This article examines the creation and use of gendered archetypes by the Provisional Government of the Republic of China (PGROC), the first collaborationist government established in China following the Japanese invasion of 1937. Drawing on a wide range of visual sources, it traces how this regime's messages about where women ‘belonged’ in an occupied China resulted in the creation of unique and complex archetypes which were deployed to convince Chinese women of the advantages of PGROC rule. Chief among these archetypes was the figure of the ‘PGROC new woman’. I show how this figure developed in PGROC poster art and propaganda, and eventually in film, as well as how it evolved out of early wartime and pre-war precedents. In addition to deta...
In a piece I did for the Huffington Post on women and the Olympics, I provided a brief overview of t...
In the male-dominated theatrical world, actresses strategically relied on personal connections to su...
Almost half a century has passed since Anglophone feminist scholars began to write about women in Ch...
This article examines the creation and use of gendered archetypes by the Provisional Government of t...
This article investigates a selection of post-1980 life writings—autobiographies, memoirs and rememb...
This thesis is a study of civilian women mobilised by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and their wa...
This article considers how Chinese Communist Party (CCP) officials understood, perceived, and experi...
This paper aims to assess how Ri Kōran came to represent the gender dichotomies of the Japanese Empi...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Cambridge University Pre...
The mobilization of women pursued by the Women's Advisory Committee (Funü zhidao weiyuanhui 婦女指導委員會)...
This article explores the life and images of Huang Bamei (1906–1982)—a female bandit, guerrilla lead...
In her article Women\u27s Wartime Life Writing in Early Twentieth-Century China Li Guo discusses m...
Iconographies of Occupation is the first book to address how the “collaborationist” Reorganized Nati...
In her article Women\u27s Wartime Life Writing in Early Twentieth-Century China Li Guo discusses m...
This study examines how women\u27s roles and gender were portrayed in magazines published during thr...
In a piece I did for the Huffington Post on women and the Olympics, I provided a brief overview of t...
In the male-dominated theatrical world, actresses strategically relied on personal connections to su...
Almost half a century has passed since Anglophone feminist scholars began to write about women in Ch...
This article examines the creation and use of gendered archetypes by the Provisional Government of t...
This article investigates a selection of post-1980 life writings—autobiographies, memoirs and rememb...
This thesis is a study of civilian women mobilised by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and their wa...
This article considers how Chinese Communist Party (CCP) officials understood, perceived, and experi...
This paper aims to assess how Ri Kōran came to represent the gender dichotomies of the Japanese Empi...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Cambridge University Pre...
The mobilization of women pursued by the Women's Advisory Committee (Funü zhidao weiyuanhui 婦女指導委員會)...
This article explores the life and images of Huang Bamei (1906–1982)—a female bandit, guerrilla lead...
In her article Women\u27s Wartime Life Writing in Early Twentieth-Century China Li Guo discusses m...
Iconographies of Occupation is the first book to address how the “collaborationist” Reorganized Nati...
In her article Women\u27s Wartime Life Writing in Early Twentieth-Century China Li Guo discusses m...
This study examines how women\u27s roles and gender were portrayed in magazines published during thr...
In a piece I did for the Huffington Post on women and the Olympics, I provided a brief overview of t...
In the male-dominated theatrical world, actresses strategically relied on personal connections to su...
Almost half a century has passed since Anglophone feminist scholars began to write about women in Ch...