Trafficked women are victims in need of saving, evangelical anti-trafficking activists proclaim. The labour that evangelicals undertake to do so is arduous. Caine warns: few will be rescued, only one per cent. Her assertion, however, is not self-defeating. It compels her audience to action, by playing on an apocalyptic scenario that amplifies the testimonial power of one “saved” victim, and so, too, her heroic saviours.
Could it be that Christian anti-sex traffickers, like Caine, solicit large evangelical audiences and prop up a legal system that criminalizes sex work because they are better story tellers than their opponents?
Sex worker rights activists offer accounts of women, men and trans-people who migrate to new countries; who turn tricks on the street, acts as escorts, perform sex acts on camera, strip or whatever, to make ends meet; who fear police crackdowns and try to avoid deportation.
Christian anti-trafficking activists, instead, paint dramatic pictures of millions of innocent, vulnerable (even desirable?) victims: women and girls under threat of the voracious appetites of a cruel and dehumanizing sex trade, and they need you to rescue them.
Concordia's Department of Religions and Cultures supports rich research, teaching, and student projects in Women, Gender, and Sexuality studies in various religious traditions and cultural contexts.
Additionally, the Department hosts a monthly Women, Gender and Sexuality (WGS) Seminar that attracts students and faculty from other local universities and brings world-class faculty to Concordia to present their research.
On March 15th, the Department will host Indrani Chatterjee (History, University of Texas at Austin), who will give a talk, entitled “Impossible Decoloniality: Unspeakable Histories of Gender in Modern India.”
For details, please consult: https://www.concordia.ca/artsci/religions-cultures/programs/women-gender-sexuality.html.