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  1. Strangers to Ourselves.Julia Kristeva - 1991 - Columbia University Press.
    This book is concerned with the notion of the "stranger" -the foreigner, outsider, or alien in a country and society not their own- as well as the notion of strangeness within the self -a person's deep sense of being, as distinct from outside appearance and their conscious idea of self. Kristeva begins with the personal and moves outward by examining world literature and philosophy. She discusses the foreigner in Greek tragedy, in the Bible, and in the literature of the Middle (...)
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  • Reading, Writing, and Rewriting the Prostitute Body.Shannon Bell - 1994 - Indiana University Press.
    "I found this a fascinating book: wide-ranging, readable." —Alison Jaggar Bell shows how the flesh-and-blood female body engaged in sexual interaction for payment has no inherent meaning and is signified differently in different cultures ...
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  • Helping Women Who Sell Sex: The Construction of Benevolent Identities.Laura María Agustín - 2005 - Rhizomes 10 (1).
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  • The Embodiment of Feminist Liberation Theology: The Spiralling of Incarnation.Lisa Isherwood - 2004 - Feminist Theology 12 (2):140-156.
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  • Other Dreams of Freedom: Religion, Sex, and Human Trafficking.Yvonne C. Zimmerman - 2013 - Oup Usa.
    Yvonne C. Zimmerman offers a groundbreaking exploration of the relationship between freedom and sexual regulation in American approaches to human trafficking.
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  • Fair Trade Sex: Reflections on God, Sex, and Economics.Thia Cooper - 2011 - Feminist Theology 19 (2):194-207.
    God, sex, and economics are all intertwined. The trafficking of people for sex intensifies each year. The sex trade crosses a spectrum from ‘high class’ escorts to sex slaves. The sex industry includes toys, pornography, and the exchange of sex between buyers, sellers, and managers. In this market exists sexual poverty caused by injustice, the imbalance of sexual power between individuals and within structures. Poverty pushes people into the market to sell, to be sold. Theologically there is a harmful, top-down, (...)
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  • Wise, Strange, and Holy: The Strange Woman and the Making of the Bible.Claudia Camp - 2000
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