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Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (2009) 68 (3): 777–804.
Published: 01 August 2009
.... Army Graduate School Walter Reed Army Medical Center . http://history.amedd.army.mil/booksdocs/KOREA/recad2/ch4-2.htm . [accessed April 24, 2009]. Minami Hiroshi , 1949 . Panpan no sekai [The world of the panpan ]. Kaizō , December. Molasky Michael . 1999 . The American...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (2022) 81 (2): 365–379.
Published: 01 May 2022
... sexual partners, and/or those who were sex workers, faced much societal stigma. The postwar treatment of panpan is evidence of this. Panpan were sex workers, usually women, who serviced the US military and were able to earn a generous income and have some autonomy in their work (Sanders 2010 , 416...
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Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (2003) 62 (2): 706–708.
Published: 01 May 2003
... is the origin of that eighth-century inscription, as George Coedes insisted. Chaiya is identified not with the Sumatrans but with the early realms of Panpan (so called by its Chinese name) and Langkasuka, important east-coast trading centers between the fifth and eighth centuries. They were within Srivijaya's...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (2014) 73 (1): 187–198.
Published: 01 February 2014
... with the sensuality of the occupation's lived experience. It was originally in this context that the panpan or the streetwalker and what Yoshikuni Igarashi called “the age of the body” 9 appeared as a new way to understand occupied Japan. While in many ways conditioned by the physical presence of Allied...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (2016) 75 (1): 87–109.
Published: 01 February 2016
...). The streetwalking panpan , who appeared willingly to sell sex to servicemen, became the most conspicuous symbol of Japan's loss of empire and compromised sovereignty. Yet sex workers, and the entertainment of servicemen more generally, were critical in Japan's economic recovery, earning scarce dollars...
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