Women and Economics

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    In Japan’s Comfort Women, subtitled the Sexual slavery and prostitution during World War II and the US occupation, the author Yuki Tanaka unearths a topic largely undiscussed throughout history. Published by Routledge in 2002, Tanaka goes into depth about the history of the exploitation of thousands of women used as comfort women, a euphemism for sexual slavery, for Japanese soldiers. The book is broken up into six chapters, including an epilogue, which focus on the different areas regarding…

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    During World War II, over 200,000 women in East Asia were victims of human trafficking and exploited for the Imperial Armed Force’s personal use[i]. Over 80% of the trafficked women during World War II were Korean. Since the late 1800’s, the Japanese army has utilized prostitution and Comfort Stations as a method of reducing rape during times of war. Shortly after the Nanjing Massacre 1937, the Japanese Army became aggressive in the recruitment of women. Despite the Japanese Army’s Comfort…

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    Ayesha Akhter Hist 173 Yuki Terazawa “Comfort Women” During World War II, when Japan waged the so called “holy war” to dominate East Asia, the Japanese government arranged a system for the government officials, police and military police, to force women into being a “comfort women” which in other words, a sex slave. These women were abducted, deceived and violently raped. The point of “comfort women” was not only to stabilize the army’s morale but also to prevent rape and sexually transmitted…

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    The poet’s choice to utilize couplets throughout his dramatic monologue is clearly ironic as the Duke represents a strong narcissism, as well as a blatant embodiment of the objectification of women that Browning suggests makes him unpaired, and unmatchable. Browning’s choice to use these contrasting couplets, then, calls into question the logic of the speaker himself. If there is irony in the physical nature of the poem, does Browning suggest…

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    labor and sex slavery. An example of socially accepted human trafficking for its time, is "comfort women" in Japan, Korea, and other Asian countries. During World War II, women and young girls from Asian countries were captured or sold by family members to Japanese soldiers for the use of sexual companionship in attempts to boost morale and limit the spread of sexually transmitted disease. These women were raped and abused multiple times daily and forced to live in dirty, diseased places that…

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    Egypt is one of the countries that its law is an enemy of women 's rights. Its laws come from the interpretation of some scholars to the Koran and how they understand it. Women 's rights in Egypt have long been severely restricted due to Sharia (Islamic law) and cultural traditions. The laws are base on discriminatory. So, it was the time for the women to get back their freedom and not be treated like a bird placed in a cage. Women plays a vital role in our life so they should be provided with…

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    Women 's rights in Egypt have long been severely restricted due to Sharia (Islamic law) and cultural traditions. The laws in Egypt act like an enemy of women 's rights as they are based on gender discriminatory. How can a woman has unequal value of a man and treated differently! So, it was the time for the women to unite and stand together to get back their freedom and proof to the world that they are not birds placed in cages. They asked for their rights; freedom of speech and to be treated…

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    Weeping that her baby is a girl, Daisy is dependent on men to make her key decisions for her (133, 151): secure in and yet remote from male ownership and ardor, "making only a polite, pleasant effort to entertain or to be entertained" (12-13), she radiates a carefully girlish charm of irrationality and whimsy: "Do you want to hear about the butler's nose?" (14). Woman, it appears, is presented only as romance, in the restless world of glamour where there are only the pursued and the pursuing. As…

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    After experiencing the violence of war, it is difficult for a soldier to readjust back into society causing alienation and a strain to return home both physically and emotionally. In Hemingway’s short story, “Soldier’s Home” the main character Harold Krebs lies, is incapable of love and he struggles to readapt to his family and community. Krebs is a different person than before the war and eventually accepts the idea that he can never really go home. Hemingway illustrates the…

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    The society we live in today consists of people that buy into stereotypes and the propaganda that is being fed by the government and the media to them. Stereotypes make individual 's perceptions of a group of people in a certain way, most of the times is negative, which induces the opinion to all members of the group. Aware of the influence stereotypes have on people 's views, governments use stereotypes already imbedded in society as a propaganda tactic to persuade people 's thoughts, opinions…

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