Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Liberation or purification? Prostitution, women’s movement and nation building in South Korea under US military occupation, 1945–1948

View through CrossRef
This article investigates postcolonial South Korea’s prostitution policy as a focal point of sexual politics in the undertaking of nation building under US military occupation (1945–1948). It clarifies that the discourse on prostitution served as a forum for competing visions of a new nation: socialism versus nationalism, and women’s liberation versus national purification. It analyzes the paradoxical process by which the women’s campaign to abolish one colonial legacy of prostitution (‘Authorization-Regulation’) eventually resulted in retaining another legacy (‘Toleration-Regulation’) in a new guise. It conceptualizes the postcolonial prostitution policy that combined regulation and prohibition as a ‘Toleration-Regulation Regime,’ arguing that it was a compromise between the US military government and South Korean elites. Finally, this article demonstrates that building the nation was also a process of making female subalterns, prostitutes.
SAGE Publications
Title: Liberation or purification? Prostitution, women’s movement and nation building in South Korea under US military occupation, 1945–1948
Description:
This article investigates postcolonial South Korea’s prostitution policy as a focal point of sexual politics in the undertaking of nation building under US military occupation (1945–1948).
It clarifies that the discourse on prostitution served as a forum for competing visions of a new nation: socialism versus nationalism, and women’s liberation versus national purification.
It analyzes the paradoxical process by which the women’s campaign to abolish one colonial legacy of prostitution (‘Authorization-Regulation’) eventually resulted in retaining another legacy (‘Toleration-Regulation’) in a new guise.
It conceptualizes the postcolonial prostitution policy that combined regulation and prohibition as a ‘Toleration-Regulation Regime,’ arguing that it was a compromise between the US military government and South Korean elites.
Finally, this article demonstrates that building the nation was also a process of making female subalterns, prostitutes.

Related Results

Transpacific Camptowns: Korean Women, US Army Bases, and Military Prostitution in America
Transpacific Camptowns: Korean Women, US Army Bases, and Military Prostitution in America
Abstract Military prostitution has been a staple of US–Korea relations since the 1940s, contained in the so-called camptown communities surrounding US military bases...
Protesting the Expansion of US Military Bases in Pyeongtaek: A Local Movement in South Korea
Protesting the Expansion of US Military Bases in Pyeongtaek: A Local Movement in South Korea
Since World War II, US military bases have become a global phenomenon and generated complex responses from their “host” societies. For these past six decades, South Korea has funct...
“Bad for the Body, Bad for the Heart”: Prostitution Harms Women Even if Legalized or Decriminalized
“Bad for the Body, Bad for the Heart”: Prostitution Harms Women Even if Legalized or Decriminalized
With examples from a 2003 New Zealand prostitution law, this article discusses the logical inconsistencies in laws sponsoring prostitution and includes evidence for the physical, e...
Pimp-Controlled Prostitution
Pimp-Controlled Prostitution
Street-level prostitution is comprised of both pimp-controlled prostitution and independent entrepreneurial prostitution. Although much of the more recent research has focused on t...
Female Prostitution, Customers, and Violence
Female Prostitution, Customers, and Violence
Through a critical review of existing research, this article argues that (a) customers have been excluded from many debates surrounding prostitution, and including them will create...
Young Australians’ Attitudes to the Military and Military Service
Young Australians’ Attitudes to the Military and Military Service
What are young Australians’ understandings of, and attitudes to, the military and military service? This article describes a pilot study of 320 young Australian university students...
Juveniles' Motivations for Remaining in Prostitution
Juveniles' Motivations for Remaining in Prostitution
Qualitative data from in-depth interviews were collected in 1990–1991, 1992, and 2000 with 49 prostituted juveniles remanded to two rehabilitation centers in Taiwan. These data are...
Musical Entanglements: Ely Haimowitz and Orchestral Music under the US Army Military Government in Korea, 1945–1948
Musical Entanglements: Ely Haimowitz and Orchestral Music under the US Army Military Government in Korea, 1945–1948
AbstractShortly after Japan's surrender to Allied forces, the Soviet Union occupied the northern part of Korea, and the United States moved into the south, where it established the...

Recent Results

Feminism versus femininity? Exploring feminist dilemmas through cooperative inquiry research
Feminism versus femininity? Exploring feminist dilemmas through cooperative inquiry research
This article analyses the findings from a cooperative inquiry study with seven feminist identified women based in the UK. It explores the tensions participants experienced in negot...
Alexander Calder
Alexander Calder
Alexander Calder, American Painting, 1978, Perls Galleries...
Living Film Histories: Researching at the Bill Douglas Cinema Museum
Living Film Histories: Researching at the Bill Douglas Cinema Museum
The Bill Douglas Cinema Museum at the University of Exeter is both a public museum and a research and teaching resource originally based on the collection put together by film-make...

Back to Top