Bringing together for the first time sexual and industrial
labour as the means to understand gender, work and class in modern
Japan and Korea, this book shows that a key feature of the
industrialisation of these countries was the associated development
of a modern sex labour industry. Tying industrial and sexual labour
together, the book opens up a range of key questions: In what
economy do we place the labour of the former "comfort women"? Why
have sex workers not been part of the labour movements of Korea and
Japan? Why is it difficult to be "working-class" and "feminine"?
What sort of labour hierarchies operate in hostess clubs? How do
financial crises translate into gender crises? This book explores
how sexuality is inscribed in working-class identities and traces
the ways in which sexual and labour relations have shaped the
cultures of contemporary Japan and Korea. It addresses important
historical episodes such as the Japanese colonial industrialisation
of Korea, wartime labour mobilisation, women engaged in forced sex
work for the Japanese army throughout the Asian continent, and
issues of ethnicity and sex in the contemporary workplace. The case
studies provide specific examples of the way gender and work have
operated across a variety of contexts, including Korean shipyard
unions, Japanese hostess clubs, and the autobiographical literature
of Korean factory girls. Overall, this book provides a compelling
account of the entanglement of sexual and industrial labour
throughout the twentieth century, and shows clearly how ideas about
gender have contributed in fundamental ways to conceptions of class
and worker identities.
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