Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-gxg78 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-29T04:29:59.721Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

State of the Field: Women in China's Long Twentieth Century

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 March 2007

Gail Hershatter
Affiliation:
gbhers@ucsc.eduis Professor of History at theUniversity of California, Santa Cruz.
Get access

Abstract

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Association for Asian Studies 2004

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

List of References

Ahern, Emily. 1975. “The Power and Pollution of Chinese Women.” In M. Wolf and Witke 1975.Google Scholar
Anagnost, Ann. 1988. “Family Violence and Magical Violence: The Woman as Victim in China's One-Child Family Policy.” Women and Language 11(2):1622.Google Scholar
Anagnost, Ann. 1989. “Transformations of Gender in Modern China.” In Gender and Anthropology: Critical Reviews for Research and Teaching, ed. Morgen, Sandra. Washington, D.C.: American Anthropological Association.Google Scholar
Anagnost, Ann. 1997. National Past-Times: Narrative, Representation, and Power in Modern China. Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press.Google Scholar
Andors, Phyllis. 1983. The Unfinished Liberation of Chinese Women, 1949–1980. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.Google Scholar
Bailey, Paul J. 2003. “‘Unharnessed Fillies’: Discourse on the ‘Modern' Female Student in Early Twentieth-Century China.” In Luo and Lü 2003.Google Scholar
Banister, Judith. 1987. China's Changing Population. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Bao, Xiaolan and Wu, Xu. 2001. “Feminist Collaboration between Diaspora and China.” In Hsiung, Jaschok, and Milwertz 2001.Google Scholar
Barlow, Tani E. 1989. “Introduction.” In I Myself Am a Woman: Selected Writings of Ding Ling, ed. and trans. Barlow, Tani E. and Bjorge, Gary J.. Boston: Beacon Press.Google Scholar
Barlow, Tani E., ed. 1993. Gender Politics in Modern China: Writing and Feminism. Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press.Google Scholar
Barlow, Tani E. 1994a. “Politics and Protocols of Funü: (Un)Making National Woman.” In Gilmartin et al. 1994.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barlow, Tani E. 1994b. “Theorizing Woman: Funü, Guojia, Jiating.” In Zito and Barlow 1994.Google Scholar
Barlow, Tani E. 1997. “Women at the Close of the Maoist Era in the Polemics of Li Xiaojiang and Her Associates.” In The Politics of Culture in the Shadow of Capital, ed. Lowe, Lisa and Lloyd, David. Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press.Google Scholar
Barlow, Tani E. 2004. The Question of Women in Chinese Feminism. Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press.Google Scholar
Bauer, John, Feng, Wang, Nancy, Riley E. and Xiaohua, Zhao. 1992. “Gender Inequality in Urban China: Education and Employment.” Modern China 18(3):333–70.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Daniel, Bays H., ed. 1996. Christianity in China: From the Eighteenth Century to the Present. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Beahan, Charlotte L. 1975. “Feminism and Nationalism in the Chinese Women's Press.” Modern China 1(4):379416.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Beahan, Charlotte L. 1976. “The Women's Movement and Nationalism in Late Ch'ing China.” PhD diss., Columbia University.Google Scholar
Beahan, Charlotte L. 1981. “In the Public Eye: Women in Early Twentieth-Century China.” In Guisso and Johannesen 1981.Google Scholar
Beahan, Charlotte L. 1984. “One Woman's View of the Early Chinese Communist Movement: The Autobiography of Mme. Zhang Guotao.” Republican China 10(1)(B):2536.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Beaver, Patricia D., Lihui, Hou and Xue, Wang. 1995. “Rural Chinese Women: Two Faces of Economic Reform.” Modern China 21(2):205–32.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Belden, Jack. 1970. China Shakes the World. New York: Harper, 1949. Reprint, New York and London: Monthly Review Press.Google Scholar
Bell, Lynda S. 1994. “For Better, For Worse: Women and the World Market in Rural China.” Modern China 20(2):180210.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bell, Lynda S. 1999. One Industry, Two Chinas: Silk Filatures and Peasant-Family Production in Wuxi County, 1865–1937. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bernhardt, Kathryn. 1994. “Women and the Law: Divorce in the Republican Period.” In Civil Law in Qing and Republican China, ed. Bernhardt, Kathryn and Huang, Philip C. C.. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bernhardt, Kathryn. 1999. Women and Property in China, 960–1949. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Berry, Chris. 1999. “Representing Chinese Women: Researching Women in the Chinese Cinema.” In Finnane and McLaren 1999.Google Scholar
Beynon, Louise. 2004. “Dilemmas of the Heart: Rural Working Women and Their Hopes for the Future.” In Gaetano and Jacka 2004.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bian, Yanjie, John, Logan R. and Xiaoling, Shu. 2000. “Wage and Job Inequalities in the Working Lives of Men and Women in Tianjin.” In Entwisle and Henderson 2000.Google Scholar
Bianco, Lucien and Chang-Ming, Hua. 1988. “Implementation and Resistance: The Single-Child Family Policy.” In Feuchtwang, Hussein, and Pairault 1988.Google Scholar
Blake, C. Fred. 1978. “Death and Abuse in Marriage Laments: The Curse of Chinese Brides.” Asian Folklore Studies 37(1):1333.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Borthwick, Sally. 1985. “Changing Concepts of Women from the Late Qing to the May Fourth Period.” In Ideal and Reality: Social and Political Change in Modern China, ed. Pong, David and Fung, Edmund. Lanham, Md.: University Press of America.Google Scholar
Bossen, Laurel. 1994. “Gender and Economic Reform in Southwest China.” In Femmes, Féminisme, et Développement/Women, Feminism, and Development, ed. Dagenais, Huguette and Piché, Denise. Montreal: McGill–Queen's University Press.Google Scholar
