This paper explores the importance of sexuality in international labour migration from Pakistan, paying special attention to masculine desire and subjectivity (driving forces in sending contexts), and to the bodily experience of travel, transit and the labour process (consequences at destination). The relationships between these two aspects of the migration process are theorised by applying the insights of classical and Lacanian psychoanalysis, Georges Bataille's 'base materialism' and contemporary queer theory to empirical data - interviews with migrant men in London and Florence. It is argued that a theoretically nuanced approach which resists rigid distinctions between sexuality and the economic sphere is required if we are to understand...