dc.creator | Murph, Karen S. | en |
dc.date.accessioned | 2012-02-10T16:19:58Z | en |
dc.date.available | 2012-02-10T16:19:58Z | en |
dc.date.created | 2008 | en |
dc.date.issued | 2008 | en |
dc.identifier.other | APT-BAG: georgetown.edu.10822_553153.tar;APT-ETAG: e615be9ddf8ce9b0929b3be802695d46 | en |
dc.identifier.uri | http://hdl.handle.net/10822/553153 | en |
dc.description | Thesis (Ph.D.)--Georgetown University, 2008.; Includes bibliographical
references. In spite of the political and historical controversy surrounding the testimonies
of the Korean women forced to be sex slaves of and by the Japanese Military during the Asia
Pacific War (1932-1945), their testimonies and allies' representations of them have not been
analyzed from a sociolinguistic perspective. This study examines how the sex slave survivors,
commonly referred to as "comfort women," and their advocates negotiate the
competing master narratives (Mishler 1995; Talbot et al. 1996; Bamberg and Andrews 2004) of
prostitution, slavery, and rape as they interdiscursively construct them/selves as reliable
narrators and credible, prototypical (Rosch 1978; Givon 1989; Violi 2000) victims of sex
slavery while refuting the adversarial discourse that postions them as liars and prostitutes.;
The primary data were six videotaped interviews conducted in Korean by the Washington
Coalition for Comfort Women, Inc., and later translated into English and published in Comfort
Women Speak: Testimony by Sex Slaves of the Japanese Military (Schellstede 2000). I also
examined representations of one of the interviewee's testimony in English in public discourse.
Using the interview data, I examine how one survivor constructs herself as a reliable narrator
using negation and explanation and her story as credible using involvement and evaluation
strategies, such as sound words and constructed dialogue. I apply Labov's (2006) theory of
narrative preconstruction to each survivor's testimony and examine overlap between the
initiating event and scripts of prostitution, slavery, and rape. I find that when a survivor's
testimony activates the prostitution script, she must explicitly refute it by denying she
received payment. Finally, I show the ramifications of advocates' mis/representations of the
women in public discourse.; The findings can inform all victims of sex slavery and those who
advocate on their behalf as they illuminate the penalties of nonconformity to the master
discourse governing the narrow and oppressive range of what comprises an appropriate or
prototypical victim. This study contributes to the understanding of the delicate balance of
framing the survivor as both agentive (empowered) and as a prototypical victim who, in this
case, deserves an apology and compensation from the government of Japan. | en |
dc.format | application/pdf | en |
dc.language | eng | en |
dc.publisher | Georgetown University | en |
dc.source | Dept. of Linguistics, Doctoral dissertations, 2008. | en |
dc.subject | Comfort women--Korea; Service, Compulsory non-military--Korea; World War,
1939-1945--Atrocities; World War, 1939-1945--Women--Korea; Psychology--Biographical
methods | en |
dc.title | Negotiating the master narratives of prostitution, slavery, and rape in the
testimonies by and representations of Korean sex slaves of the Japanese military
(1932-1945) | en |
dc.type | thesis | en |