Gold goes up to $4,100 on Tuesday    Oil surges on Tuesday    Egypt, Qatar seek to deepen investment partnership    Trump-Xi meeting still on track    Sisi hails Gaza peace accord as a 'new chapter' for the Middle East    BP signs agreement to drill five new gas wells in Mediterranean within its Egypt concessions    Turkish president holds sideline meetings with world leaders at Egypt summit    S&P Global Ratings upgrade signals renewed confidence in Egypt's economy: CBE Governor    Finance Ministry announces exceptional tourism investment opportunities in Assiut    Al-Sisi, Meloni discuss strengthening Egypt–Italy relations, supporting Gaza ceasefire efforts    Al-Sisi, Merz discuss Gaza ceasefire, ways to deepen Egypt–Germany relations    L'Oréal Egypt's 10th summit draws over 800 experts, focuses on dermatology    URGENT: Netanyahu skips Sharm El-Sheikh peace summit for holy reasons    Ministers of Egypt، Slovakia sign MoU on environmental protection، climate change    Egypt's Sisi warns against unilateral Nile actions, calls for global water cooperation    Egypt unearths one of largest New Kingdom Fortresses in North Sinai    Egypt's Health Minister showcases Women's Health Initiative at Berlin Innovation Forum    Egypt unearths New Kingdom military fortress on Horus's Way in Sinai    Egypt Writes Calm Anew: How Cairo Engineered the Ceasefire in Gaza    Egypt's acting environment minister heads to Abu Dhabi for IUCN Global Nature Summit    Egyptian Open Amateur Golf Championship 2025 to see record participation    Cairo's Al-Fustat Hills Park nears completion as Middle East's largest green hub – PM    Egypt's Cabinet approves decree featuring Queen Margaret, Edinburgh Napier campuses    El-Sisi boosts teachers' pay, pushes for AI, digital learning overhaul in Egypt's schools    Egypt's Sisi congratulates Khaled El-Enany on landslide UNESCO director-general election win    Syria releases preliminary results of first post-Assad parliament vote    Karnak's hidden origins: Study reveals Egypt's great temple rose from ancient Nile island    Egypt resolves dispute between top African sports bodies ahead of 2027 African Games    Egypt's Al-Sisi commemorates October War, discusses national security with top brass    Egypt reviews Nile water inflows as minister warns of impact of encroachments on Rosetta Branch    Egypt's ministry of housing hails Arab Contractors for 5 ENR global project awards    A Timeless Canvas: Forever Is Now Returns to the Pyramids of Giza    Egypt aims to reclaim global golf standing with new major tournaments: Omar Hisham    Egypt to host men's, juniors' and ladies' open golf championships in October    Germany among EU's priciest labour markets – official data    Paris Olympic gold '24 medals hit record value    It's a bit frustrating to draw at home: Real Madrid keeper after Villarreal game    Russia says it's in sync with US, China, Pakistan on Taliban    Shoukry reviews with Guterres Egypt's efforts to achieve SDGs, promote human rights    Sudan says countries must cooperate on vaccines    Johnson & Johnson: Second shot boosts antibodies and protection against COVID-19    Egypt to tax bloggers, YouTubers    Egypt's FM asserts importance of stability in Libya, holding elections as scheduled    We mustn't lose touch: Muller after Bayern win in Bundesliga    Egypt records 36 new deaths from Covid-19, highest since mid June    Egypt sells $3 bln US-dollar dominated eurobonds    Gamal Hanafy's ceramic exhibition at Gezira Arts Centre is a must go    Italian Institute Director Davide Scalmani presents activities of the Cairo Institute for ITALIANA.IT platform    







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My Life in a Harem
Published in Bikya Masr on 16 - 12 - 2010

Jillian Lauren, author of the memoir Some Girls: My Life in A Harem, signs books with a flourish: “Some girls kiss and tell!” She is a gorgeous brunette with a wide smile and short fingernails. She is also a former stripper, New York call girl, art school student, actress, and member of a select crew of party guests auditioned and hired to “entertain” the Sultan of Brunei's younger brother, Prince Jefri. It was the early 1990s, and Lauren was inexplicably told to call Prince Jefri “Robin” when she arrived at the lavishly constructed party-land where she would pass her nineteenth year.
With careful emotional hindsight and an impeccable weaving of detail, Lauren reveals two worlds now extinct: the tightly-controlled, early years of American girls' involvement in Robin's harem, and her own irretrievable, passionately floundering late teens.
Lauren's memoir moves through New York City, Singapore, Kuala Lumpur, and the Borneo palace, where she lived at the whim of the Prince, with an ineffable grace. She calls herself clumsy, but her story dances across gold-thread rugs and peeling hardwood with equal aplomb.
While she describes a few years of utter creative chaos, sexual dissociation, and intense attached/avoidant love affairs, Lauren deftly avoids blaming her vicissitudes on her work as a prostitute or harem girl. She is neither dispassionate nor defensive. She is fascinated, still, by the systems that produce men who can't get enough sex or cars, women who can't get enough attention or power, and this fascination gives her writing the touch of a lover, not the smack of a polemic. During her first week in Brunei, Lauren writes, “A painting caught my eye that every other night I had passed right by … I had studied this kind of painting in art history, had analyzed each racist, imperialist brushstroke. And here was a romanticized, nineteenth-century Western portrayal of a harem hanging one hundred and fifty years later on the wall of–a harem. It was positively postmodern.”
Lauren's painful loneliness as a young woman living in the competitive world of Robin's unending girl-parade is made palpable as she discusses her eating disorder, her boredom, her desperate attempts to stay in New York in between stints in Brunei. She also makes no bones about her attraction to Robin, her attraction to the money, her attraction to the adventure and the stamp of “difference” she'd spent her New Jersey childhood cultivating. Eventually she makes that stamp literal, in the form of an elaborate tattoo that curls from her stomach to her vulva.
Lauren spends much of the book asking herself “What would Patti Smith do?” but admits that there were moments during which she felt much more like Patty Hearst, wanting desperately for Robin or other women in the harem to approve of her. The details of her time in Brunei are personal, at times stifling, in keeping with the fact that she was often kept in locked rooms, opulent as they were, and was not privy to any official information about the Prince, the country, or even what she was expected to do, until she was expected to do it.
However, Some Girls is not a cautionary tale about sex work. While Lauren does not ignore the thorny questions of agency and servitude in the international sex industry, Some Girls is less an exposé and more an elegant reflection on the dangers of losing oneself, to whatever might consume us. Lauren knows one must begin from a position of basic privilege to ask the questions she is asking, even as she reveals familial abuse and her own depression. She admits to blank spots in her narrative: she was often drunk, she was sexually dissociated, she doesn't remember it all.
She didn't go to Brunei to write this book. She struggles to explain why she went at all. In the hands of a less reflective writer, her moments of fuzzy recollection or confused motives would seem dishonest. But for Lauren, these confusions are actually the moments of “reality” in a surreal world. Emotion and memory are tangled, slippery, and unreliable. Flashes of emotional clarity are a luxury, and by the end of Lauren's narrative, it is obvious that the luxury of a Tiffany diamond jewelry set pales in comparison.
BM


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