Sexual Violence in History: A Bibliography

compiled by Stefan Blaschke

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Start: Alphabetical Index: Speaker Index: A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z

First published: April 1, 2025 - Last updated: April 1, 2025

TITLE INFORMATION

Speaker: Lin Li

Title: Becoming Vocal

Subtitle: Politicizing the Voices of “Comfort Women”

Conference: 138th Annual Meeting of the American Historical Association (January 3–6, 2025) - Online Program

Session: 22. After Silence: Gender-Based Violence and Feminist Resistance across Asia (Chair: Qiong Liu)

Place: New York City, New York, United States

Date: January 3, 2025

Language: English

Keywords: Modern History: 20th Century, 21st Century | Asian History: Japanese History, Chinese History, Korean History | Types: Forced Prostitution / "Comfort Women" System; Types: Wartime Sexual Violence / Asia-Pacific War; Victims: Narratives / Comfort Women Narratives; Representations: Films / I Can Speak



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ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

Speaker: Lin Li, Department of Asian and Middle East Studies, Kenyon College - Academia.edu

Abstract: »This presentation examines "comfort women" survivors’ everlasting struggle to make their voices heard by focusing on two key aspects of their testimonies: the linguistic and the ideological framework through which survivors narrate their experiences. The act of speaking alone does not guarantee that a voice can be recognized and heard. Rather, many conditions must be fulfilled before speakers become legible to listeners. In this presentation, I examine the complex conditions within which "comfort women" survivors come to be recognized as legitimate speakers whose words are taken seriously.
I begin with a critical analysis of the 2017 South Korean film I Can Speak, discussing how the protagonist transforms from a "silent" victim into a vocal survivor-activist through her acquisition of English and her speaking tour in the United States. I analyze how such a plot reinforces Anglophone (and especially US dominance) in the transpacific redress movement. Next, I turn to the testimonies of Chinese women in the resistance who were captured and forced into Japanese military sexual slavery. Examining how they strategically foreground their heroic resistance when disclosing their experience of sexual assault, I reveal how anti-Japanese nationalism simultaneously legitimizes the discussion of sexual violence, an otherwise taboo subject, while severely restricting the scope within which it can be discussed.« (Source: Online Program)

Wikipedia: History of Asia: History of Japan / Shōwa era | History of Asia: History of China / | History of Asia: History of Korea / Korea under Japanese rule, History of South Korea | Film: Films about comfort women / I Can Speak | Prostitution: Forced prostitution / Comfort women | Sex and the law: Wartime sexual violence / Wartime sexual violence in World War II | War: Pacific War / Japanese war crimes