In this Book
Service Economies: Militarism, Sex Work, and Migrant Labor in South Korea
Book
2010
Published by:
University of Minnesota Press
summary
Service Economies presents an alternative narrative of South Korean modernity by examining how working-class labor occupies a central space in linking the United States and Asia to South Korea's changing global position from a U.S. neocolony to a subempire.
Making surprising and revelatory connections, Jin-kyung Lee analyzes South Korean military labor in the Vietnam War, domestic female sex workers, South Korean prostitution for U.S. troops, and immigrant/migrant labor from Asia in contemporary South Korea. Foregrounding gender, sexuality, and race, Lee reimagines the South Korean economic "miracle" as a global and regional articulation of industrial, military, and sexual proletarianization.
Lee not only addresses these under-studied labors individually but also integrates and unites them to reveal an alternative narrative of a changing South Korean working class whose heterogeneity is manifested in its objectification. Delving into literary and popular cultural sources as well as sociological work, Lee locates South Korean development in its military and economic interactions with the United States and other Asian nation-states, offering a unique perspective on how these practices have shaped and impacted U.S.-South Korea relations.
Table of Contents
Cover
pp. 1-1
Title Page, Copyright Page
pp. 2-5
Contents
pp. 6-7
Acknowledgments
pp. vii-viii
Introduction: Proletarianizing Sexuality and Race
pp. 1-36
1 Surrogate Military, Subempire, and Masculinity: South Korea in the Vietnam War
pp. 37-77
2 Domestic Prostitution: From Necropolitics to Prosthetic Labor
pp. 79-123
3 Military Prostitution: Gynocentrism, Racial Hybridity, and Diaspora
pp. 125-183
4 Migrant and Immigrant Labor: Redefining Korean Identity
pp. 185-231
Postscript: The Exceptional and the Normative in South Korean Modernization
pp. 233-235
Notes
pp. 237-270
Select Bibliography
pp. 271-285
Index
pp. 287-305
| ISBN | 9780816675180 |
|---|---|
| Related ISBN(s) | 9780816651269 |
| MARC Record | Download |
| OCLC | 698111711 |
| Pages | 408 |
| Launched on MUSE | 2014-01-01 |
| Language | English |
| Open Access | No |


