Trafficking in Popular Culture: Sexual and Gender Abuse in Morel’s Taken and Atkinson’s One Good Turn
2016; University of La Laguna; Issue: 73 Linguagem: Inglês
ISSN
2530-8335
Autores Tópico(s)Sex work and related issues
ResumoespanolEsta contribucion intenta analizar como las formas narrativas populares utilizan el tema del trafico de personas en los ultimos tiempos. El analisis se concentra en la novela One Good Turn de Kate Atkinson (2006) y la pelicula Venganza (2008) dirigida por Pierre Morel, debido a su tratamiento del tema de la trata con fines sexuales. Ambos textos se clasifican dentro del genero de misterio, mas especificamente del “thriller” cinematografico y la novela de detectives. Un analisis comparativo de ambos textos ilustrara como se representa en la cultura popular la trata de personas con fines de explotacion sexual, y demostrara interesantes divergencias en la ideologia en que se inscriben. La pelicula evoca peligros destinados a mitificar la trata en el contexto de los tradicionales temores sobre la trata de blancas, sin tener en cuenta la estructura amplia y compleja de la industria del sexo en combinacion con los flujos migratorios. Por el contrario, al explorar los fallos de la politica de controles fronterizos y la incapacidad de las fuerzas del orden para impedir la victimizacion de las mujeres, la novela se vuelca en la problematica de la indefension o la agentividad de las mujeres en nuestra sociedad. EnglishThis paper looks at the way in which popular narrative forms deal with the contemporary issue of trafficking. The analysis of Kate Atkinson’s novel One Good Turn (2006) and Pierre Morel’s movie Taken (2008), which address both the concept and current practices of trafficking and prostitution, are both written within the genre of popular crime. A comparative analysis of these texts will illustrate how the issue of trafficking is seen and analysed in popular cultural forms, while highlighting remarkable divergences in purpose and ideology. The dangers Taken evokes are clearly aimed at creating a “myth” of trafficking which rewrites nineteenth-century fears of white slavery with a complete disregard for the complex structure of the sex industry and migratory flows. On the contrary, by exploring the failures of both border control and the forces of law and order to prevent sex trafficking, One Good Turn clearly states the necessity of establishing other means to prevent female abuse, turning instead to consider issues of women’s powerlessness and/or agency.
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