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This book develops a new approach to historical change at the turn
of the twentieth century, a crucial stage in the unfolding of
Chinese modernity. Its focus is on the fraught and momentous woman
question, which foregrounded the cultural paradoxes and political
aspirations that define the era. Judge probes Chinese approaches to
their own past and the modern West (mediated via Japan) through a
close examination of the varied cultural and political uses of
female biography--a genre with a 2,000-year history in China and a
new political salience in the early twentieth century. She analyzes
the ways a range of male and female actors appropriated historical
Chinese and modern Western women's biographies to promote competing
visions of female virtue, talent, and heroism--and by extension, to
advance competing evaluations of China's ritual teachings, cultural
heritage, and national future. Judge cogently maps these various
approaches and establishes a new hermeneutics of historical change.
At the same time, she highlights disjunctions among representations
of exemplary heroines and between such representations and women's
actual lives by ending each chapter with a methodologically
innovative counterpoint. Excavating traces of the often highly
mediated experience of China's first generation of female political
activists, overseas students, schoolteachers, and public writers,
she questions the ways long-standing and newly defined gender
categories took on--or failed to take on--efficacy in women's
everyday lives. Judge concludes by evaluating how women's issues
continue to illuminate Chinese understandings of the past, the
West, and the nation at the turn of the twenty-first century.
This book is open access and available on
www.bloomsburycollections.com. It is funded by Knowledge Unlatched.
This volume presents women warriors and hero cults from a number of
cultures since the early modern period. The first truly global
study of women warriors, individual chapters examine figures such
as Joan of Arc in Cairo, revenging daughters in Samurai Japan, a
transgender Mexican revolutionary and WWII Chinese spies. Exploring
issues of violence, gender fluidity, memory and nation-building,
the authors discuss how these real or imagined female figures were
constructed and deployed in different national and transnational
contexts. Divided into four parts, they explore how women warriors
and their stories were created, consider the issue of the violent
woman, discuss how these female figures were gendered, and
highlight the fate of women warriors who live on. The chapters
illustrate the ways in which female fighters have figured in
nation-building stories and in the ordering or re-ordering of
gender politics, and give the history of women fighters a critical
edge. Exploring women as military actors, women after war, and the
strategic use of women's stories in national narratives, this
intellectually innovative volume provides the first global
treatment of women warriors and their histories.
China’s past and present have been in a continuous dialogue
throughout history, one that is heavily influenced by time and
language: the temporal orientation and the linguistic apparatus
used to express and solidify identity, ideas, and practices.
Presenting a host of in-depth case studies, Time and Language: New
Sinology and Chinese History argues for and demonstrates the
significance of "New Sinology" by restoring the role of
language/philology in the research and understanding of how modern
China emerged. Reading the modern as a careful and ongoing
conversation with the past renders the "new" in a different
perspective. This volume is a significant step toward a new
historical narrative of China’s modern history, one wherein
"ruptures" can exist in tandem with continuities. The collection
accentuates the deep connection between language and power—one
that spans well across China’s long past—and hence the immense
consequences of linguistic-related methodology to the comprehension
of power structures and identity in China. Each of the essays in
this volume tackles these issues, the methodological and the
thematic, from a different angle but they all share the Sinological
prism of analysis and the basic understanding that a much longer
timeframe is required to make sense of Chinese modernity. The
languages examined are diverse, including modern and classical
Chinese, as well as Manchu and Japanese. Taken together they bring
a spectrum of linguistic perspectives and hence a spectrum of power
relations and identities to the forefront. While the essays focus
on late Qing and early twentieth-century eras, they refer often to
earlier periods, which are necessary to making real sense of later
eras. The methodological and the thematic do not only converge, but
also generate a plea for fostering and expanding this approach in
current and future studies.
This book reveals and interprets the rich diversity of
turn-of-the-twentieth-century Chinese approaches to their own past
and the modern West through the lens of the woman question. Writers
and activists who engaged in debates over this question variously
appropriated biographies of women-a genre with a 2,000-year history
in China and a new political salience in the early twentieth
century. Judge maps the ways these individuals used historical
Chinese and modern Western women's biographies to promote competing
visions of female virtue, talent, and heroism, and, ultimately, to
advance competing evaluations of China's ritual teachings, cultural
heritage, and national future. She concludes by applying the
hermeneutics of historical change she develops for the turn of the
twentieth century to the turn of the twenty-first century, as
women's issues continue to foreground Chinese conceptions of the
past, the West, and the nation.
In this major new collection, an international team of scholars
examine the relationship between the Chinese women's periodical
press and global modernity in the late nineteenth and twentieth
centuries. The essays in this richly illustrated volume probe the
ramifications for women of two monumental developments in this
period: the intensification of China's encounters with foreign
powers and a media transformation comparable in its impact to the
current internet age. The book offers a distinctive methodology for
studying the periodical press, which is supported by the
development of a bilingual database of early Chinese periodicals.
Throughout the study, essays on China are punctuated by
transdisciplinary reflections from scholars working on periodicals
outside of the Chinese context, encouraging readers to rethink
common stereotypes about lived womanhood in modern China, and to
reconsider the nature of Chinese modernity in a global context.
China’s past and present have been in a continuous dialogue
throughout history, one that is heavily influenced by time and
language: the temporal orientation and the linguistic apparatus
used to express and solidify identity, ideas, and practices.