Bossen, Laurel. 1999. “Women and Development.” In Gamer 1999.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bossen, Laurel. 2000. “Women Farmers, Small Plots, and Changing Markets in China.” In Women Farmers and Commercial Ventures: Increasing Food Security in Developing Countries, ed. Spring, Anita. Boulder, Colo.: Lynne Rienner.Google Scholar
Bossen, Laurel. 2002. Chinese Women and Rural Development: Sixty Years of Change in Lu Village, Yunnan. Lanham, Md.: Rowman and Littlefield.Google Scholar
Montgomery, Broaded C. and Chongshun, Liu. 1996. “Family Background, Gender, and Educational Attainment in Urban China.” China Quarterly, no. 145:5386.Google Scholar
Brook, Timothy and Luong, Hy V., eds. 1997. Culture and Economy: The Shaping of Capitalism in Eastern Asia. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brownell, Susan. 1995. Training the Body for China: Sports in the Moral Order of the People's Republic. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Brownell, Susan. 1998–99. “The Body and the Beautiful in Chinese Nationalism: Sportswomen and Fashion Models in the Reform Era.” China Information 13(2–3):3658.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brownell, Susan. 1999. “Strong Women and Impotent Men: Sports, Gender, and Nationalism in Chinese Public Culture.” In M. Yang 1999c.Google Scholar
Brownell, Susan. 2000. “Gender and Nationalism in China at the Turn of the Millennium.” In China Briefing 2000: The Continuing Transformation, ed. White, Tyrene. Armonk, N.Y.: M. E. Sharpe.Google Scholar
Brownell, Susan. 2001. “Making Dream Bodies in Beijing: Athletes, Fashion Models, and Urban Mystique in China.” In N. Chen et al. 2001.Google Scholar
Brownell, Susan and Jeffrey, Wasserstrom. 2002a. “Afterword: Putting Gender at the Center.” In Brownell and Wasserstrom 2002b.Google Scholar
Brownell, Susan and Jeffrey, Wasserstrom. 2002b. Chinese Femininities, Chinese Masculinities: A Reader. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brownell, Susan and Jeffrey, Wasserstrom. 2002c. “Introduction: Theorizing Femininities and Masculinities.” In Brownell and Wasserstrom 2002b.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bu, Wei. 2004. “Chinese Women and the Mass Media: Status Quo, Interventions, and Challenges.” In J. Tao, Zheng, and Mow 2004.Google Scholar
Cai, Yiping, Yuan, Feng and Yanqiu, Guo. 2001. “The Women's Media Watch Network.” In Hsiung, Jaschok, and Milwertz 2001.Google Scholar
Carroll, Peter. 2003. “Refashioning Suzhou: Dress, Commodification, and Modernity.” positions: east asia cultures critique 11(2):443–78.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chang, Pang-Mei Natasha. 1997. Bound Feet and Western Dress. New York: Anchor Books.Google Scholar
Chang, Xiangqun. 1999. “‘Fat Pigs’ and Women's Gifts: Agnatic and Non-Agnatic Social Support in Kaixiangong Village.” In West et al. 1999.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chao, Emily. 2003. “Dangerous Work: Women in Traffic.” Modern China 29(1):71107.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chen, Mingxia. 2004. “The Marriage Law and the Rights of Chinese Women in Marriage and the Family.” In J. Tao, Zheng, and Mow 2004.Google Scholar
Chen, Nancy N., Clark, Constance D., Gottschang, Suzanne Z. and Jeffery, Lyn, eds. 2001. China Urban: Ethnographies of Contemporary Culture. Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press.Google Scholar
Chen, Pi-Chao. 1985. “Birth Control Methods and Organisation in China.” In Croll, Davin, and Kane 1985.Google Scholar
Chen, Tina Mai. 2003. “Proletarian White and Working Bodies in Mao's China.” positions: east asia cultures critique 11(2):361–93.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chen, Yiyun. 1994. “Out of the Traditional Halls of Academe: Exploring New Avenues for Research on Women.” Trans. S. Katherine Campbell. In Gilmartin et al. 1994.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cheng, Weikun. 1996. “The Challenge of the Actresses: Female Performers and Cultural Alternatives in Early Twentieth Century Beijing and Tianjin.” Modern China 22(2):197233.Google Scholar
Chew, Matthew. 2003. “The Dual Consequences of Cultural Localization: How Exposed Short Stockings Subvert and Sustain Global Cultural Hierarchy.” positions: east asia cultures critique 11(2):479509.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chiang, William. 1995. We Two Know the Script, We Have Become Good Friends: Linguistic and Social Aspects of the Women's Script Literacy in Southern Hunan, China. Lanham, Md.: University Press of America.Google Scholar
Chow, Esther Ngan-Ling, ed. 2002. Transforming Gender and Development in East Asia. New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Chow, Rey. 1991. Woman and Chinese Modernity: The Politics of Reading Between West and East. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.Google Scholar
Chu, Junhong. 2001. “Prenatal Sex Determination and Sex-Selective Abortion in Rural Central China.” Population and Development Review 27(2):259–82.Google Scholar
Clark, Constance D. 2001. “Foreign Marriage, ‘Tradition,’ and the Politics of Border Crossings.” In N. Chen et al. 2001.Google Scholar
Cornue, Virginia. 1999. “Practicing NGOness and Relating Women's Space Publicly: The Women's Hotline and the State.” In M. Yang 1999c.Google Scholar
Croll, Elisabeth J. 1974. The Women's Movement in China: A Selection of Readings, 1949–73. Modern China Series, no. 6. London: Anglo-Chinese Educational Institute.Google Scholar
Croll, Elisabeth J. 1979. Women in Rural Development: The People's Republic of China. Geneva: International Labour Office.Google Scholar
Croll, Elisabeth J. 1980. Feminism and Socialism in China. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1978. Reprint, New York: Schocken.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Croll, Elisabeth J. 1981. The Politics of Marriage in Contemporary China. New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Croll, Elisabeth J. 1983. Chinese Women Since Mao. London: Zed Books.Google Scholar
Croll, Elisabeth J. 1985a. “Introduction: Fertility Norms and Family Size in China.” In Croll, Davin, and Kane 1985.Google Scholar
Croll, Elisabeth J. 1985b. “The Single-Child Family in Beijing: A First-Hand Report.” In Croll, Davin, and Kane 1985.Google Scholar
Croll, Elisabeth J. 1985c. Women and Rural Development in China: Production and Reproduction. Geneva: International Labour Office.Google Scholar
