The Pacific War and Working Women in Late Colonial Korea

This paper describes the experiences of young Korean women being recruited to work in factories during the Japanese colonial era (1910-1945). Though Korean industrialization began about 1910, the military-industrial complex needed all the workers it could get during WWI & again during WWII, &...

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Veröffentlicht in:Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 2007-10, Vol.33 (1), p.81-103
1. Verfasser: Kim, Janice C. H.
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description This paper describes the experiences of young Korean women being recruited to work in factories during the Japanese colonial era (1910-1945). Though Korean industrialization began about 1910, the military-industrial complex needed all the workers it could get during WWI & again during WWII, & many were women. The factory girls of the 1920s & 1930s have been portrayed as victims of capitalism, while during the late 1930s & early 1940s, many were recruited away from the factories to serve as "comfort women" or sex slaves for the Japanese military. This discussion of Korean women's work during 1937-1945 serves to explain their contributions to industrial production in the Japanese wartime empire; outline the policies & programs that placed industry & labor within the scope of imperial mobilization; elaborate on how female labor recruitment was performed; describe how the Women's Labor Volunteer Corps mobilized trainable female workers; &, drawing from the oral histories of these female volunteers, to illustrate some lesser known effects of Japan's total war in Korea. Appendixes, References. J. Stanton
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Though Korean industrialization began about 1910, the military-industrial complex needed all the workers it could get during WWI & again during WWII, & many were women. The factory girls of the 1920s & 1930s have been portrayed as victims of capitalism, while during the late 1930s & early 1940s, many were recruited away from the factories to serve as "comfort women" or sex slaves for the Japanese military. This discussion of Korean women's work during 1937-1945 serves to explain their contributions to industrial production in the Japanese wartime empire; outline the policies & programs that placed industry & labor within the scope of imperial mobilization; elaborate on how female labor recruitment was performed; describe how the Women's Labor Volunteer Corps mobilized trainable female workers; &, drawing from the oral histories of these female volunteers, to illustrate some lesser known effects of Japan's total war in Korea. Appendixes, References. J. 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identifier ISSN: 0097-9740
ispartof Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society, 2007-10, Vol.33 (1), p.81-103
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language eng
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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); Jstor Complete Legacy; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Colonial history
Colonialism
Employee recruitment
Employment
Factories
Factory labor
Female employees
Gender
Heavy industry
Industrial development
Industrial Production
Japan
Korea
Korean people
Labor
Military recruitment
Recruitment
Social conditions
Textile industry
Victimization
Volunteer labor
War
Women
Women workers
Working Women
title The Pacific War and Working Women in Late Colonial Korea
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