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

被引:7
作者
Nadesan, Majia [1 ]
Kim, Linda [1 ]
机构
[1] Arizona State Univ, Sch Social & Behav Sci, West Campus, Glendale, AZ 85069 USA
关键词
Comfort women; contested experience; memorials; narratives and geopolitics; public memory; social media audiences; statues; GENDER; NEWS; RAPE; WAR;
D O I
10.1080/07491409.2021.1954119
中图分类号
G2 [信息与知识传播];
学科分类号
05 ; 0503 ;
摘要
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.
引用
收藏
页码:123 / 142
页数:20
相关论文
共 54 条
[21]   Online news comments: Social network and emergent public [J].
Kangaspunta, Veera .
INFORMATION SOCIETY, 2018, 34 (05) :275-288
[22]   Re-membering comfort women: From on-screen storytelling and rhetoric of materiality to re-thinking history and belonging [J].
Khrebtan-Horhager, Julia ;
Kim, Minkyung .
QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF SPEECH, 2020, 106 (04) :427-452
[23]  
Kim E Tammy., 2006, Women Performance: A Journal of Feminist Theory, V16, P221, DOI [https://doi.org/10.1080/07407700600744535, DOI 10.1080/07407700600744535]
[24]   Memorializing Comfort Women: Memory and Human Rights in Korea-Japan Relations [J].
Kim, Mikyoung .
ASIAN POLITICS & POLICY, 2014, 6 (01) :83-96
[25]  
Kim-Wachutka J, 2019, ASIA-PAC J-JPN FOCU, V17
[26]  
Kirgis FL, 2001, AM J INT LAW, V95, P335
[27]   The Sonyosang Phenomenon: Nationalism and Feminism Surrounding the "Comfort Women" Statue [J].
Kwon, Vicki Sung-yeon .
KOREAN STUDIES, 2019, 43 :6-39
[28]   The Deafening Silence of the Korean "Comfort Women": A Response Based on Lyotard and Irigaray [J].
Lee, Constance Youngwon ;
Crowe, Jonathan .
ASIAN JOURNAL OF LAW AND SOCIETY, 2015, 2 (02) :339-356
[29]  
Matsuda M. J., 1993, Words that wound: Critical race theory, assaultive speech, and the First Amendment, DOI DOI 10.4324/9780429502941
[30]   Collecting the Gaze: Memory, Agency, and Kinship in the Women's Jail Museum, Johannesburg [J].
Mcalister, Joan Faber .
WOMENS STUDIES IN COMMUNICATION, 2013, 36 (01) :1-27