Croll, Elisabeth J. 1994. From Heaven to Earth: Images and Experiences of Development in China. London and New York: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Croll, Elisabeth J. 1995. Changing Identities of Chinese Women: Rhetoric, Experience, and Self-Perception in Twentieth-Century China. Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press. London and Atlantic Highlands, N.J.: Zed Books.Google Scholar
Croll, Elisabeth J. 1996. “Gendered Moments and Inscripted Memories: Girlhood in Twentieth-Century Chinese Autobiography.” In Gender and Memory, ed. Leydesdorff, Selma, Passerini, Luisa and Thomspon, Paul. International Yearbook of Oral History and Life Stories, no. 4. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Croll, Elisabeth J. 2000. Endangered Daughters: Discrimination and Development in Asia. London and New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Croll, Elisabeth J. 2001. “New Spaces, New Voices: Women Organizing in Twentieth-Century China.” In Hsiung, Jaschok, and Milwertz 2001.Google Scholar
Croll, Elisabeth, Delia, Davin and Penny, Kane, eds. 1985. China's One-Child Family Policy. Basingstoke, Hants: Macmillan.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dai, Jinhua. 1995. “Invisible Women: Contemporary Chinese Cinema and Women's Film.” positions: east asia cultures critique 3(1):255–80.Google Scholar
Dai, Jinhua. 1999. “Rewriting Chinese Women: Gender Production and Cultural Space in the Eighties and Nineties.” In M. Yang 1999c.Google Scholar
Dai, Jinhua. 2004. “Class and Gender in Contemporary Chinese Women's Literature.” In J. Tao, Zheng, and Mow 2004.Google Scholar
Dai, Jinhua and Mayfair, Yang. 1995. “A Conversation with Huang Shuqing.” positions: east asia cultures critique 3(3):790805.Google Scholar
Dal Lago, Francesca. 2000. “Crossed Legs in 1930s Shanghai: How ‘Modern’ the Modern Woman?” East Asian History, no. 19:103–44.Google Scholar
Dalsimer, Marlyn and Laurie, Nisonoff. 1987. “The Implications of the New Agricultural and One-Child Family Policies for Rural Chinese Women.” Feminist Studies 13(3):583607.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Davin, Delia. 1973. “Women in the Liberated Areas.” In M. Young 1973.Google Scholar
Davin, Delia. 1975a. “The Implications of Some Aspects of C.C.P. Policy toward Urban Women in the 1950s.” Modern China 1(4):363–78.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Davin, Delia. 1975b. “Women in the Countryside of China.” In M. Wolf and Witke 1975.Google Scholar
Davin, Delia. 1976. Woman-Work: Women and the Party in Revolutionary China. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Davin, Delia. 1985. “The Single-Child Family Policy in the Countryside.” In Croll, Davin, and Kane 1985.Google Scholar
Davin, Delia. 1988. “The Implications of Contract Agriculture for the Employment and Status of Chinese Peasant Women.” In Feuchtwang, Hussein, and Pairault 1988.Google Scholar
Davin, Delia. 1989. “Of Dogma, Dicta, and Washing Machines: Women in the People's Republic of China.” In Kruks, Rapp, and Young 1989.Google Scholar
Davin, Delia. 1997. “Migration, Women, and Gender Issues in Contemporary China.” In Floating Population and Migration in China: The Impact of Economic Reforms, ed. Scharping, Thomas. Hamburg: Institut für Asienkunde.Google Scholar
Davin, Delia. 1999. Internal Migration in Contemporary China. New York: St. Martin's Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Davis, Deborah, ed. 2000. The Consumer Revolution in Urban China. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Davis, Deborah and Stevan, Harrell, eds. 1993. Chinese Families in the Post-Mao Era. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Davis-Friedmann, Deborah. 1985. “Old-Age Security and the One-Child Campaign.” In Croll, Davin, and Kane 1985.Google Scholar
Diamant, Neil J. 2000a. “Re-examining the Impact of the 1950 Marriage Law: State Improvisation, Local Initiative, and Rural Family Change.” China Quarterly, no. 161:171–98.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Diamant, Neil J. 2000b. Revolutionizing the Family: Politics, Love, and Divorce in Urban and Rural China, 1949–1968. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Diamond, Norma. 1975. “Collectivization, Kinship, and the Status of Women in Rural China.” In Toward an Anthropology of Women, ed. Reiter, Reyna R.. New York and London: Monthly Review Press.Google Scholar
Dikötter, Frank. 1995. Sex, Culture, and Modernity in China. Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press.Google Scholar
Dikötter, Frank. 1998. Imperfect Conceptions: Medical Knowledge, Birth Defects, and Eugenics in China. New York: Columbia University Press.Google Scholar
Dirlik, Arif and Maurice, Meisner, eds. 1989. Marxism and the Chinese Experience. Armonk, N.Y.: M. E. Sharpe.Google Scholar
Dongchen District Division Of The Public Security Bureau, Beijing (Dongchen District). 1997. “An Analysis of 260 Prostitutes and Prostitute Clients.” In Jeffreys 1997b.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dooling, Amy D. and Torgeson, Kristina M.. 1998. Writing Women in Modern China: An Anthology of Women's Literature from the Early Twentieth Century. New York: Columbia University Press.Google Scholar
Drucker, Alison R. 1981. “The Influence of Western Women on the Anti-Footbinding Movement, 1840–1911.” In Guisso and Johannesen 1981.Google Scholar
Du, Fangqin. 2001. “‘Manoeuvring Fate' and ‘Following the Call': Development and Prospects of Women's Studies.” In Hsiung, Jaschok, and Milwertz 2001.Google Scholar
Duara, Prasenjit. 1995. Rescuing History from the Nation. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Duara, Prasenjit. 1998. “The Regime of Authenticity: Timelessness, Gender, and National History in Modern China.” History and Theory 37(3):287309.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Duara, Prasenjit. 2000. “Of Authenticity and Woman: Personal Narratives of Middle-Class Women in Modern China.” In Becoming Chinese: Passages to Modernity and Beyond, ed. Yeh, Wen-hsin. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Duara, Prasenjit. 2003. Sovereignty and Authenticity: Manchukuo and the East Asian Modern. Lanham, Md.: Rowman and Littlefield.Google Scholar
