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In 1998, Sweden passed ground-breaking legislation criminalising
the purchase of sexual services which sought to curb demand and
support women exiting the sex industry. Grounded in the reality of
the violence and abuse inherent in prostitution -- and reeling from
the death of a friend to prostitution in Spain -- Kajsa Ekis Ekman
exposes the many lies in the sex work scenario. Trade unions arent
trade unions. Groups for prostituted women are simultaneously
groups for brothel owners. And prostitution is always presented
from a womans point of view. The men who buy sex are left out.
Drawing on Marxist and feminist analyses, Ekis Ekman argues that
the Self must be split from the body to make it possible to sell
your body without selling yourself. The body becomes sex. Sex
becomes a service. The story of the sex worker says: the Split Self
is not only possible, it is the ideal. Turning to the practice of
surrogate motherhood, Kajsa Ekis Ekman identifies the same
components: that the woman is neither connected to her own body nor
to the child she grows in her body and gives birth to. Surrogacy
becomes an extended form of prostitution. In this capitalist
creation story, the parent is the one who pays. The product sold is
not sex but a baby. Ekis Ekman asks: why should this not be called
child trafficking? This brilliant expose is written with a
razor-sharp intellect and disarming wit and will make us look at
prostitution and surrogacy and the parallels between them in a new
way.
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