Women and the Periodical Press in China's Long Twentieth Century
Herausgeber: Hockx, Michel; Mittler, Barbara; Judge, Joan
Women and the Periodical Press in China's Long Twentieth Century
Herausgeber: Hockx, Michel; Mittler, Barbara; Judge, Joan
- Gebundenes Buch
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
A major illustrated collection offering a fresh interdisciplinary reading of Chinese women's periodicals and history in the long twentieth century.
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
- Jeffrey T. LeighAustrian Imperial Censorship and the Bohemian Periodical Press, 1848¿7166,99 €
- Vietnam Over the Long Twentieth Century37,99 €
- Diana LaryChina's Grandmothers92,99 €
- Xiantao ZhangThe Origins of the Modern Chinese Press204,99 €
- Scott W. HaroldCountering China's Efforts to Isolate Taiwan Diplomatically in Latin America and the Caribbean18,99 €
- Mobo GaoThe Battle For China's Past46,99 €
- Edwin J. DingleChina's Revolution 1911-1912; A Historical and Political Record of the Civil War23,99 €
-
-
-
A major illustrated collection offering a fresh interdisciplinary reading of Chinese women's periodicals and history in the long twentieth century.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 452
- Erscheinungstermin: 19. Juni 2018
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 29mm
- Gewicht: 801g
- ISBN-13: 9781108419758
- ISBN-10: 1108419755
- Artikelnr.: 49777361
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 452
- Erscheinungstermin: 19. Juni 2018
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 29mm
- Gewicht: 801g
- ISBN-13: 9781108419758
- ISBN-10: 1108419755
- Artikelnr.: 49777361
Introduction: women's journals as multigeneric artefacts Joan Judge,
Barbara Mittler and Michel Hockx; Part I. Methodologies: Framing,
Constituting, and Regulating the Space of the Woman's Journal: 1.
Persuading with pictures: cover art and The Ladies' Journal (1915-1931)
Julia F. Andrews; 2. Engendering a journal: editors and nudes in petite and
its global context Liying Sun; 3. Raising eyebrows: the journal Eyebrow
Talk and the regulation of 'harmful fiction' in modern China Michel Hockx;
Coda: women's journals through the prism of late Qing fiction Ellen Widmer;
Part II. A Space of Their Own: The Woman's Journal, Generic Choice and the
Making of Female Public Expression: Reflection: writers and readers:
constituting the space of women's journals Jennifer Scanlon; 4.
Radicalizing poetics: poetic practice in Women's World, 1904-1907 Grace
Fong; 5. Redefining female talent: The Women's Eastern Times, The Ladies'
Journal, and the development of 'women's art' in China Doris Sung; 6.
Constituting the female subject: romantic fiction by women authors in
Eyebrow Talk Jin-Zhu Huang; 7. Rebellious yet constrained: dissenting
women's views on love and sexual morality in The Ladies' Journal and New
Woman Rachel Hsu; 8. Voices of female educators in early twentieth-century
women's magazines Siao-chen Hu; 9. 'Room for improvement': the ideal of the
educational home in The Ladies' Journal Maria af Sandeberg; Part III.
Gendered Space and Global Context: Foreign Models, Circulating Concepts and
the Constitution of Female Subjectivities: Reflection lived and idealized
self and other on the pages of the women's magazine Nathalie Cooke and
Jennifer Garland; 10. Competing conceptualizations of Guo (country, state,
and/or nation-state) in late Qing women's journals Nanxiu Qian; 11. Western
heroines in late Qing women's journals: Meiji-Era writings on 'women's
self-help' in China Xia Xiaohong; 12. Foreign knowledge of bodies: Japanese
sources, western science, and China's republican lady Joan Judge; 13.
'Othering' the foreign other in Chinese women's magazines in the early
twentieth century Paul Bailey; 14. The new (wo)man and her/his others:
foreigners on the pages of China's women's magazines Barbara Mittler;
Conclusion: a space of their own? Concluding reflections Harriet Evans.
Barbara Mittler and Michel Hockx; Part I. Methodologies: Framing,
Constituting, and Regulating the Space of the Woman's Journal: 1.
Persuading with pictures: cover art and The Ladies' Journal (1915-1931)
Julia F. Andrews; 2. Engendering a journal: editors and nudes in petite and
its global context Liying Sun; 3. Raising eyebrows: the journal Eyebrow
Talk and the regulation of 'harmful fiction' in modern China Michel Hockx;
Coda: women's journals through the prism of late Qing fiction Ellen Widmer;
Part II. A Space of Their Own: The Woman's Journal, Generic Choice and the
Making of Female Public Expression: Reflection: writers and readers:
constituting the space of women's journals Jennifer Scanlon; 4.
Radicalizing poetics: poetic practice in Women's World, 1904-1907 Grace
Fong; 5. Redefining female talent: The Women's Eastern Times, The Ladies'
Journal, and the development of 'women's art' in China Doris Sung; 6.
Constituting the female subject: romantic fiction by women authors in
Eyebrow Talk Jin-Zhu Huang; 7. Rebellious yet constrained: dissenting
women's views on love and sexual morality in The Ladies' Journal and New
Woman Rachel Hsu; 8. Voices of female educators in early twentieth-century
women's magazines Siao-chen Hu; 9. 'Room for improvement': the ideal of the
educational home in The Ladies' Journal Maria af Sandeberg; Part III.