Eckholm, Erik. 2002. “Desire for Sons Drives Use of Prenatal Scans in China.” New York Times, June 21, A3.Google ScholarPubMed
Edwards, Louise. 1994. “Chin Sung-Ts'en's A Tocsin for Women: The Dextrous Merger of Radicalism and Conservatism in Feminism of the Early Twentieth Century.” Jindai Zhongguo funü shi yanjiu/Research on Women in Modern Chinese History, no. 2:117–40.Google Scholar
Edwards, Louise. 1999. “From Gender Equality to Gender Difference: Feminist Campaigns for Quotas for Women in Politics.” Twentieth-Century China 24(2):69105.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Edwards, Louise. 2000a. “Policing the Modern Woman in Republican China.” Modern China 26(2):115–47.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Edwards, Louise. 2000b. “Women in the People's Republic of China: New Challenges to the Grand Gender Narrative.” In Women in Asia: Tradition, Modernity, and Globalisation, ed. Edwards, Louise and Roces, Mina. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.Google Scholar
Edwards, Louise. 2000c. “Women's Suffrage in China: Challenging Scholarly Conventions.” Pacific Historical Review 69(4):617–38.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barbara, Entwisle and Henderson, Gail E., eds. 2000. Re-Drawing Boundaries: Work, Households, and Gender in China. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Erwin, Kathleen. 1999. “White Women, Male Desires: A Televisual Fantasy of the Transnational Chinese Family.” In M. Yang 1999c.Google Scholar
Erwin, Kathleen. 2000. “Heart-to-Heart, Phone-to-Phone: Family Values, Sexuality, and the Politics of Shanghai's Advice Hotlines.” In Davis 2000.Google Scholar
Erwin, Kathleen. Forthcoming. Mobilizing Sex and Virtue: Gender and Transnational Desires in Shanghai. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Evans, Harriet. 1995. “Defining Difference: The ‘Scientific’ Construction of Sexuality and Gender in the People's Republic of China.” Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 20(2):357–94.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Evans, Harriet. 1997. Women and Sexuality in China: Dominant Discourses of Female Sexuality and Gender Since 1949. London: Blackwell.Google Scholar
Evans, Harriet. 1998. “The Language of Liberation: Gender and Jiefang in Early CCP Discourse.” Intersections, inaugural issue. http://wwwsshe.murdoch.edu.au/intersections. Reprinted in Wasserstrom 2003.Google Scholar
Evans, Harriet. 1999. “‘Comrade Sisters': Gendered Bodies and Spaces.” In Picturing Power in the People's Republic of China: Posters of the Cultural Revolution, ed. Evans, Harriet and Donald, Stephanie. Lanham, Md.: Rowman and Littlefield.Google Scholar
Evans, Harriet. 2000. “Marketing Femininity: Images of the Modern Chinese Woman.” In China Beyond the Headlines, ed. Weston, Timothy B. and Jensen, Lionel M.. Lanham, Md.: Rowman and Littlefield.Google Scholar
Evans, Harriet. 2001. “What Colour is Beautiful Hair? Subjective Interventions and Global Fashions in the Cultural Production of Gender in Urban China.” Figurationen: Gender, Literature, Culture, no. 2:117–32.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Evans, Harriet. 2002. “Past, Perfect, or Imperfect: Changing Images of the Ideal Wife.” In Brownell and Wasserstrom 2002b.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Evans, Harriet. 2003. “Sex and the Open Market.” In Sexualities and Society: A Reader, ed. Weeks, Jeffrey, Holland, Janet and Waites, Matthew. Cambridge: Polity Press in association with Blackwell.Google Scholar
Families With Children From China. 1999. “Adoption Law of the People's Republic of China.” http://www.fwcc.org/china_adoption_law_98.htm.Google Scholar
Cindy, Fan C.. 2003. “Rural-Urban Migration and Gender Division of Labor in Transitional China.” International Journal of Urban and Regional Research 27(1):2447.Google Scholar
Cindy, Fan C.. 2004. “Out to the City and Back to the Village: The Experiences and Contributions of Rural Women Migrating from Sichuan and Anhui.” In Gaetano and Jacka 2004.Google Scholar
Cindy, Fan C. and Huang, Youqin. 1998. “Waves of Rural Brides: Female Marriage Migration in China.” Annals of the Association of American Geographers 88(2):227–51.Google Scholar
Cindy, Fan C. and Ling, Li. 2002. “Marriage and Migration in Transitional China: A Field Study of Gaozhou, Western Guangdong.” Environment & Planning A 34(4):619–38.Google Scholar
Fan, Hong. 1997. Footbinding, Feminism, and Freedom: The Liberation of Women's Bodies in Modern China. London: Frank Cass.Google Scholar
Farrer, James. 2000. “Dancing through the Market Transition: Disco and Dance Hall Sociability in Shanghai.” In Davis 2000.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Farrer, James. 2002. Opening Up: Youth Sex Culture and Market Reform in Shanghai. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Farrer, James and Zhongxin, Sun. 2003. “Extramarital Love in Shanghai.” China Journal, no. 50:136.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Feigon, Lee. 1994. “Gender and the Chinese Student Movement.” In Popular Protest and Political Culture in Modern China, ed. Wasserstrom, Jeffrey N. and Perry, Elizabeth J.. 2nd ed. Boulder, Colo.: Westview.Google Scholar
Feuchtwang, Stephan, Athar, Hussein and Thierry, Pairault, eds. 1988. Transforming China's Economy in the Eighties. Boulder, Colo.: Westview Press; London: Zed Books.Google Scholar
Finnane, Antonia. 1996. “What Should Chinese Women Wear? A National Problem.” Modern China 22(2):99131. Reprinted in Finnane and McLaren 1999.Google Scholar
Finnane, Antonia. 2003. “Yu Feng and the 1950s Dress Reform Campaign: Global Hegemony and Local Agency in the Art of Fashion.” Jindai Zhongguo de funü yu shehui (1600–1950) [Women and Society in Modern China (1600–1950)]. Vol. 2 of Wusheng zhi sheng [Voices Amid Silence], ed. Chien-ming, Yu. Taipei: Zhongyang yanjiuyuan jindaishi yanjiusuo.Google Scholar
Finnane, Antonia and Anne, McLaren, eds. 1999. Dress, Sex, and Text in Chinese Culture. Clayton: Monash Asia Institute.Google Scholar
