• Human and Alienating Work: What Sex Worker Advocates Can Teach Catholic Social Thought Ward, Kate 2021 Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics , Vol. 41 , Issue 2 , S. 261 ff. ( Zeitschrift ) Englisch 1540-7942 | 2326-2176 10.5840/jsce2021112952 Abstract

    In Catholic social thought (CST), work that is exploitative, immoral, or hopelessly monotonous can be labeled alienating: its performance makes the worker a stranger to her own, God-given human nature. CST traditionally understands sex work, which directs the human sexual faculties to ends other than the unitive and procreative, as a paradigmatic example of alienating work, and this paper will not disagree. Instead, I will show how accepting sex worker advocates’ claim that “sex work is work” reveals that while sex work is indeed alienating by CST’s standards, many forms of paid work available today are alienating in similar ways. Listening to sex worker advocates helps CST strengthen its critique of alienating work while acknowledging sex workers’ moral agency.

    Schlagwörter

    Applied Philosophy | Philosophy and Religion

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Ward, Kate
Applied Philosophy
Philosophy and Religion

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