The control and representation of sexualities were powerful tools in the construction of colonial orders. Though Edward Said noted the centrality of the erotic to the devaluation and submission of the Orient as part of its feminisation, few scholars have explored the historicity of this process in particular colonial contexts. This paper reads Spanish colonialism in Northern Morocco through representations of prostitution and whoredom across the cultural production of different social actors, with particular attention to the peripheral and ephemeral Orientalisms of popular practice: postcards, journalism, massified travel writing and pulp fiction. With Spanish soldiers and male tourists expecting access to spaces of entertainment that included commercial sex, and women actively travelling from Metropolitan Spain and across North Africa to earn cash as a prostitutional proletariat, the practice of sex work was increasingly visible in Maghrebi urban space. I argue that Spanish...
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