actual strippers please
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Elizabeth Eaves never worked as a real stripper. In her book "Bare: the Naked Truth About Stripping" she refused to dance at a real club where lapdances are the primary way the girls earn money. Eaves is an upper middle class writer appropriating terms in order to sell her book. How can a person who never worked in a strip-club, never gave a lap dance, never had to hustle to sell lap-dances, how can this woman write a book about dancers and power? Why do we love to read accounts written by upper-middle class women when real working class girls are dancing every day and writing about it and their experiences are totally different and much more valid? This pisses me off so bad.
The lusty lady is a peep show. The girls never have body contact with men, the girls don't have to sell lapdances by hustling, the girls that work there are usually college educated and privileged. Elizabeth Eaves is monopolizing space that should be given to real strippers who have real experiences to tell.
Until Elizabeth Eaves is willing to lapdance to pay her rent and work and live closely with other working class women who are doing the same- she should really shut up and leave the writing to those other women who know what they are talking about.
Elizabeth Eaves' book is classict in that it totally ignores the difference between her experience and the more common experience of girls working in regular clubs.