Professor Jacobson recently wrote about the ‘Poison Ivies’ in a report that mainly focused on the presence of destructive DEI policies at America’s most prestigious schools.
Princeton University is now reminding us that there are other problems at Ivy League schools, particularly with wokeness in academics.
Thanks to the Gender Studies program at Princeton, students at the venerated institution can now learn all about sex work.
FOX News reports:
Princeton gender studies program to offer ‘sex work,’ ‘queer spaces’ coursesPrinceton University’s Gender and Sexuality Studies (GSS) program will offer classes on topics like “sex work” and “queer spaces” during its upcoming spring semester, incorporating topics like “erotic dance,” “pornography” and more, according to the university’s online course listing.The Ivy League institution will offer five total courses that contain the word “queer” in their course descriptions, according to a Campus Reform report published Tuesday, including “Love: Anthropological Explorations,” “Queer Spaces in the World,” “Power, Profit and Pleasure: Sex Workers and Sex Work,” “Disability and the Politics of Life,” and “The Poetics of Memory: Fragility and Liberation.”The university’s course dedicated to sex work appears to focus on the stigmatization and controversies surrounding the topic as well as power dynamics and societal expectations.”Why does sex work raise some of the most fascinating, controversial and often taboo questions of our time? The course explores the intricate lives and intimate narratives of sex workers from the perspective of sex workers themselves, as they engage in myriad varieties of global sex work: pornography, prostitution, erotic dance, escorting, street work, camming, commercial fetishism, and sex tourism,” the course description reads in part.
The Campus Reform report includes more details:
In total the department will offer five classes that mention the word “queer” in their course descriptions, according to the university’s website: “Love: Anthropological Explorations,” “Queer Spaces in the World,” “Power, Profit and Pleasure: Sex Workers and Sex Work,” “Disability and the Politics of Life,” and “The Poetics of Memory: Fragility and Liberation.”The class on sex work seeks to interrogate the “intricate lives” and “intimate narratives” from the “perspective of sex workers themselves, as they engage in myriad varieties of global sex work: pornography, prostitution, erotic dance, escorting, street work, camming, commercial fetishism, and sex tourism.”“Themes include: the ‘whore stigma,’ race, class and queer dynamics; law, labor and money; technologies of desire and spectacle; dirt, marriage and monogamy; carceral modernity; violence, agency and, above all, strategies for social transformation,” the description continues.Its reading list includes “Revolting Prostitutes,” “Unequal Desires,” “Porn Work,” “Sex at the Margins,” and “To Live Freely in This World.”
People are grossed out and for good reason.
Exit question: Do you really need an Ivy League degree to learn how to become a prostitute?
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