Korean War Effects On American Women

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War is an universal phenomenon in which ancient societies as well as modern ones have participated in that have been characterized by extreme violence, social disruption, and economic destruction. The human toll of war is well documented. Various media outlets have distributed pictures of the destruction, the injured, the survivors, the dead. Yet, there is an aspect of war that few have of knowledge of; what life is like afterward for those who were affected by the man-made disaster. After the conclusion of the Korean War, in order to fulfill its promise of protecting South Korea from future aggression, the United States government established a myriad of military installations in the small Asian nation. Surrounding the military bases are Korean …show more content…

Due to the fact that the lives of the woman were irregular, even if they were able to have a family the violent experiences of the women made it extremely difficult to live a normal life and as a result made it impossible for the woman to create a family and home on a normative basis. The interracial children that were born out of wedlock were abandoned, left to be raised by the mother alone. The women became single mothers who had to form a non-nuclear, non-normative, alternative versions of home and family since both the mother and child encountered harsh prejudice, judgement, and discrimination from other Koreans even when the formation of the family was completely out of their control [Takagi and Park …show more content…

In both normative and nonnormative families, It is very difficult for normal family experiences to match the experiences of the alternative version of home and family, the background of many war brides are unique and impossible to

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