Elsevier

Women's Studies International Forum

Volume 54, January–February 2016, Pages 67-78
Women's Studies International Forum

Emotions and activism for former so-called “comfort women” of the Japanese Occupation of the Netherlands East Indies

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.wsif.2015.11.002Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Activism was constrained by the military dominated New Order and an increasing emphasis on morality.

  • Cultural concepts regarding women's sexuality, shame and morality constrained survivors.

  • Activists used emotive stories and images to try to produce a moral shock in society.

  • Across activism and government responses ideas of patriarchy and national shame or honour persist.

Synopsis

This paper begins to chart the history of the understudied topic of Indonesian activism for the so called ‘comfort women’ of the Japanese military from World War Two. It asks how and why activists in the specific historical context of New Order Indonesia, the cultural context of Indonesia, the global rise in human rights claims and a new openness to war redress in Japan were variously constrained and enabled in their advocacy. Drawing on recent research into the history of emotions and social movements the paper analyses how and why Indonesian activists appealed to certain emotions to gain support within Indonesia and Japan for compensation. A focus on emotions and the political and cultural contexts surrounding early Indonesian activism allows us to better understand the local framing, reception and outcomes of this global protest movement in Indonesia.

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Note concerning images and copyright. The three photographic images have been scanned from the 1996 Ex-Heiho Forum Report which I accessed through the NIOD library in Amsterdam. The Ex-Heiho Forum no longer operates in the same form and its members would be over 90 years old at this stage, if alive, and are not readily contactable.