Female sex workers in SF: Difference between revisions

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Characters whose work explicitly involves sexual behavior or sexual performance.
Characters whose work explicitly involves sexual behavior or sexual performance. Includes people who provide sexual services for money or professionally, e.g., whores, prostitutes, streetwalkers, escorts, callgirls; sex performers; and people who do sexual performance for money or professionally, e.g., strippers, actors, lapdancers, nude or pinup girl models, etc.
 
See also [[List of non-female sex workers in SF]]


==List of works==
==List of works==

Revision as of 09:51, 29 April 2007

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Characters whose work explicitly involves sexual behavior or sexual performance. Includes people who provide sexual services for money or professionally, e.g., whores, prostitutes, streetwalkers, escorts, callgirls; sex performers; and people who do sexual performance for money or professionally, e.g., strippers, actors, lapdancers, nude or pinup girl models, etc.

See also List of non-female sex workers in SF

List of works

  • Brian W. Aldiss. "Lambeth Blossom" in Strange Bedfellows: Sex and Science Fiction, edited by Thomas N. Scortia (1972). © 1967.
  • Margaret Atwood. The Handmaid's Tale. Forced prostitution by the handmaids; and houses of ill-repute secretly provided for the bigwigs.
  • Mercedes Lackey. One of the Gryphon books have a sex-worker (Amberdrake, a "kestra'chern") as a protagonist; these particular sex-workers are respected in society, and are combination therapist / sex therapist / masseur, and are of both sexes. Examples of that profession crop up in other of her later Valdemar works. This is also one of the rare examples of a male sex worker in SF.
  • Charles Oberndorf. Sheltered Lives (1992). After the spread of "hives," a deadly STD, the government sets up shop with licensed sexual service workers.
  • J. Neil Schulman. The Rainbow Cadenza. All women are required to spend several years in "the Service" - prostitution.
  • Sarah Waters. Tipping the Velvet (It's not fantasy/sf, but readers of fantasy might well like it; the London of the early 20th century is pratically fantastic. This is a lesbian picaresque novel & well worth reading.)
  • Joss Whedon. "Firefly" (character of Inara is a Companion, a registered multi-talented professional who at least sometimes includes sex in her services; she is regularly described as a whore by major character Mal; in episode "Heart of Gold", a former Companion is now a madame of a house of prostitution)
  • Gene Wolfe. Free Live Free
  • "Alias"
    • episode 2x11 (#35) "Phase One" Sydney undercover as an escort
    • episode 2x21 (#43) "Second Double" Sydney undercover as a dominatrix