Trafficking Hadassah

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A01=Ericka Shawndricka Dunbar
African diaspora oppression
African Girls
Africana Women
Author_Ericka Shawndricka Dunbar
Beautification Process
biblical gender studies
Category=QRMF12
Collective Memories
Collective Trauma
collective trauma in biblical narratives
Conferred
Contemporary Horror Films
Cosmetic Treatments
Critical Spin
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
Female Collective
Human Trafficking
intersectionality theory
King's Bedroom
King's Palace
King's Provinces
King’s Bedroom
King’s Palace
King’s Provinces
Lord's Resistance Army
Lord’s Resistance Army
Minoritized Bodies
postcolonial feminist analysis
Rape Disclosure
Sex Work
Sexual Exploitation
Sexual Trafficking
sexual violence research
Story World
Transatlantic Slave Trade
trauma and memory studies
UN
Violated
Virgin Girls

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367769116
  • Weight: 400g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 12 Nov 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The representation of sexual trafficking in the book of Esther has parallels with the cultural memories, histories, and materialized pain of African(a) girls and women across time and space, from the Persian Empire, to subsequent slave trade routes and beyond.

Trafficking Hadassah illuminates that Africana female bodies have been and continue to be colonized and sexualized, exploited for profit and pleasure, causing adverse physical, mental, sexual, socio-cultural, and spiritual consequences for the girls and women concerned. It focuses on sexual trafficking both in the biblical book of Esther and during the transatlantic slave trade to demonstrate how gender and racism intersect with other forms of oppression, including legal oppression, which results in the sexual trafficking of African(a) females. It examines both the conditions and mechanisms by which the trafficking of the virgin girls (who are collectively identified) are legitimated and normalized in the book of Esther, alongside contemporary histories of Africana females. This important book examines ideologies and stereotypes that are used to justify the abuse in both contexts, challenges the complicity of biblical readers and interpreters in violence against girls and women, and illustrates how attention to the nameless, faceless African girls in the text is impacted by the #MeToo and #SayHerName social movements.

This book will be of particular interest to those studying the Bible, religion, gender, theology, and sex trafficking. It is also an important book for those in the related fields of Africana Studies, Trauma Studies, Post-Colonial Studies, Diaspora Studies, Critical Race Studies, as well as to the general reader.

Ericka Shawndricka Dunbar is Visiting Professor of Hebrew Bible, Payne Theological Seminary, Wilberforce, Ohio, USA.

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