Disappointed social space of the beginning of the twenty-first century has been marked by S. Žižek's publication entitled "No Sex, Please, We're Post-Human!". This appeal seems to have reflected the tendency that is a matter of a great concern of philosophers, psychologists, demographists-with the growth of universal indifference, even contrary to the proclaimed sexual freedom, decreases human sexual passion and sex drive. Therefore, it is no longer a strange approach that can be found among the publications that such "inevitable evil" as prostitution is about to disappear and the issue of eliminating the threat from its social body is going to be solved. It is the emergence of a situation of such rather attractive prospects that an actual appeal to the subject of prostitution is not only an integral part of the sexual life of mankind, but also as an element of the communicative space, as a system of signs that allows the boundary between I and the Stranger / Other.