Presenting a host of in-depth case studies, Time and Language: New
Sinology and Chinese History argues for and demonstrates the
significance of "New Sinology" by restoring the role of
language/philology in the research and understanding of how modern
China emerged. Reading the modern as a careful and ongoing
conversation with the past renders the "new" in a different
perspective. This volume is a significant step toward a new
historical narrative of China’s modern history, one wherein
"ruptures" can exist in tandem with continuities. The collection
accentuates the deep connection between language and power—one
that spans well across China’s long past—and hence the immense
consequences of linguistic-related methodology to the comprehension
of power structures and identity in China. Each of the essays in
this volume tackles these issues, the methodological and the
thematic, from a different angle but they all share the Sinological
prism of analysis and the basic understanding that a much longer
timeframe is required to make sense of Chinese modernity. The
languages examined are diverse, including modern and classical
Chinese, as well as Manchu and Japanese. Taken together they bring
a spectrum of linguistic perspectives and hence a spectrum of power
relations and identities to the forefront. While the essays focus
on late Qing and early twentieth-century eras, they refer often to
earlier periods, which are necessary to making real sense of later
eras. The methodological and the thematic do not only converge, but
also generate a plea for fostering and expanding this approach in
current and future studies.
Print and Politics offers a cultural history of a late Qing
newspaper, Shibao, the most influential reform daily of its time.
Exploring the simultaneous emergence of a new print culture and a
new culture of politics in early-twentieth-century China, the book
treats Shibao as both institution and text and demonstrates how the
journalists who wrote for the paper attempted to stake out a
"middle realm" of discourse and practice.
Chronicling the role these journalists played in educational and
constitutional organizations, as well as their involvement in major
issues of the day, it analyzes their essays as political documents
and as cultural artifacts. Particular attention is paid to the
language the journalists used, the cultural constructs they
employed to structure their arguments, and the multiple sources of
authority they appealed to in advancing their claims for reform.
This volume develops new strategies for reading, contextualizing,
and interpreting the long Chinese tradition of women's biography.
Drawing upon a vast array of sources - from formal biography to
poetry, letters, and oral interviews - the authors examine how
women's biography served particular cultural, political, and
world-making projects, and how it illuminates these projects in new
ways by highlighting tensions within and between them.
What can we learn about modern Chinese history by reading a
marginalized set of materials from a widely neglected period? In
Republican Lens, Joan Judge retrieves and revalorizes the vital
brand of commercial culture that arose in the period surrounding
China's 1911 Revolution. Dismissed by high-minded ideologues of the
late 1910s and largely overlooked in subsequent scholarship, this
commercial culture has only recently begun to be rehabilitated in
mainland China. Judge uses one of its most striking, innovative -
and continually mischaracterized - products, the journal Funu
shibao (The women's eastern times), as a lens onto the early years
of China's first Republic. Redeeming both the value of the medium
and the significance of the era, she demonstrates the extent to
which the commercial press channeled and helped constitute key
epistemic and gender trends in China's revolutionary twentieth
century. The book develops a cross-genre and inter-media method for
reading the periodical press and gaining access to the complexities
of the past. Drawing on the full materiality of the medium, Judge
reads cover art, photographs, advertisements, and poetry,
editorials, essays, and readers' columns in conjunction with and
against one another, as well as in their broader print, historical
and global contexts. This yields insights into fundamental tensions
that governed both the journal and the early Republic. It also
highlights processes central to the arc of twentieth-century
knowledge culture and social change: the valorization and
scientization of the notion of "experience," the public
actualization of "Republican Ladies," and the amalgamation of
"Chinese medicine" and scientific biomedicine. It further revives
the journal's editors, authors, medical experts, artists, and, most
notably, its little known female contributors. Republican Lens
captures the ingenuity of a journal that captures the chaotic
potentialities within China's early Republic and its global
twentieth century.
This book is open access and available on
www.bloomsburycollections.com. It is funded by Knowledge Unlatched.
This volume presents women warriors and hero cults from a number of
cultures since the early modern period. The first truly global
study of women warriors, individual chapters examine figures such
as Joan of Arc in Cairo, revenging daughters in Samurai Japan, a
transgender Mexican revolutionary and WWII Chinese spies. Exploring
issues of violence, gender fluidity, memory and nation-building,
the authors discuss how these real or imagined female figures were
constructed and deployed in different national and transnational
contexts. Divided into four parts, they explore how women warriors
and their stories were created, consider the issue of the violent
woman, discuss how these female figures were gendered, and
highlight the fate of women warriors who live on. The chapters
illustrate the ways in which female fighters have figured in
nation-building stories and in the ordering or re-ordering of
gender politics, and give the history of women fighters a critical
edge. Exploring women as military actors, women after war, and the
strategic use of women's stories in national narratives, this
intellectually innovative volume provides the first global
treatment of women warriors and their histories.
In this major new collection, an international team of scholars
examine the relationship between the Chinese women's periodical
press and global modernity in the late nineteenth and twentieth
centuries. The essays in this richly illustrated volume probe the
ramifications for women of two monumental developments in this
period: the intensification of China's encounters with foreign
powers and a media transformation comparable in its impact to the
current internet age. The book offers a distinctive methodology for
studying the periodical press, which is supported by the
development of a bilingual database of early Chinese periodicals.
Throughout the study, essays on China are punctuated by
transdisciplinary reflections from scholars working on periodicals
outside of the Chinese context, encouraging readers to rethink
common stereotypes about lived womanhood in modern China, and to
reconsider the nature of Chinese modernity in a global context.
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