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Lori works illegally in a rented flat in central London, living in
fear of police raids which could mean losing her small daughter and
her dream of a new life. Freya is a student who finds she can make
far more money as an escort than she could in an office; life,
after all, is already a tangle of madness and dissociation. And
Paula is a journalist whose long-term campaign against prostitution
has brought her some strange bedfellows. After a shock change to
the law, with brothels being raided by the authorities, lives
across the country are fractured. As a threat from Lori's past
begins to catch up with her, the three women are increasingly,
inevitably drawn into each other's orbit The Service is a powerful
and challenging novel about women's bodies, sex and relationships,
mental health, entitlement, authenticity, privilege and power - as
shocking as any dystopia, but touching and deeply humane.
The histories of the trans and sex worker rights movements are
closely intertwined and, particularly in the UK, it's rare to find
a carceral feminist who isn't also a rabid transphobe. What does it
mean to write as part of a community that is under attack? Where,
in fiction, is the line between exploring harmful ideology and
humanising it? In Morbid Obsessions Alison Rumfitt and Frankie
Miren explore these questions and talk about the crossover in the
ways they chose to approach them in their novels Tell Me I'm
Worthless (Cipher Press) and The Service (Influx Press), covering
the pornographic interest in sex workers and trans women, online
violence, moral panic, creative representation, and paying tribute
to sex worker and trans activism through fiction. Frank, funny, and
hopeful, and featuring two new stories, an introduction by writer
and historian Morgan M. Page, and an interview with Natalia Santana
Mendes, Morbid Obsessions is an urgent and vital conversation about
making art as collective struggle. All proceeds (after production
costs) from the sale of this book will be donated to Babeworld, a
collective which seeks to create a more representative art world,
and will go into direct grants to marginalised artists.
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