Commodified Anatomies: Disposable Women in Postcolonial Narratives of Sexual Trafficking/Abduction

This dissertation explores postcolonial fiction that reflects the structural situation of a genocidal number of third-world women who are being trafficked for sexual purposes from postcolonial countries into the global north—invariably, gender, class and race play a crucial role in their exploitatio...

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Main Author: Barberan Reinares, Maria Laura
Format: Others
Published: Digital Archive @ GSU 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/english_diss/84
http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1089&context=english_diss
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spelling ndltd-GEORGIA-oai-digitalarchive.gsu.edu-english_diss-10892013-04-23T03:27:31Z Commodified Anatomies: Disposable Women in Postcolonial Narratives of Sexual Trafficking/Abduction Barberan Reinares, Maria Laura This dissertation explores postcolonial fiction that reflects the structural situation of a genocidal number of third-world women who are being trafficked for sexual purposes from postcolonial countries into the global north—invariably, gender, class and race play a crucial role in their exploitation. Above all, these women share a systemic disposability and invisibility, as the business relies on the victim’s illegality and criminality to generate maximum revenues. My research suggests that the presence of these abject women is not only recognized by ideological and repressive state apparatuses on every side of the trafficking scheme (in the form of governments, military establishments, juridical systems, transnational corporations, etc.) but is also understood as necessary for the current neoliberal model to thrive undisturbed by ethical imperatives. Beginning with the turn of the twentieth century, then, I analyze sexual slavery transnationally by looking at James Joyce’s “Eveline,” Therese Park’s A Gift of the Emperor, Mahasweta Devi’s “Douloti the Bountiful,” Amma Darko’s Beyond the Horizon, Chris Abani’s Becoming Abigail, and Roberto Bolaño’s 2666, concentrating on the political, economic, and social discourses in which the narratives are immersed through the lens of Marxist, feminist, and postcolonial theory. By interrogating these postcolonial narratives, my project reexamines the sex slave-trafficker-consumer triad in order to determine the effect of each party’s presence or absence from the text and the implications in terms of the discourses their representations may tacitly legitimize. At the same time, this work investigates the type of postcolonial stories the West privileges and the reasons, and the subjective role postcolonial theory plays in overcoming subaltern women’s exploitation within the current neocolonial context. Overall, I interrogate the role postcolonial literature plays as a means of achieving (or not) social change, analyze the purpose of artists in representing exploitative situations, identify the type of engagement readers have with these characters, and seek to understand audiences’ response to such literature. I look at authors who have attempted to discover fruitful avenues of expression for third-world women, who, despite increasingly constituting the bulk of the work force worldwide, continue to be exploited and, in the case of sex trafficking, brutally violated. 2012-04-12 text application/pdf http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/english_diss/84 http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1089&context=english_diss English Dissertations Digital Archive @ GSU Sex Traffcking Postcolonial Literature Feminist Theory Transnational Comfort Women White Slavery
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Sex Traffcking
Postcolonial Literature
Feminist Theory
Transnational
Comfort Women
White Slavery
spellingShingle Sex Traffcking
Postcolonial Literature
Feminist Theory
Transnational
Comfort Women
White Slavery
Barberan Reinares, Maria Laura
Commodified Anatomies: Disposable Women in Postcolonial Narratives of Sexual Trafficking/Abduction
description This dissertation explores postcolonial fiction that reflects the structural situation of a genocidal number of third-world women who are being trafficked for sexual purposes from postcolonial countries into the global north—invariably, gender, class and race play a crucial role in their exploitation. Above all, these women share a systemic disposability and invisibility, as the business relies on the victim’s illegality and criminality to generate maximum revenues. My research suggests that the presence of these abject women is not only recognized by ideological and repressive state apparatuses on every side of the trafficking scheme (in the form of governments, military establishments, juridical systems, transnational corporations, etc.) but is also understood as necessary for the current neoliberal model to thrive undisturbed by ethical imperatives. Beginning with the turn of the twentieth century, then, I analyze sexual slavery transnationally by looking at James Joyce’s “Eveline,” Therese Park’s A Gift of the Emperor, Mahasweta Devi’s “Douloti the Bountiful,” Amma Darko’s Beyond the Horizon, Chris Abani’s Becoming Abigail, and Roberto Bolaño’s 2666, concentrating on the political, economic, and social discourses in which the narratives are immersed through the lens of Marxist, feminist, and postcolonial theory. By interrogating these postcolonial narratives, my project reexamines the sex slave-trafficker-consumer triad in order to determine the effect of each party’s presence or absence from the text and the implications in terms of the discourses their representations may tacitly legitimize. At the same time, this work investigates the type of postcolonial stories the West privileges and the reasons, and the subjective role postcolonial theory plays in overcoming subaltern women’s exploitation within the current neocolonial context. Overall, I interrogate the role postcolonial literature plays as a means of achieving (or not) social change, analyze the purpose of artists in representing exploitative situations, identify the type of engagement readers have with these characters, and seek to understand audiences’ response to such literature. I look at authors who have attempted to discover fruitful avenues of expression for third-world women, who, despite increasingly constituting the bulk of the work force worldwide, continue to be exploited and, in the case of sex trafficking, brutally violated.
author Barberan Reinares, Maria Laura
author_facet Barberan Reinares, Maria Laura
author_sort Barberan Reinares, Maria Laura
title Commodified Anatomies: Disposable Women in Postcolonial Narratives of Sexual Trafficking/Abduction
title_short Commodified Anatomies: Disposable Women in Postcolonial Narratives of Sexual Trafficking/Abduction
title_full Commodified Anatomies: Disposable Women in Postcolonial Narratives of Sexual Trafficking/Abduction
title_fullStr Commodified Anatomies: Disposable Women in Postcolonial Narratives of Sexual Trafficking/Abduction
title_full_unstemmed Commodified Anatomies: Disposable Women in Postcolonial Narratives of Sexual Trafficking/Abduction
title_sort commodified anatomies: disposable women in postcolonial narratives of sexual trafficking/abduction
publisher Digital Archive @ GSU
publishDate 2012
url http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/english_diss/84
http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1089&context=english_diss
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