In Love in the Drug War: Selling Sex and Finding Jesus on the Mexico-US Border Sarah Luna takes readers into the intimate relationships weaved in la Zona, a prostitution zone in Reynosa, Mexico. Luna captures the complex relationships among subjects rarely brought together in an ethnography, namely, sex workers and their clients, missionaries, drug dealers, and government officials, among others. More specifically, Luna's account focuses on how the differences created by the border impact her interlocutors’ dreams of migration as well as the intimate relationships between Mexican sex workers and US evangelical missionaries. Missionaries, as Luna details, cross borders in a neocolonial attempt to find God through saving the poor and the sinners, while Mexican sex workers move hoping to escape poverty, or at times are coerced by families and pimps. Based on a year of ethnographic fieldwork and archival work in 2009, Love in the Drug War examines...
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Book Review|
October 01 2022
A Queer Sense of Love and Obligation at the US-Mexico Border
Love in the Drug War: Selling Sex and Finding Jesus on the Mexico-US Border
. Sarah Luna. Austin
: University of Texas Press
, 2020
. ix + 241 pp.GLQ (2022) 28 (4): 642–644.
Citation
Anahi Russo Garrido; A Queer Sense of Love and Obligation at the US-Mexico Border. GLQ 1 October 2022; 28 (4): 642–644. doi: https://doi.org/10.1215/10642684-9991397
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