1st Edition

Comfort Women of the Japanese Empire Colonial Rule and the Battle over Memory

By Park Yuha Copyright 2025
    304 Pages 4 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    This is an important and controversial book, hitherto available only in Korean, Japanese and Chinese, a book which has been subject to court cases attempting to have some parts of the book deleted. The author reconsiders the issue of the “comfort women”, that is the Korean women who were compelled to provide sexual comfort to Japanese troops during the Asia-Pacific War. She explores the human complexity of the experiences of these women, who despite terrible exploitation, she feels, cannot and should not only be considered only as passive victims. She sets the issue in context, revealing how Korean society played a role, with patriarchy and middlemen being significant factors in the procurement of comfort women, and how alongside the comfort women there were volunteer labour corps of Korean young women supporting the Japanese war effort. She highlights Korea’s colonial status, different from the territories Japan invaded and conquered, discusses how relations between colonisers and colonised in an empire are not straightforward, and argues that people should work to understand more fully the mindset of those at the time, and refrain from forcing values from the present to resolve indignities of the past. Aiming at finding a way to pursue reconciliation while looking more closely at the history, the book provides substantial consideration of key issues to do with empire, memorialization, and censorship, and is an uncomfortable read for those seeking simplistic interpretations and simplistic solutions.

    List of Figures

    Prologue from Volker Stanzel, former German Ambassador to China and Japan

    Author’s Preface to the English Translation

    Translators’ Introduction

    Author’s Introduction to the Japanese version

     

    Part I: Who were the comfort women? State control of the body, civilian engagement

     

    Chapter 1: Forced transport or national mobilization

    Chapter 2:  The erosion of memory at the comfort station

    Chapter 3: Immediately after defeat – Return of the Korean comfort women

     

    Part 2: “Colony” and the Korean Comfort Women

     

    Chapter 4: Korean perceptions of the comfort women

    Chapter 5: The battle over memory: the South Korean side

    Chapter 6: Thinking About South Korean support groups

    Chapter 7: Reading the Korean Constitutional Court ruling

    Chapter 8: Examining “what the world thinks”

     

    Part 3: The conflict of memory: the collapse of the Cold War order and the comfort women issue

     

    Chapter 9: The colonial consciousness that supports the thinking of deniers

    Chapter 10: Considering Japan’s apology and compensation actions in the 1990s

    Chapter 11: Expectations placed on the Japanese government once again

    Chapter 12: Facing the supporters’ potential

     

    Part 4: Beyond the empire and the Cold War

     

    Chapter 13: Comfort women and the nation-state

    Chapter 14: For a new Asia: Seventy years since defeat, seventy years since liberation

     

    In place of an afterword: why we must reconsider the comfort women issue

    Index

    Biography

    Park Yu-ha is a Professor Emeritus at the College of International Studies, Sejong University, Korea