Wednesday, May 6, 2020

The Legacy Of Rape, By Nancy Toping Bazins And Jane...

To explore the legacy of rape as a tool in war Nancy Toping Bazin’s and Jane Harmovit Lauter’s philosophy of domination is important to know. The philosophy of domination is the underpinning of all patriarchal institutions from domestic institutions, to government, and the military. Another usefully theory is one succinctly described by Katrina Lee Koo in â€Å"Confronting a Disciplinary Blindness: Women, War and Rape in the International Politics of Security†. Koo says, â€Å"the nation, the state, allies, and enemies intersect with gendered identities†¦sexual enslavement is politicized violence against women’s bodies that is both state-sanctioned and premeditated† in effect, during war time there is an intersection of gender with religion, ethnicity, nationality and anything else that represents the opposing side as an â€Å"other†. In this sense an assault on the women of a nation is a direct assault on their state, their culture, the ir religion, their ethnic group as well as the men in it. In her essay â€Å"Revisiting the Issue of Korean ‘Military Comfort Women’: The Question of Truth and Positionality† Hyunah Yang says, â€Å"by invading women’s bodies, rape attempts to possess the enemy’s property and leaves a rift in the most fundamental ground of the symbolic system that sustains the enemies group identity†¦belief that the woman’s body is a field underpinning the family, ethnic group, and/or nation† (61). During the comfort system the Japanese army was not only in control of the Korean

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