In 1940, China’s Nationalist Ministry of Education issued a decree from its wartime capital of Chongqing. At a time when Japan occupied China’s eastern seaboard and the Communists controlled the north, the Ministry called on educators and homemakers to “cultivate children’s happiness.” Doing more with less, teachers and mothers were supposed to make children believe that “even if the food is unsatisfactory, the clothes are inadequate, or the habitation is insufficient… it is still very good” (p. 1). In Keeping the Nation’s House, Helen Schneider explores how Chinese educators and the Chinese state transformed the seemingly frivolous and individualistic bourgeois concept of domestic happiness into a political ideology that promised to save t...
Will virulent nationalism make China a threat to the international order? This is the question that ...
Book review by Thomas D. Curran. Zhou, Huimei. 近代民众教育馆 = A Study of Modern Mass Education Bureaus. B...
In this lively and accessible book, LiAnne Yu discusses how consumerism has replaced traditions and ...
In 1940, China’s Nationalist Ministry of Education issued a decree from its wartime capital of Chong...
Superstitious Regimes is an interdisciplinary work that sheds new light on the interaction between t...
The rise of China presents a long-term challenge to the world not only economically, but politically...
In the dazzling global metropolis of Shanghai, what has it meant to call the city home? In this acco...
Why is “eating in Canton” (shi zai Guangzhou) known as the best in China? Seung-joon Lee’s lively an...
Gail Hershatter and her Shaanxi-native research collaborator Gao Xiaoxian (of the Shaanxi Provincial...
The future is a hot topic in China; bookstores are full of tomes asserting the 21st century as China...
In the past 30 years, China has been experiencing tremendous social, economic, and educational trans...
This book brings together papers and panel discussions of a conference on Chiang Kai-shek held in Ta...
Tong Lam’s engaging new study A Passion for Facts analyzes the processes by which modern modes of ap...
In Changing Referents: Learning Across Space and Time in China and the West, Leigh Jenco challenges ...
Millions of Chinese have memorized Mao Zedong’s 1939 lines “In Memory of Norman Bethune,” written so...
Will virulent nationalism make China a threat to the international order? This is the question that ...
Book review by Thomas D. Curran. Zhou, Huimei. 近代民众教育馆 = A Study of Modern Mass Education Bureaus. B...
In this lively and accessible book, LiAnne Yu discusses how consumerism has replaced traditions and ...
In 1940, China’s Nationalist Ministry of Education issued a decree from its wartime capital of Chong...
Superstitious Regimes is an interdisciplinary work that sheds new light on the interaction between t...
The rise of China presents a long-term challenge to the world not only economically, but politically...
In the dazzling global metropolis of Shanghai, what has it meant to call the city home? In this acco...
Why is “eating in Canton” (shi zai Guangzhou) known as the best in China? Seung-joon Lee’s lively an...
Gail Hershatter and her Shaanxi-native research collaborator Gao Xiaoxian (of the Shaanxi Provincial...
The future is a hot topic in China; bookstores are full of tomes asserting the 21st century as China...
In the past 30 years, China has been experiencing tremendous social, economic, and educational trans...
This book brings together papers and panel discussions of a conference on Chiang Kai-shek held in Ta...
Tong Lam’s engaging new study A Passion for Facts analyzes the processes by which modern modes of ap...
In Changing Referents: Learning Across Space and Time in China and the West, Leigh Jenco challenges ...
Millions of Chinese have memorized Mao Zedong’s 1939 lines “In Memory of Norman Bethune,” written so...
Will virulent nationalism make China a threat to the international order? This is the question that ...
Book review by Thomas D. Curran. Zhou, Huimei. 近代民众教育馆 = A Study of Modern Mass Education Bureaus. B...
In this lively and accessible book, LiAnne Yu discusses how consumerism has replaced traditions and ...