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SDHF Newsletter No.98-4 The Origins of the US Army’s Korean comfort women

The Origins of the US Army’s Korean Comfort Women (HEART PRESS) 
By Choi Kilsung,
Professor at University of East-Asia, Professor Emeritus at Hiroshima University
(4) Chapter 3 The Spread of Prostitution
August 18, 2015

Sexual violence by the US Army during the Korean War fostered “prostitution villages,” which rapidly expanded as military brothels supported by the Korean government. But this does not mean that prostitution and brothels are things limited to war time.
 There exists both a society of sexual morality which controls prostitution as antisocial sexual deviancy, and one that seeks to reduce normal physiological tensions through the institutionalization of prostitution in the belief that it is not possible to satisfy the sexual needs of all society within the framework of legal marriage alone.
In this Chapter, the author gives his thoughts on “coffeehouse prostitution,” which became prevalent throughout Korea after the war, giving various perspectives of women’s lifestyles.
Details can be found here;

*Chapter 3
    https://www.sdh-fact.com/CL/Chapter-3-US-Armys-Korean-comfort-women.pdf
*Author profile: https://www.sdh-fact.com/auther/choi-kilsung

*Introduction & Contents: https://www.sdh-fact.com/CL/Introduction-TOC-.pdf
*Chapter 1: The Korean War as I Experienced It
https://www.sdh-fact.com/CL/Chapter-1-US-Armys-Korean-comfort-women.pdf
*Chapter 2: From Rape to Prostitution
   https://www.sdh-fact.com/CL/Chapter-2-US-Armys-Korean-comfort-women.pdf

Questions are welcome.

MOTEKI Hiromichi, Secretary General
for KASE Hideaki, Chairman
Society for the Dissemination of Historical Fact

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