Friedman, Sara L. 2000. “Spoken Pleasures and Dangerous Desires: Sexuality, Marriage, and the State in Rural Southeastern China.” East Asia: An International Quarterly 18(4):1339.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Friedman, Sara L. 2004. “Embodying Civility: Civilizing Processes and Symbolic Citizenship in Southeastern China.” Journal of Asian Studies 63(3):687718.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Friedman, Sara L. Forthcoming. “The Intimacy of State Power: Marriage, Liberation, and Socialist Subjects in Southeastern China.” American Ethnologist.Google Scholar
Furth, Charlotte. 1999. A Flourishing Yin: Gender in China's Medical History, 960–1665. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gaetano, Arianne M. 2004. “Filial Daughters, Modern Women: Migrant Domestic Workers in Post-Mao Beijing.” In Gaetano and Jacka 2004.Google Scholar
Gaetano, Arianne M. and Tamara, Jacka, eds. 2004. On the Move: Women in Rural-to-Urban Migration in Contemporary China. New York: Columbia University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Robert, Gamer ed. 1999. Understanding Contemporary China. Boulder, Colo.: Lynne Rienner.Google Scholar
Gao, Xiaoxian. 1994. “China's Modernization and Changes in the Social Status of Rural Women.” Trans. S. Katherine Campbell. In Gilmartin et al. 1994.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gao, Xiaoxian. 2001. “Strategies and Space: A Case Study.” In Hsiung, Jaschok, and Milwertz 2001.Google Scholar
Gates, Hill. 1989. “The Commoditization of Chinese Women.” Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 14(4):799832.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gates, Hill. 1993. “Cultural Support for Birth Limitation Among Urban Capital-Owning Women.” In Davis and Harrell 1993.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gates, Hill. 1996a. China's Motor: A Thousand Years of Petty Capitalism. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Gates, Hill. 1996b. “Footbinding, Handspinning, and the Modernization of Little Girls.” In South China: State, Culture, and Social Change During the 20th Century, ed. Douw, Leo and Post, Peter. Amsterdam and New York: North-Holland.Google Scholar
Gates, Hill. 1999. Looking for Chengdu: A Woman's Adventures in China. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Gates, Hill. 2001. “Footloose in Fujian: Economic Correlates of Footbinding.” Comparative Studies in Society and History 43(1):130–48.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ge, Youli and Susan, Jolly. 2001. “East Meets West Feminist Translation Group: A Conversation Between Two Participants.” In Hsiung, Jaschok, and Milwertz 2001.Google Scholar
Gillette, Maris Boyd. 2000a. Between Mecca and Beijing: Modernization and Consumption Among Urban Chinese Muslims. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Gillette, Maris Boyd. 2000b. “What's in a Dress? Brides in the Hui Quarter of Xi'an.” In Davis 2000.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gilmartin, Christina K. 1989. “Gender, Politics, and Patriarchy in China: The Experiences of Early Women Communists, 1920–27.” In Kruks, Rapp, and Young 1989.Google Scholar
Gilmartin, Christina K. 1990. “Violence Against Women in Contemporary China.” In Violence in China: Essays in Culture and Counterculture, ed. Lipman, Jonathan N. and Stevan, Harrell. Albany: State University of New York Press.Google Scholar
Gilmartin, Christina K. 1993. “Gender in the Formation of a Communist Body Politic.” Modern China 19(3):299329.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gilmartin, Christina K. 1994. “Gender, Political Culture, and Women's Mobilization in the Chinese Nationalist Revolution, 1924–1927.” In Gilmartin et al. 1994.Google Scholar
Gilmartin, Christina K. 1995. Engendering the Chinese Revolution: Radical Women, Communist Politics, and Mass Movements in the 1920s. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gilmartin, Christina K. 1999. “Introduction: May Fourth and Women's Emancipation.” In Lan and Fong 1999.Google Scholar
Gilmartin, Christina K., Gail, Hershatter, Lisa, Rofel and Tyrene, White, eds. 1994. Engendering China: Women, Culture, and the State. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gipoulon, Catherine. 1984. “Integrating the Feminist and Worker's Movement: The Case of Xiang Jingyu.” Republican China 10(1)(A):2941.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gipoulon, Catherine. 1989–90. “The Emergence of Women in Politics in China, 1898–1927.” Chinese Studies in History 23(3):4667.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Glosser, Susan L. 1995. “The Business of Family: You Huigao and the Commercialization of a May Fourth Ideal.” Republican China 20(2):80116.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Glosser, Susan L. 2002. “‘The Truths I Have Learned': Nationalism, Family Reform, and Male Identity in China's New Culture Movement, 1915–1923.” In Brownell and Wasserstrom 2002b.Google Scholar
Glosser, Susan L. 2003. Chinese Visions of Family and State, 1915–1953. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Goldman, Merle and Perry, Elizabeth J., eds. 2002. Changing Meanings of Citizenship in Modern China. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Goldstein, Joshua. 1998. “Scissors, Surveys, and Psycho-Prophylactics: Prenatal Health Care Campaigns and State Building in China, 1949–1954.” Journal of Historical Sociology 11(2):153–84.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Goldstein, Melvyn C., Ben, Jiao, Cynthia, Beall M. and Phuntsog, Tsering. 2002. “Fertility and Family Planning in Rural Tibet.” China Journal, no. 47:1939.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Goldstein, Sidney, Zai, Liang, and Alice, Goldstein. 2000. “Migration, Gender, and Labor Force in Hubei Province, 1985–1990.” In Entwisle and Henderson 2000.Google Scholar
Goodman, David S. G. 1997. “The Licheng Rebellion of 1941: Class, Gender, and Leadership in the Sino-Japanese War.” Modern China 23(2):216–45.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gottschang, Suzanne Z. 2001. “The Consuming Mother: Infant Feeding and the Feminine Body in Urban China.” In N. Chen et al. 2001.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Greenhalgh, Susan. 1990. “The Evolution of the One-Child Policy in Shaanxi, 1979–88.” China Quarterly, no. 122:191–229.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Greenhalgh, Susan. 1993. “The Peasantization of the One-Child Policy in Shaanxi.” In Davis and Harrell 1993.Google Scholar
