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Rating:  Summary: Orientalia: Tourist View Of The Underground Review: My expectations of this book was to have access to the vast dimensions of the asian sex world that expands from passion to the sad reality of sexual slavery. I had hoped that Tracy Quan could bring this distant world to me through photographs that infiltrated beyond the surface into the very core of this interesting subject. What I found instead was a mediocre account of various Asian women involved in the sex trade of several countries. Quan seems to lack depth in her vision of portraying the essence of human suffering behind the scenes. What I see is a snap shot collection of boredom amoung women in a world that seems to have few doors. There is nothing intriguing about these pictures. No sense of having any access beyond what might be considered the surface images of women at work.. The book lacks mystery. The images are simplisticly selfish in the sense that there is nothing to wonder about beyond these subjects sitting around over lit rooms, talking on the phone, staring in mirriors, or just sleeping..One does get a glimpse of sisterhood, of some unifying force that keeps these women from total isolation, but again it is so borderline uncommited to anything substantial, that it fades with my interst from page to page.. Overall, this is a very weak viewpoint into a world that conceals far more drama and suffering than the artist was able to capture..
Rating:  Summary: Asian Woman - More than Prostitutes? Review: My first reaction to Reagan Louie's photographs was that of fascination. As an American male, there is a conditioned sexual response to a photo of a prostitute. The tinge of desire fueling an intense fascination for these hyper sexual photos, and there are elements for intellectual rapture as well, the surreal normalcy of the brothel, the digging into the artist intentions...but ultimately my response is still an illusion... the compelling illusion of lust and desire. Like the morning after a drunken one-night fling, Reagan leaves me empty and wanting something deeper. Photographs are the result of a series of conscious and subconscious choices made by the artist (ala Diane Arbus), and the greater an artist awareness the greater her freedom to chose.... resulting in better art. It's too bad that SFMOMA devoted an entire exhibit to (and thus drag an audience through) an Asian American man going though an identity search through the brothels of Asia. Surely there are Asian woman who are mothers, lawyers, activists, farmers, entrepreneurs, spiritual leaders, political revolutionaries, economists, daughters, sisters, and wives. I have no doubt that Asian woman are more complex than an exotic sexual delicacy to be consumed by fine art enthusiasts. But perhaps that will be the work of a real artist.
Rating:  Summary: Was hoping for a little more Review: This book consist up a couple short essays/comments at the beginning and end with photos taking up all the inner pages. All the captions are at the back of the book instead of aligned with each photo as I would have hoped. I was looking for these captions, for more of a mix of photos/text to provide a little background into these womens lives. How or why they decided upon this lifestyle--families to take care of, survival, more money to enjoy the finer things in life, abuse, etc. Perhaps a third of the photos are nudes or partial nudes. Some are pretty good but overall I couldn't see into these womens lives without a little background help. A little more depth than photos was what I wanted, but this book is a photo book, not a graphic novel. So if you want the photos and details you might want to pass.
Rating:  Summary: prostitutes are people! Review: This book helps us to see that prostitutes are daughters, sisters, mothers, too. Some of the women are beautiful, some are plain. Some are posing erotically, others are sitting fully clothed, some happy, some sad --yes, prostitutes are people, too. As you can see from other reviews, this message is still needed, this is a very moving and meaningful book.
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