Joseph has been sold into slavery in Egypt, but he's described as exceptionally good-looking and capable. His appearance and competence matter to the narrative - they make him valuable even as an enslaved person.
I think about how attractiveness functions in systems of exploitation. Joseph's beauty probably makes his life in slavery both better and more dangerous - more valuable as a servant, but also more vulnerable to desire and violence.
The text isn't naive about this. Joseph's attractiveness becomes a liability when Potiphar's wife wants him. His worth is inseparable from his vulnerability. That's the real world for beautiful people in power-imbalanced situations.
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