Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
376520 | Women's Studies International Forum | 2006 | 14 Pages |
SynopsisThis article explores the social psychological and physiological impact of wartime military sexual slavery on postwar lives of former “comfort women” by analyzing Korean survivors' testimonial narratives of han (long-held bitter resentment) and my multisite ethnographic research findings on the topic. Taking a comparative perspective of a “person-centered anthropology,” it attempts to historicize the experiences of wartime enforced sexual labor and its impact on reproductive capacity in postwar marital lives among some Korean, Filipino, and Dutch survivors. I posit the cumulative number (as well as the degree of roughness) of forced sexual intercourse–operationalized as the length of sexual servitude period–as a crucial factor in affecting the survivors' reproductive successes in postwar marital lives. Other important intervening variables for survivors' in/fertility that I theorize include sexually transmitted diseases, reproductive disruptions, and exceptionally privileged treatment resulting in reduced sexual workload.