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Non-Western Colonization, Orientalism, and the Comfort Women
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Table of Contents

Table of Contents

Chapter 1 – Introduction: Collective Memories of Sexual Slavery under the Japanese Imperial Military

Chapter 2 – The Memories of Sexual Slavery in Japan from 1945 to the 1960s: Romantic Stories of Forbidden Love

Chapter 3 – The Memories of Sexual Slavery in Japan from the 1970s to 1990: Japanese War Guilt, Victims, and Romanticized Memories

Chapter 4 – The Memories of Sexual Slavery from 1991 to 2015: Nationalist Memories

Chapter 5 – The Memories of Sexual Slavery from 1991 to 2015: Progressive Memories

Chapter 6 – The Memories of Sexual Slavery in Japan from 2015 to the Present: The 2015 Bilateral Agreement and ‘Comfort Women’ Statues

Chapter 7 – Reflections on Memories of Sexual Slavery in Japan and South Korea

About the Author

Ako Inuzuka is associate professor of communication at the University of Pittsburgh at Johnstown.

Reviews

"This beautifully written book unpacks the works of memory constructions of ‘comfort women,’ a highly contentious issue in East Asia. Deeply engaged with influential popular texts in Japan over the span of past seven decades, Inuzuka illustrates how one of the harrowing atrocities that occurred during the Asian-Pacific war has been collectively remembered and forgotten in competing public discourses. This book will attract researchers in the fields of Asian studies, history, intercultural communication, and women & gender studies."
*Hsin-I Cheng, Middle Tennessee State University*

“The struggle of man against power is the struggle of memory against forgetting,” so goes one of the most memorable lines in Milan Kundera’s The Book of Laughter and Forgetting. In this searing, extraordinary work, Ako Inuzuka powerfully demonstrates the constitutive role of rhetoric in the construction of Japanese memories of the sexual enslavement of Korean women during World War Two. Inuzuka’s book does more than make a powerful intervention in fields as varied as intellectual history, critical race studies, gender studies, and rhetorical criticism. It’s courageous archaeology of her own experience invites readers into a collective practice of re-membering; that is, of knitting together a new politics of justice, solidarity, and freedom.
*Omedi Ochieng, Denison University*

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