Elizabeth Bernstein is professor of women's, gender, and sexuality studies and of sociology at Barnard College, Columbia University, and the author of Temporarily Yours: Intimacy, Authenticity, and the Commerce of Sex, also published by the University of Chicago Press.
A whip-smart, razor-sharp analysis of the neoliberal con game behind the global anti-sex trafficking juggernaut. The nuanced ethnography and sophisticated theorizations extend Bernstein's brilliant groundbreaking critiques of the discourse of sex trafficking and the emergence of carceral feminism. A game-changing must-read for feminists, scholars, and activists alike. --Lisa Duggan, New York University Bernstein's important book on the so-called new abolitionism not only debunks the myth of human trafficking. Its profound originality is that it also moves beyond the apparent irrationality of a sex panic. Indeed, carceral feminism, militarized humanitarianism, and redemptive capitalism make strange bedfellows, but this wonderfully rich volume reveals the neoliberal rationality underlying their convergence. --Eric Fassin, University of Paris VIII Brokered Subjects reveals how central questions of sexuality and gender are to new forms of neoliberal governance and racial power in national and transnational politics. Bernstein reveals why discourses of anti-trafficking campaigns have become ubiquitous across left- and right-wing politics. She shows with powerful ethnographic research and evidence how anti-trafficking brings together a range of political actors who have the power to define sexuality, morality, and what women--especially poor ones--need to do with their bodies. This is important reading for activists, policy makers, NGOs, and researchers. --Inderpal Grewal, Yale University My enthusiasm for this thoughtful and masterful ethnographic analysis of trafficking discourse is unqualified. Bernstein offers a provocative challenge in tracing the work that decades of anti-trafficking interventions have been doing--from facilitating a billion-dollar industry of good intentions reinforced by a white savior industrial complex, to reinforcing sexual, cultural, and racial stereotypes, as well as emboldening a new sexual politics that has securitized rather than enabled the freedom of disenfranchised constituencies. Brokered Subjects is a bold and timely book that is bound to compel a rethinking of contemporary understandings of gender progress and freedom. --Ratna Kapur, Queen Mary University of London