In the years following the Second Sino-Japanese War (1937–1945), Chinese conceptions of children and childhood underwent a massive transformation. In particular, Communist educators in Northeast China and other parts of the country placed a new labor-oriented ideal of childhood at the center of the nation’s modernizing project. This article focuses on two issues related to this “remaking” of Chinese childhood in the mid-twentieth century. First, how did lower-elementary reading primers and other textbooks help create for children the idea of a Chinese nation, of which they were part and with which they were expected to identify above and beyond the domestic spheres of their natal families? Second, how did such textbooks teach children to th...
The representation of the relationship between parent and child, the moral cornerstone of Chinese so...
The article brings together scholarly work on children's studies from Chinese and English sources. I...
Children's early reading materials appear in paper or virtual forms, in look-and-say pictures or scr...
In the years following the Second Sino-Japanese War (1937–1945), Chinese conceptions of children and...
The images in this photo essay supplement the curator's research article, “Imagining China’s Childre...
This dissertation argues that children have contributed significantly to the rise and longevity of C...
This dissertation argues that children have contributed significantly to the rise and longevity of C...
“Inventing the Socialist Child” illustrates the thinking, institution-building, and daily practices ...
Traditional publications for Chinese children were based on core value and belief systems in Confuci...
2013-07-25There was an unprecedented development of discourses on children during Republican Era. Am...
In 1929 the leading Chinese intellectual Hu Shi said: “To understand the degree to which a particula...
The study of childhood is crucial to understanding contemporary Chinese society and culture. Success...
This book chapter is being made available in KU ScholarWorks with the permission of the publisher
In 1929 the leading Chinese intellectual Hu Shi said: “To understand the degree to which a particula...
This book chapter is being made available in KU ScholarWorks with the permission of the publisher
The representation of the relationship between parent and child, the moral cornerstone of Chinese so...
The article brings together scholarly work on children's studies from Chinese and English sources. I...
Children's early reading materials appear in paper or virtual forms, in look-and-say pictures or scr...
In the years following the Second Sino-Japanese War (1937–1945), Chinese conceptions of children and...
The images in this photo essay supplement the curator's research article, “Imagining China’s Childre...
This dissertation argues that children have contributed significantly to the rise and longevity of C...
This dissertation argues that children have contributed significantly to the rise and longevity of C...
“Inventing the Socialist Child” illustrates the thinking, institution-building, and daily practices ...
Traditional publications for Chinese children were based on core value and belief systems in Confuci...
2013-07-25There was an unprecedented development of discourses on children during Republican Era. Am...
In 1929 the leading Chinese intellectual Hu Shi said: “To understand the degree to which a particula...
The study of childhood is crucial to understanding contemporary Chinese society and culture. Success...
This book chapter is being made available in KU ScholarWorks with the permission of the publisher
In 1929 the leading Chinese intellectual Hu Shi said: “To understand the degree to which a particula...
This book chapter is being made available in KU ScholarWorks with the permission of the publisher
The representation of the relationship between parent and child, the moral cornerstone of Chinese so...
The article brings together scholarly work on children's studies from Chinese and English sources. I...
Children's early reading materials appear in paper or virtual forms, in look-and-say pictures or scr...