Abstract

Synopsis This paper investigates prostitution policies in South Korea during the Park Chung-Hee (Pak Chŏnghŭi) regime which ruled from 1961 to 1979. I introduce the concept of the “toleration-regulation regime” to characterize those policies which combined prohibition and regulation. I show how the Park regime's prostitution policies functioned as a gendering strategy that produced sexual/gendered subject-positions, relegating the subject-position of prostitutes to a “substratum” that produced and supported the gender hierarchy within the Korean national community. In conclusion, the prostitution policies of the Park regime functioned as a matrix that established the boundaries of the “virtuous community” by building sexual and civil hierarchies between men and women as well as between “chaste” and “fallen” women.

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