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“Comfort Women” and Aggressive War: Reading Korean and Chinese Survivors’ Accounts KCI 등재

  • 언어ENG
  • URLhttps://db.koreascholar.com/Article/Detail/322621
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통일인문학 (S/N Korean Humanities)
건국대학교 인문학연구원 (The Institute of the Humanities for Unification)
초록

Imperial Japan’s “comfort women” system was one of the major atrocities against humanity during the Asia-Pacific war (1931-1945), yet denial of this war crime remains steadfast in Japan today. This paper introduces and discusses the personal accounts of Korean and Chinese “comfort women” which hitherto were unavailable to English readers. It demonstrates, through the testimonies of the survivors and eyewitnesses, the close correlation between the proliferation of the military comfort stations and the progression of Japan’s aggressive war. The lived experiences of the “comfort women” reveal undeniably that the “comfort women” system was created for the war and made possible by the war. The survivors’ narratives highlight that in today’s world when sexual violence continues to be used as an instrument of armed conflicts that prevents societies from achieving sustainable peace, the comfort women’s memories constitute a legacy of global significance.

저자
  • Peipei Qiu(Vassar College)