Dreaming the New Woman : An Oral History of Missionary Schoolgirls in Republican China

個数:1
紙書籍版価格
¥20,147
  • 電子書籍
  • ポイントキャンペーン

Dreaming the New Woman : An Oral History of Missionary Schoolgirls in Republican China

  • 著者名:Bond, Jennifer
  • 価格 ¥15,738 (本体¥14,308)
  • Oxford University Press(2023/02/15発売)
  • 冬の読書を楽しもう!Kinoppy 電子書籍・電子洋書 全点ポイント25倍キャンペーン(~1/25)
  • ポイント 3,575pt (実際に付与されるポイントはご注文内容確認画面でご確認下さい)
  • 言語:ENG
  • ISBN:9780197654798
  • eISBN:9780197654811

ファイル: /

Description

Based on extensive oral history interviews, Dreaming the New Woman uncovers the experiences of girls who attended missionary middle schools in Republican China in the first half of the twentieth century. Chinese missionary schoolgirls were often labelled "foreign puppets" or seen as passive recipients of a western-style education. By focusing on the pupils' own perspectives and drawing on seventy-five oral history interviews conducted with missionary school alumnae, alongside student writings, missionary reports, and newspaper sources, this fascinating book provides fresh insights into what it meant to be Chinese, female, and Christian during the first half of China's turbulent twentieth century. The oral history interviews show how missionary schoolgirls weathered periods of anti-Christian hostility, experimented with new gender roles at school, experienced the Second Sino-Japanese War in Shanghai, and applied Christianity to the Communist cause after 1949. Jennifer Bond reveals how pupils used their schools as a laboratory, blending different ideas from Christianity, nationalism, Communism, and feminism to forge new notions of Chinese womanhood. Girls skillfully combined Christian aspects of missionary education such as the rhetoric of "service" with discussion of women's roles in nation building to widen their sphere of operation in society. The daily practices and lifestyles within the hybrid cultural environment of missionary schools fostered new identities that influenced the girls' aspirations and later careers. A fluency in English, western social graces, and membership in Christian churches admitted them as members of a new western-educated Chinese elite that emerged in the Republican era.

最近チェックした商品