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The female prostitute as "the other"

  • Autores: Maria Johanna Schouten
  • Localización: Mundos sociais: saberes e prácticas, 2008, ISBN 978-972-95945-4-0, pág. 216
  • Idioma: inglés
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  • Resumen
    • The unconventional character of sex work often engenders images of prostitutes as being anomalous persons. The professional activity then is believed to affect all aspects of life and personality of the (female) sex worker. Inversely, the conviction may exist that just specific types of women, with certain physical and mental characteristics, will enter this trade. The notion of the female prostitute as the Other was particularly powerful in western thought at the end of the nineteenth century and the beginning of the twentieth century, and in our paper the ideas of that period about the "otherness" in its various layers will be explored. This period was also the zenith of imperialism, the domination of Other people and inherently the sexual encounter of occidental men with oriental and African women. The images of these "exotic" women and the practice of prostitution in a colonial context will be an additional topic in this paper, to be related with the ideas in Europe about sex work.


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