This project investigates narratives of survivors of sex trafficking posted on YouTube and focuses specifically on moments when the survivor started a transition from being trafficked to becoming free. Narrative analysis is used to explore recurrent narrative features and we find that the description of life or death circumstances is one common context for the decision to escape being trafficked. Furthermore, we show how speakers use reported private thoughts (RPT) to narrate the turning point in which they had a realization about their current situation. We examine how the speaker reconstructs her realization, her in-the-moment stance, and subsequent agency in her turning point narrative as she reports how and why she took action to make a change in the situation. The analysis provides insight into how survivors of sex trafficking have transitioned away from trafficking, and how they reconstruct their agency in doing so.
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2024. “Even When I was on the Street, I Still Didn’t Want to Give Myself the Label of ‘Prostitute’”: Sex Trade Survivor Mentors’ Narrative Constructions of Their Past Involvement in the Sex Trade. Clinical Social Work Journal
2024. The presentation of self via everyday vlogging: Analyzing everyday vlogs of Korean expatriates. Discourse, Context & Media 59 ► pp. 100784 ff.
Lockyer, Sue
2022. Beyond Inclusion: Survivor-Leader Voice in Anti-Human Trafficking Organizations. Journal of Human Trafficking 8:2 ► pp. 135 ff.
Lockyer, Sue & Christopher J. Koenig
2022. At the Intersection of Method and Empowerment: Reflections from a Pilot Photovoice Study with Survivors of Human Trafficking. Journal of Human Trafficking 8:4 ► pp. 390 ff.
Heinrichsmeier, Rachel
2021. Who gets to speak: The role of reported speech for identity work in complaint stories. Journal of Pragmatics 174 ► pp. 43 ff.
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 25 october 2024. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers.
Any errors therein should be reported to them.