Gendered Space and Global Context: Foreign Models, Circulating Concepts and
the Constitution of Female Subjectivities: Reflection lived and idealized
self and other on the pages of the women's magazine Nathalie Cooke and
Jennifer Garland; 10. Competing conceptualizations of Guo (country, state,
and/or nation-state) in late Qing women's journals Nanxiu Qian; 11. Western
heroines in late Qing women's journals: Meiji-Era writings on 'women's
self-help' in China Xia Xiaohong; 12. Foreign knowledge of bodies: Japanese
sources, western science, and China's republican lady Joan Judge; 13.
'Othering' the foreign other in Chinese women's magazines in the early
twentieth century Paul Bailey; 14. The new (wo)man and her/his others:
foreigners on the pages of China's women's magazines Barbara Mittler;
Conclusion: a space of their own? Concluding reflections Harriet Evans.
Introduction: women's journals as multigeneric artefacts Joan Judge,
Barbara Mittler and Michel Hockx; Part I. Methodologies: Framing,
Constituting, and Regulating the Space of the Woman's Journal: 1.
Persuading with pictures: cover art and The Ladies' Journal (1915-1931)
Julia F. Andrews; 2. Engendering a journal: editors and nudes in petite and
its global context Liying Sun; 3. Raising eyebrows: the journal Eyebrow
Talk and the regulation of 'harmful fiction' in modern China Michel Hockx;
Coda: women's journals through the prism of late Qing fiction Ellen Widmer;
Part II. A Space of Their Own: The Woman's Journal, Generic Choice and the
Making of Female Public Expression: Reflection: writers and readers:
constituting the space of women's journals Jennifer Scanlon; 4.
Radicalizing poetics: poetic practice in Women's World, 1904-1907 Grace
Fong; 5. Redefining female talent: The Women's Eastern Times, The Ladies'
Journal, and the development of 'women's art' in China Doris Sung; 6.
Constituting the female subject: romantic fiction by women authors in
Eyebrow Talk Jin-Zhu Huang; 7. Rebellious yet constrained: dissenting
women's views on love and sexual morality in The Ladies' Journal and New
Woman Rachel Hsu; 8. Voices of female educators in early twentieth-century
women's magazines Siao-chen Hu; 9. 'Room for improvement': the ideal of the
educational home in The Ladies' Journal Maria af Sandeberg; Part III.
Gendered Space and Global Context: Foreign Models, Circulating Concepts and
the Constitution of Female Subjectivities: Reflection lived and idealized
self and other on the pages of the women's magazine Nathalie Cooke and
Jennifer Garland; 10. Competing conceptualizations of Guo (country, state,
and/or nation-state) in late Qing women's journals Nanxiu Qian; 11. Western
heroines in late Qing women's journals: Meiji-Era writings on 'women's
self-help' in China Xia Xiaohong; 12. Foreign knowledge of bodies: Japanese
sources, western science, and China's republican lady Joan Judge; 13.
'Othering' the foreign other in Chinese women's magazines in the early
twentieth century Paul Bailey; 14. The new (wo)man and her/his others:
foreigners on the pages of China's women's magazines Barbara Mittler;
Conclusion: a space of their own? Concluding reflections Harriet Evans.
Barbara Mittler and Michel Hockx; Part I. Methodologies: Framing,
Constituting, and Regulating the Space of the Woman's Journal: 1.
Persuading with pictures: cover art and The Ladies' Journal (1915-1931)
Julia F. Andrews; 2. Engendering a journal: editors and nudes in petite and
its global context Liying Sun; 3. Raising eyebrows: the journal Eyebrow
Talk and the regulation of 'harmful fiction' in modern China Michel Hockx;
Coda: women's journals through the prism of late Qing fiction Ellen Widmer;
Part II. A Space of Their Own: The Woman's Journal, Generic Choice and the
Making of Female Public Expression: Reflection: writers and readers:
constituting the space of women's journals Jennifer Scanlon; 4.
Radicalizing poetics: poetic practice in Women's World, 1904-1907 Grace
Fong; 5. Redefining female talent: The Women's Eastern Times, The Ladies'
Journal, and the development of 'women's art' in China Doris Sung; 6.
Constituting the female subject: romantic fiction by women authors in
Eyebrow Talk Jin-Zhu Huang; 7. Rebellious yet constrained: dissenting
women's views on love and sexual morality in The Ladies' Journal and New
Woman Rachel Hsu; 8. Voices of female educators in early twentieth-century
women's magazines Siao-chen Hu; 9. 'Room for improvement': the ideal of the
educational home in The Ladies' Journal Maria af Sandeberg; Part III.
Gendered Space and Global Context: Foreign Models, Circulating Concepts and
the Constitution of Female Subjectivities: Reflection lived and idealized
self and other on the pages of the women's magazine Nathalie Cooke and
Jennifer Garland; 10. Competing conceptualizations of Guo (country, state,
and/or nation-state) in late Qing women's journals Nanxiu Qian; 11. Western
heroines in late Qing women's journals: Meiji-Era writings on 'women's
self-help' in China Xia Xiaohong; 12. Foreign knowledge of bodies: Japanese
sources, western science, and China's republican lady Joan Judge; 13.
'Othering' the foreign other in Chinese women's magazines in the early
twentieth century Paul Bailey; 14. The new (wo)man and her/his others:
foreigners on the pages of China's women's magazines Barbara Mittler;
Conclusion: a space of their own? Concluding reflections Harriet Evans.