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Pagpopokpok at Pangangabit: Language, Media, and the Structural Pathologization of Female Survival in the Philippines

Author

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  • Lorenzana, Benjamin Abalos III

Abstract

Across many cultures, morality and the feminine exist within a strict dichotomy of good and bad, wherein sexual conduct exhibited by women—such as sex work and infidelity—are cast in a significantly harsher light than when performed by men. This manifests as the Heterosexual Sexual Double Standard (SDS). As synthesized by Endendijk et al. (2020) in their landmark meta-analysis, "He is a Stud, She is a Slut!" empirical data confirms the continued global persistence of this traditional double standard. Specifically, frequent sexual activity in men is socially expected, and evaluated positively, whereas identical behaviors in women are met with stringent restrictions and negative moral evaluations like "slut-shaming." While behavioral frequency is a critical factor—with females making up an estimated 80% of sex work providers globally (McKeever, 2025), and young married women aged 18 to 29 slightly outpacing men in infidelity at 11% versus 10% (Wang, 2018)—major structural disparities remain unaddressed. Chief among these "elephants in the room" is that men are the primary drivers of these behaviors: they constitute the overwhelming majority of consumers in the sex work, with 11% of men reporting ever having paid for sex compared to less than 1% of women (McKeever, 2025), and they are statistically more likely to cheat across almost all older demographics (Wang, 2018). Grounded in these disparities, this paper explores how these global double standards manifest locally; while Philippine society and mainstream media cast the pokpok (sex worker) and the kabit (mistress) as agents of moral decay, an intersectional analysis reveals that their positions are deeply dictated by structural poverty and reinforced by a patriarchal religious framework that disproportionately punishes women while absolving men.

Suggested Citation

  • Lorenzana, Benjamin Abalos III, 2026. "Pagpopokpok at Pangangabit: Language, Media, and the Structural Pathologization of Female Survival in the Philippines," SocArXiv 7rsnz_v1, Center for Open Science.
  • Handle: RePEc:osf:socarx:7rsnz_v1
    DOI: 10.31219/osf.io/7rsnz_v1
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Briones, Roehlano M., 2018. "The Wage Gap between Male and Female Agricultural Workers: Analysis and Implications for Gender and Development Policy," Discussion Papers DP 2018-15, Philippine Institute for Development Studies.
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