The figure of the trafficked victim : gender, rights and representation
chapter
posted on 2014-08-07, 09:06authored byRutvica Andrijasevic
During
the
last
two
decades,
critical
scholars
in
gender,
migration
and
post-‐
colonial
studies
have
been
engaged
in
attempting
to
dislodge
the
figure
of
the
sex
trafficking
victim
from
its
position
of
primacy
in
public,
policy
and
academic
debates.
The
body
of
work
that
stresses
the
agency
and
rights
of
migrant
women
in
the
sex
sector
has
put
forward
a
convincing
critique
of
the
passive
and
enslaved
trafficking
victim
and
has
replaced
the
latter
with
the
figures
of
the
active
migrant
and
the
political
protagonist.
Despite
such
a
shift,
however,
the
figure
of
the
trafficking
victim
continues
to
dominate
public
and
policy
arenas.
In
this
chapter,
I
am
interested
in
the
persistence
of
the
figure
of
the
victim
and
suggest
that
that
the
figure
of
the
victim
is
not
a
‘free-‐floating’
but
rather
produced
through
specific
codes
and
conventions.
These
issues,
I
argue,
become
visible
by
bringing
to
the
fore
the
nexus
among
sexuality,
gender
and
narrative.
By
building
on
feminist
scholarship
on
sexuality
and
representation
in
film,
visual
media
studies
and
historical
studies
of
East/West
Europe,
I
explore
the
ways
in
which
representations
are
embedded
within
narrative
tropes
and
discursive
constructions
about
women’s
sexuality
that
are
culturally
and
historically
specific.
History
Citation
Andrijasevic, R, The figure of the trafficked victim : gender, rights and representation, 'The SAGE handbook of feminist theory', Sage
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SOCIAL SCIENCE/School of Management