Abstract: This article examines the enduring genealogy of racial–sexual domination through the Japanese empire, Korean War, and Cold War trades in Asians, throughout which the “comfort woman” and the “mixed-blood” child emblematized limit cases of dehumanization. I excavate the two figures by comparing the original and censored scripts of Korean filmmaker Lee Man-hee’s Seven Female POWs (1964/5), where the “comfort woman” appears as a North Korean military POW and her hypothetical “mixed-blood” child as a specter of inter-Korean intimacies. Resituating the postwar stigma of miscegenation as a definitional problem of racial difference in law and visual culture, I expand the discourse of critical race theory beyond its customary geographical domains to argue that dehumanization through racial–sexual domination is the constitutive basis of the trade in humans.
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Ju‐Won Kim
Dongguk University Ilsan Hospital
Verge Studies in Global Asias
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Ju‐Won Kim (Sun,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69ada8c2bc08abd80d5bbffe — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/vrg.2026.a984887