ALERT: This system is being upgraded on Tuesday December 12. It will not be available
for use for several hours that day while the upgrade is in progress. Deposits to DukeSpace
will be disabled on Monday December 11, so no new items are to be added to the repository
while the upgrade is in progress. Everything should be back to normal by the end of
day, December 12.
GIs and 'Jeep Girls': Sex and American Soldiers in Wartime China
Abstract
This article examines how sex affected the larger politics of the Sino–US alliance
during World War II. By early 1945, Chinese from across the social spectrum resented
the US military presence, but just one issue sparked a violent backlash: sexual relations
between American soldiers (GIs) and Chinese women. Two interrelated, patriarchal narratives
about sex emerged that spring. Starting in March, government-backed newspapers began
criticizing “Jeep girls,” an epithet coined to describe the Chinese women who consorted
with American servicemen. Rumors also circulated that GIs were using Jeeps to kidnap
“respectable” women and rape them. Each narrative portrayed women’s bodies as territory
to be recovered and inextricable from national sovereignty. These narratives resonated
widely, turning Jeep girls into the catalyst through which all variables causing resentment
against the US military presence intersected and converged. With Japan on the ropes,
China’s allied friends now stood in the way of irreversibly consigning foreign imperialism
to the past. Sexual relations were not the Sino–US alliance’s seedy underside, but
the core site of its tensions.
Type
Journal articlePermalink
https://hdl.handle.net/10161/25022Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1080/17535654.2019.1618627Publication Info
Fredman, Zach (2019). GIs and 'Jeep Girls': Sex and American Soldiers in Wartime China. Journal of Modern Chinese History, 13(1). pp. 76-101. 10.1080/17535654.2019.1618627. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/25022.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
Collections
More Info
Show full item recordScholars@Duke
Zach Fredman
Assistant Professor of History at Duke Kunshan University
Zach Fredman is a diplomatic and military historian whose research focuses on the
United States in the world, modern China, and US-East Asian relations. His first book, The
Tormented Alliance: American Servicemen and the Occupation of China, 1941–1949
(UNC Press, 2022), examines the U.S. military presence in China during World War II
and the Chinese Civil War. He has begun research on a second monograph, tentatively
titled R&R: The US Military's Rest and Recreati

Articles written by Duke faculty are made available through the campus open access policy. For more information see: Duke Open Access Policy
Rights for Collection: Scholarly Articles
Works are deposited here by their authors, and represent their research and opinions, not that of Duke University. Some materials and descriptions may include offensive content. More info