Greenhalgh, Susan. 1994. “Controlling Births and Bodies in Village China.” American Ethnologist 21(1):330.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Greenhalgh, Susan. 2001. “Fresh Winds in Beijing: Chinese Feminists Speak Out on the One-Child Policy and Women's Lives.” Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 26(3):847–87.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Greenhalgh, Susan and Jiali, Li. 1995. “Engendering Reproductive Policy and Practice in Peasant China: For a Feminist Demography of Reproduction.” Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 20(3):601–41.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Greenhalgh, Susan, Zhu, Chuzhu and Li, Nan. 1994. “Restraining Population Growth in Three Chinese Villages, 1988–93.” Population and Development Review 20(2):365–96.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gronewold, Sue. 1984. Beautiful Merchandise: Prostitution in China, 1840–1936. New York: Haworth Press.Google Scholar
Gronewold, Sue. 1996. “Encountering Hope: The Door of Hope Mission in Shanghai and Taipei.” PhD diss., Columbia University.Google Scholar
Guisso, Richard W. and Stanley, Johannesen, eds. 1981. Women in China: Current Directions in Historical Scholarship. Youngstown, N.Y.: Philo Press.Google Scholar
Han, Jialing. 2004. “Economic Growth and Women's Development in China's Western Areas: A Case Study.” In J. Tao, Zheng, and Mow 2004.Google Scholar
Handlin, Joanna F. 1975. “Lü Kun's New Audience: The Influence of Women's Literacy on Sixteenth-Century Thought.” In M. Wolf and Witke 1975.Google Scholar
Handwerker, Lisa. 1995a. “The Hen That Can't Lay an Egg: Conceptions of Female Infertility in Modern China.” In Deviant Bodies: Critical Perspectives on Difference in Science and Popular Culture, ed. Jacqueline, Urla and Jennifer, Terry. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.Google Scholar
Handwerker, Lisa. 1995b. “Social and Ethical Implications of In Vitro Fertilization in Contemporary China.” Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics, no. 4:355–63.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Handwerker, Lisa. 1998. “The Consequences of Modernity for Childless Women in China: Medicalization and Resistance.” In Pragmatic Women and Body Politics, ed. Margaret, Lock and Kaufert, Patricia A.. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Harris, Kristine. 1995. “The New Woman: Image, Subject, and Dissent in 1930s Shanghai Film Culture.” Republican China 20(2):5579.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hayes, James. 1994. “San Po Tsai (Little Daughters-in-Law) and Child Betrothals in the New Territories of Hong Kong from the 1890s to the 1960s.” In Jaschok and Miers 1994a.Google Scholar
He, Xiaopei. 2001. “Chinese Queer (Tongzhi) Women Organizing in the 1990s.” In Hsiung, Jaschok, and Milwertz 2001.Google Scholar
Hemmel, Vibeke and Pia, Sindbjerg. 1984. Women in Rural China: Policy Towards Women Before and After the Cultural Revolution. London: Curzon Press; Atlantic Highlands, N.J.: Humanities Press.Google Scholar
Henriot, Christian. 1988. “Prostitution et ‘Police Des Moeurs' A Shanghai Aux XIXe–XXe Siècles” [Prostitution and “Morals Police” in Shanghai in the Nineteenth to Twentieth Centuries]. La Femme en Asie Orientale [Woman in East Asia], ed. Christian, Henriot. Lyon: Université Jean Moulin Lyon II.Google Scholar
Henriot, Christian. 1992. “Medicine, VD, and Prostitution in Pre-Revolutionary China.” Social History of Medicine 5(1):95120.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Henriot, Christian. 1994. “Chinese Courtesans in Late Qing and Early Republican Shanghai.” East Asian History, no. 8:3352.Google Scholar
Henriot, Christian. 1995. “‘La Fermeture': The Abolition of Prostitution in Shanghai, 1949–58.” China Quarterly, no. 142:467–86.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Henriot, Christian. 1996. “‘From a Throne of Glory to a Seat of Ignominy': Shanghai Prostitution Revisited (1849–1949).” Modern China 22(2):132–63.Google Scholar
Henriot, Christian. 1997. Belles de Shanghai: Prostitution et Sexualité en China, XIXe–XXe Siècle [Beauties of Shanghai: Prostitution and Sexuality in China, Nineteenth to Twentieth Centuries]. Paris: CNRS-editions. Trans. Noël Castelino as Prostitution and Sexuality in Shanghai: A Social History, 1849–1949. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2001.Google Scholar
Hershatter, Gail. 1986. The Workers of Tianjin, 1900–1949. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Hershatter, Gail. 1989. “The Hierarchy of Shanghai Prostitution, 1870–1949.” Modern China 15(4):463–8.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hershatter, Gail. 1991. “Prostitution and the Market in Women in Early Twentieth-Century Shanghai.” In R. Watson and Ebrey 1991.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hershatter, Gail. 1992a. “Courtesans and Streetwalkers: The Changing Discourses on Shanghai Prostitution, 1890–1949.” Journal of the History of Sexuality 3(2):245–69.Google Scholar
Hershatter, Gail. 1992b. “Regulating Sex in Shanghai: The Reform of Prostitution in 1920 and 1951.” In Shanghai Sojourners, ed. Frederic, Wakeman and Yeh, Wen-hsin. China Research Monograph, no. 40. Berkeley: Institute of East Asian Studies, University of California.Google Scholar
Hershatter, Gail. 1992c. “Sex Work and Social Order: Prostitutes, Their Families, and the State in Twentieth-Century Shanghai.” In Family Process and Political Process in Modern Chinese History, ed. Zhongyang yanjiuyuan jindaishi yanjiusuo. Vol. 2. Taipei: Zhongyang yanjiuyuan jindaishi yanjiusuo.Google Scholar
Hershatter, Gail. 1993. “The Subaltern Talks Back: Reflections on Subaltern Theory and Chinese History.” positions: east asia cultures critique 1(1):103–30.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hershatter, Gail. 1994. “Modernizing Sex, Sexing Modernity: Prostitution in Early Twentieth-Century Shanghai.” In Gilmartin et al. 1994.Google Scholar
