
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
While the Robarts Centre has the copyright for all Canada Watch issues and editorial materials, the rights of each piece reside with the author (currently under a Creative Commons license). This has been the practice of the Centre since 1992.