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DTSTART:20251102T020000
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DESCRIPTION:Elizabeth Bernstein is an Associate Professor of Women's\nStudi
 es and Sociology at Barnard College. She is the author of\n"Temporarily Yo
 urs: Intimacy\, Authenticity\, and the Commerce of\nSex" (University of Ch
 icago Press\, 2007)\, an ethnographic study of\nthe postindustrial economi
 c and cultural transformations fuelling\ncontemporary shifts in the meanin
 g\, forms\, and spatial organization\nof commercialized sexual labor. The 
 book won the prestigious\nNorbert Elias Prize\, as well as Distinguished B
 ook Awards from the\nASA's Sexualities sections\, and the Sex and Gender s
 ection.\nElizabeth teaches and writes in the fields of sexuality and the\n
 state\; the sociology of the body\; and gender and power in\ntransnational
  contexts.\n&nbsp\;\nElizabeth's talk will draw on her current book projec
 t critically\nexamining the convergence of feminist\, neoliberal\, and eva
 ngelical\nChristian efforts to shape contemporary U.S. policies around the
 \ntraffic in women. Recent publications from this research include\n"Carce
 ral Politics as Gender Justice? The 'Traffic in Women' and\nNeoliberal Cir
 cuits of Crime\, Sex\, and Rights" (Theory &amp\;\nSociety\, 2012).
DTEND:20121022T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260512T002431Z
DTSTART:20121022T200000Z
LOCATION:
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Brokered Subjects: Sex\, Trafficking\, and the Politics of Freedom
UID:RFCALITEM639141278710771445
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<p>Elizabeth Bernstein is an Associate Profess
 or of Women's\nStudies and Sociology at Barnard College. She is the author
  of\n"Temporarily Yours: Intimacy\, Authenticity\, and the Commerce of\nSe
 x" (University of Chicago Press\, 2007)\, an ethnographic study of\nthe po
 stindustrial economic and cultural transformations fuelling\ncontemporary 
 shifts in the meaning\, forms\, and spatial organization\nof commercialize
 d sexual labor. The book won the prestigious\nNorbert Elias Prize\, as wel
 l as Distinguished Book Awards from the\nASA's Sexualities sections\, and 
 the Sex and Gender section.\nElizabeth teaches and writes in the fields of
  sexuality and the\nstate\; the sociology of the body\; and gender and pow
 er in\ntransnational contexts.</p>\n<p>&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>Elizabeth's talk wi
 ll draw on her current book project critically\nexamining the convergence 
 of feminist\, neoliberal\, and evangelical\nChristian efforts to shape con
 temporary U.S. policies around the\ntraffic in women. Recent publications 
 from this research include\n"Carceral Politics as Gender Justice? The 'Tra
 ffic in Women' and\nNeoliberal Circuits of Crime\, Sex\, and Rights" (Theo
 ry &amp\;\nSociety\, 2012).</p>
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