The Geopolitics of Public Memory: The Challenge and Promise of Transnational Comfort Women Activism

IF 1.4 Q2 COMMUNICATION
M. Nadesan, Linda J. Kim
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Abstract Japan conscripted a disputed number of “comfort women” to sexually service their soldiers in occupied territories during World War II. In the aftermath of war, this apparatus was ignored by international diplomacy, and few survivors related their experiences as sex slaves. However, during the early 1990s, sexual crimes against women achieved international attention, emboldened by and emboldening silence breakers whose personal experiences were both affirmed and negated by competing global stakeholders. Activists seeking recognition of and reparations for crimes against survivors of Japan’s comfort women system have since deployed memorials to contest Japan’s position that comfort women were sex workers. These memorials materially instantiate the conflicted interpretations of the scope and severity of Japan’s war crimes, whose undecidability signifies ruptures in the contemporary symbolic order of the United States, Japan, and South Korea alliance. This project examines how online audiences construct the meanings of the highly contested 2017 San Francisco memorial.
公共记忆的地缘政治:跨国慰安妇行动主义的挑战与希望
第二次世界大战期间,日本征召了数量有争议的“慰安妇”为被占领土上的士兵提供性服务。在战争结束后,这个机构被国际外交所忽视,很少有幸存者讲述他们作为性奴隶的经历。然而,在20世纪90年代初,针对妇女的性犯罪引起了国际关注,这些人的个人经历被相互竞争的全球利益攸关方既肯定又否定。自那以后,寻求承认对日本慰安妇制度幸存者犯下的罪行并对其进行赔偿的活动人士建立了纪念碑,质疑日本认为慰安妇是性工作者的立场。这些纪念碑在物质上体现了对日本战争罪行的范围和严重程度的相互矛盾的解释,其不可确定性标志着当代美、日、韩联盟象征性秩序的破裂。这个项目考察了在线观众如何构建备受争议的2017年旧金山纪念馆的意义。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
21
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