Hershatter, Gail. 1996. “Sexing Modern China.” In Remapping China: Fissures in Historical Terrain, ed. Gail, Hershatter, Emily, Honig, Lipman, Jonathan N. and Randall, Stross. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Hershatter, Gail. 1997. Dangerous Pleasures: Prostitution and Modernity in Twentieth-Century Shanghai. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hershatter, Gail. 2000. “Local Meanings of Gender and Work in Rural Shaanxi in the 1950s.” In Entwisle and Henderson 2000.Google Scholar
Hershatter, Gail. 2002. “The Gender of Memory: Rural Chinese Women and the 1950s.” Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 28(1):4370.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hershatter, Gail. 2003. “Making the Visible Invisible: The Fate of ‘The Private' in Revolutionary China.” In Jindai Zhongguo de funü yu guojia (1600–1950) [Women and the Nation in Modern China (1600–1950)]. Vol. 1 of Wusheng zhi sheng [Voices amid Silence], ed. Lü Fangshang. Taiwan: Zhongyang yanjiuyuan jindaishi yanjiusuo.Google Scholar
Hershatter, Gail. Forthcoming. “Virtue at Work: Rural Shaanxi Women Remember the 1950s.” In Gender in Motion, ed. Bryna, Goodman and Wendy, Larson. Lanham, Md.: Rowman and Littlefield.Google Scholar
Hershatter, Gail, Emily, Honig, Susan, Mann and Lisa, Rofel, eds. and comps. 1998. Guide to Women's Studies in China. Berkeley: Institute of East Asian Studies, University of California.Google Scholar
Hershatter, Gail, Emily, Honig, and Lisa, Rofel. 1996. “Reflections on theb Fourth World Conference on Women, Beijing and Huairou, 1995.” Social Justice 23(1–2):368–75.Google Scholar
Ho, Clara Wing-Chung. 1999. “Toward a Redefinition of the Content of Chinese Women's History: Reflections on Eight Recent Bibliographies.” Nan Nü: Men, Women, and Gender in Early and Imperial China 1(1):145–59.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ho, Virgil K. Y. 1993. “Selling Smiles in Canton: Prostitution in the Early Republic.” East Asian History, no. 5:101–32.Google Scholar
Ho, Virgil K. Y. 1998–99. “Whose Bodies? Taming Contemporary Prostitutes' Bodies in Official Chinese Rhetorics.” China Information 13(2–3):1435.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Holmgren, Jennifer. 1981. “Myth, Fantasy, or Scholarship: Images of the Status of Women in Traditional China.” Australian Journal of Chinese Affairs, no. 6:147–70.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hom, Sharon. 1992. “Female Infanticide in China: The Human Rights Specter and Thoughts Toward (An)Other Vision.” Columbia Human Rights Law Review 23(2):249314.Google Scholar
Hom, Sharon. 1994. “Engendering Chinese Legal Studies: Gatekeeping, Master Discourses, and Other Challenges.” Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 19(4):1020–47.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Honig, Emily. 1983. “The Contract Labor System and Women Workers: Pre-Liberation Cotton Mills of Shanghai.” Modern China 9(4):421–54.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Honig, Emily. 1984. “Private Issues, Public Discourse: The Life and Times of Yu Luojin.” Pacific Affairs 57(2):252–65.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Honig, Emily. 1985. “Burning Incense, Pledging Sisterhood: Communities of Women Workers in the Shanghai Cotton Mills, 1919–1949.” Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 10(4):700–14.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Honig, Emily. 1986. Sisters and Strangers: Women in the Shanghai Cotton Mills, 1919–1949. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Honig, Emily. 1992. Creating Chinese Ethnicity: Subei People in Shanghai, 1850–1980. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Honig, Emily. 1996. “Christianity, Feminism, and Communism: The Life and Times of Deng Yuzhi.” In Bays 1996.Google Scholar
Honig, Emily. 2000. “Iron Girls Revisited: Gender and the Politics of Work in the Cultural Revolution, 1966–76.” In Entwisle and Henderson 2000.Google Scholar
Honig, Emily. 2002. “Maoist Mappings of Gender: Reassessing the Red Guards.” In Brownell and Wasserstrom 2002b.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Honig, Emily. 2003. “Socialist Sex: The Cultural Revolution Revisited.” Modern China 29(2):143–75.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Honig, Emily, and Gail, Hershatter. 1988. Personal Voices: Chinese Women in the 1980s. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hooper, Beverley. 1984. “China's Modernization: Are Young Women Going to Lose Out?Modern China 10(3):317–43.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hooper, Beverley. 1999. “Researching Women's Lives in Contemporary China.” In Finnane and McLaren 1999.Google Scholar
Hsieh, Ping-Ying. 1986. Autobiography of a Chinese Girl. Trans. Chi Tsui. London and New York: Pandora.Google Scholar
Hsiung, Ping-Chun. 1996. Living Rooms as Factories: Class, Gender, and the Satellite Factory System in Taiwan. Philadelphia: Temple University Press.Google Scholar
Hsiung, Ping-Chun, Maria, Jaschok and Cecilia, Milwertz, eds. 2001. Chinese Women Organizing: Cadres, Feminists, Muslims, Queers. Oxford and New York: Berg.Google Scholar
Hsiung, Ping-Chun, and Yuk-Lin, Renita Wong. 1998. “Jie Gui—Connecting the Tracks: Chinese Women's Activism Surrounding the 1995 World Conference on Women in Beijing.” Gender and History 10(3):470–97.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hu, Chi-Hsi. 1974. “The Sexual Revolution in the Kiangsi Soviet.” China Quarterly, no. 59:477–90.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hu, Ying. 1997. “Re-Configuring Nei/Wai: Writing the Woman Traveller in the Late Qing.” Late Imperial China 18(1):7299.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hu, Ying. 2000. Tales of Translation: Composing the New Woman in China, 1899–1918. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Hu, Ying. 2001. “Naming the First New Woman: The Case of Kang Aide.” Nan Nü: Men, Women, and Gender in Early and Imperial China 3(2):196231.Google Scholar
Hu, Ying. 2002. “Naming the First ‘New Woman.'” In Karl and Zarrow 2002.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hua, Chang-Ming. 1984. “Peasants, Women, and Revolution—CCP Marriage Reform in the Shaan-Gan-Ning Border Area.” Republican China 10(1)(B):114.Google Scholar
