| Literature DB >> 26478687 |
Jennifer L Syvertsen1, Angela Robertson Bazzi2.
Abstract
The relationships between female sex workers and their non-commercial male partners are typically viewed as sites of HIV risk rather than meaningful unions. This ethnographic case study presents a nuanced portrayal of the relationship between Cindy and Beto, a female sex worker who injects drugs and her intimate, non-commercial partner who live in Tijuana, Mexico. Based on ethnographic research in Tijuana and our long term involvement in a public health study, we suggest that emotions play a central role in sex workers' relationships and contribute in complex ways to each partner's health. We conceptualize Cindy and Beto's relationship as a "dangerous safe haven" in which HIV risk behaviors such as unprotected sex and syringe sharing convey notions of love and trust and help sustain emotional unity amidst broader uncertainties, but nevertheless carry very real health risks. Further attention to how emotions shape vulnerable couples' health remains a task for anthropology.Entities:
Keywords: Mexico; couples; injection drug use; love; trust
Year: 2015 PMID: 26478687 PMCID: PMC4603837 DOI: 10.1111/anoc.12037
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Anthropol Conscious ISSN: 1053-4202