Prostitution And Sex Trafficking: Intersections And Divergences – Living Memory: Negotiating the History of Japanese Military Sexual Slavery

Prostitution And Sex Trafficking: Intersections And Divergences -- Living Memory: Negotiating the History of Japanese Military Sexual Slavery

Wednesday, April 9, 2008 - 11:00am to 12:30pm
Room LC317, Linsly-Chittenden Hall See map
63 High Street
New Haven, CT 6511

Moderated by Elizabeth W. Son, Graduate Student in American Studies, Yale University

Pyong Gap Min, Professor of Sociology, Queens College, City University of New York : The Emergence of the ‘Comfort Women’ Issue and Victims Breaking Silence in South Korea

Dai Sil Kim-Gibson, Independent Filmmaker: Do You Hear Their Voices?

Joshua Pilzer, Mellon Post-Doctoral Fellows in Music, Columbia University: Song and the Secret Histories of the Korean “Comfort Women”

This panel is part “Prostitution and Sex Trafficking: Intersections and Divergences,” a speakers series organized through the Amy Rossborough Fellowship, at the Yale Women’s Center and co-sponsored by the Council on East Asian Studies at Yale University.

Tags: 
Region: 
Japan, Transregional