Huang, Philip C. C. 1990. The Peasant Family and Rural Development in the Yangzi Delta, 1350–1988. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Huang, Philip C. C. 2001a. Code, Custom, and Legal Practice in China: The Qing and the Republic Compared. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Huang, Philip C. C. 2001b. “Women's Choices Under the Law: Marriage, Divorce, and Illicit Sex in the Qing and the Republic.” Modern China 27(1):358.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Huang, Xiyi. 1999. “Divided Gender, Divided Women: State Policy and the Labour Market.” In West et al. 1999.Google Scholar
Huang, Yufu. 2004. “Chinese Women's Status as Seen Through Peking Opera.” In J. Tao, Zheng, and Mow 2004.Google Scholar
Hyde, Sandrea Teresa. 2001. “Sex Tourism Practices on the Periphery: Eroticizing Ethnicity and Pathologizing Sex on the Lancang.” In N. Chen et al. 2001.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ip, Hung-Yok. 2003. “Fashioning Appearances: Feminine Beauty in Chinese Communist Revolutionary Culture.” Modern China 29(3):329–61.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jacka, Tamara. 1990. “Back to the Wok: Women and Employment in Chinese Industry in the 1980s.” Australian Journal of Chinese Affairs, no. 24:123.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jacka, Tamara. 1992. “The Public/Private Dichotomy and the Gender Division of Rural Labour.” In Economic Reform and Social Change in China, ed. Andrew, Watson. London and New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Jacka, Tamara. 1997. Women's Work in Rural China: Change and Continuity in an Era of Reform. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jacka, Tamara. 1998. “Working Sisters Answer Back: The Presentation and Self-Presentation of Women in China's Floating Population.” China Information 13(1):4375.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jacka, Tamara. 1999. “Researching Women's Work and Gender Division of Labour in the PRC.” In Finnane and McLaren 1999.Google Scholar
Jacka, Tamara. 2000. “‘My Life as a Migrant Worker': Women in Rural-Urban Migration in Contemporary China.” Intersections, no. 4. http://wwwsshe.murdoch.edu.au/intersections/.Google Scholar
Jacka, Tamara. 2004. “Migrant Women's Stories.” In Gaetano and Jacka 2004.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jacka, Tamara, and Gaetano, Arianne M.. 2004. “Introduction: Focusing on Migrant Women.” In Gaetano and Jacka 2004.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jacka, Tamara, and Josko, Petkovic. 1998. “Ethnography and Video: Researching Women in China's Floating Population.” Intersections, inaugural issue. http://wwwsshe.murdoch.edu.au/intersections/.Google Scholar
Jacka, Tamara, and Xianlin Song, trans. 2004. “My Life as a Migrant Worker.” In Gaetano and Jacka 2004.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jackal, Patricia Stranahan. 1981. “Changes in Policy for Yan'an Women, 1935–1947.” Modern China 7(1):83112.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jankowiak, William R. 1993. Sex, Death, and Hierarchy in a Chinese City: An Anthropological Account. New York: Columbia University Press.Google Scholar
Jankowiak, William R. 2002. “Proper Men and Proper Women: Parental Affection in the Chinese Family.” In Brownell and Wasserstrom 2002b.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jaschok, Maria. 1984. “On the Lives of Women Unwed by Choice in Pre-Communist China.” Republican China 10(1)(A):4255.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jaschok, Maria. 1988. Concubines and Bondservants: A Social History. London and Atlantic Highlands, N.J.: Zed Books.Google Scholar
Jaschok, Maria. 1994. “Chinese ‘Slave' Girls in Yunnan-Fu: Saving (Chinese) Womanhood and (Western) Souls, 1930–1991.” In Jaschok and Miers 1994a.Google Scholar
Jaschok, Maria, and Suzanne, Miers, eds. 1994a. Women and Chinese Patriarchy: Submission, Servitude, and Escape. London and Atlantic Highlands, N.J.: Zed Books.Google Scholar
Jaschok, Maria, and Suzanne, Miers, eds. 1994b. “Women in the Chinese Patriarchal System: Submission, Servitude, Escape and Collusion.” In Jaschok and Miers 1994a.Google Scholar
Jaschok, Maria, Milwertz, Cecilia N., and Ping-Chun, Hsiung. 2001. “Introduction.” In Hsiung, Jaschok, and Milwertz 2001.Google Scholar
Jeffreys, Elaine. 1997a. “Guest Editor's Introduction.” In Jeffreys 1997b.Google Scholar
Jeffreys, Elaine., guest ed. 1997b. “Prostitution in Contemporary China.” Chinese Sociology and Anthropology 30, no. 1.Google Scholar
Jiang, Rongsheng. 1997. “Identifying Prostitution.” In Jeffreys 1997b.Google Scholar
Jiang, Yongping. 2004. “Employment and Chinese Urban Women Under Two Systems.” In J. Tao, Zheng, and Mow 2004.Google Scholar
Jin, Yihong. 2001. “The All China Women's Federation: Challenges and Trends.” In Hsiung, Jaschok, and Milwertz 2001.Google Scholar
Jin, Yihong. 2004. “Rural Women and Their Road to Public Participation.” In J. Tao, Zheng, and Mow 2004.Google Scholar
Johansson, Perry. 1998–99. “White Skin, Large Breasts: Chinese Beauty Product Advertising as Cultural Discourse.” China Information 13(2–3):5984.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Johnson, Elizabeth L. 1988. “Grieving for the Dead, Grieving for the Living: Funeral Laments of Hakka Women.” In J. Watson and Rawski 1988.Google Scholar
Johnson, Kay Ann. 1983. Women, the Family, and Peasant Revolution in China. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Johnson, Kay Ann. 1993. “Chinese Orphanages: Saving China's Abandoned Girls.” Australian Journal of Chinese Affairs, no. 30:6187.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Johnson, Kay Ann. 1996. “The Politics of the Revival of Infant Abandonment in China, with Special Reference to Hunan.” Population and Development Review 22(1):7798.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Johnson, Kay Ann. 2004. Wanting a Daughter, Needing a Son: Abandonment, Adoption, and Orphanage Care in China. St. Paul, Minn.: Yeong and Yeong.Google Scholar
Johnson, Kay Ann, Huang, Banghan, and Wang, Liyao. 1998. “Infant Abandonment and Adoption in China.” Population and Development Review 24(3):469–94.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Johnson, Marshall, Parish, William L., and Elizabeth, Lin. 1987. “Chinese Women, Rural Society, and External Markets.” