Sex among allies military prostitution in US-Korea relations

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: New York Columbia University Press 1997Description: xiii,240p. ill. ; 24 cmISBN:
  • 97802341106436
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 327.730519 22 MO-S
Contents:
1. Partners in Prostitution -- 2. Interstate Relations and Women -- 3. U.S.-ROK Security and Civil-Military Relations: The Camptown Clean-Up Campaign -- 4. The Role of Women in the Clean-Up Campaign: "Personal Ambassadors" -- 5. The Clean-Up Campaign as Public Relations and "Private Diplomacy" -- 6. The International Is Personal: Effects of the Clean-Up Campaign on Kijich'on Women.
Summary: Drawing on a vast array of data - archival materials, interviews with officials, social workers, and the candid revelations of sex industry workers - Moon explores the way in which the bodies of Korean prostitutes - where, when, and how they worked and lived - were used by the United States and the Korean governments in their security agreements.Summary: Weaving together issues of gender, race, sex, the relationship between individuals and the state, and foreign policy, she shows how women such as the Korean prostitutes are marginalized and made invisible in militarily dependent societies both because of the degradation of their work and because of their importance for national security.
Item type: Print List(s) this item appears in: Indiana University Collection
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Print Print OPJGU Sonepat- Campus Special Collection - Indiana University Main Library 327.730519 MO-S (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 008053

Includes bibliographical references (p. [213]-230) and index.

1. Partners in Prostitution -- 2. Interstate Relations and Women -- 3. U.S.-ROK Security and Civil-Military Relations: The Camptown Clean-Up Campaign -- 4. The Role of Women in the Clean-Up Campaign: "Personal Ambassadors" -- 5. The Clean-Up Campaign as Public Relations and "Private Diplomacy" -- 6. The International Is Personal: Effects of the Clean-Up Campaign on Kijich'on Women.

Drawing on a vast array of data - archival materials, interviews with officials, social workers, and the candid revelations of sex industry workers - Moon explores the way in which the bodies of Korean prostitutes - where, when, and how they worked and lived - were used by the United States and the Korean governments in their security agreements.

Weaving together issues of gender, race, sex, the relationship between individuals and the state, and foreign policy, she shows how women such as the Korean prostitutes are marginalized and made invisible in militarily dependent societies both because of the degradation of their work and because of their importance for national security.

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