DiscoverRealms of MemoryRemembering the System: Enforced Prostitution by the Japanese Military in Indonesia
Remembering the System: Enforced Prostitution by the Japanese Military in Indonesia

Remembering the System: Enforced Prostitution by the Japanese Military in Indonesia

Update: 2024-01-02
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The system of enforced prostitution by the Japanese military went unpunished and unexamined for decades after the Asia-Pacific War.  International recognition only began in 1991 when Korean survivor Kim Hak-sun spoke out in graphic detail about her dark past.  In Systemic Silencing: Activism, Memory, and Sexual Violence in Indonesia, University of Melbourne historian Kate McGregor tells the story of the transnational struggle for recognition and redress for and by the women of East and Southeast Asia.  Focusing on the less studied case of Indonesia, she points out how the sexual abuse and exploitation of Indonesian woman began during the Dutch colonial era.  She reveals how collaboration with the Japanese, sentiments of shame, and Cold War political and economic pressures favored the silencing of this past.  

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Remembering the System: Enforced Prostitution by the Japanese Military in Indonesia

Remembering the System: Enforced Prostitution by the Japanese Military in Indonesia

Rick Derderian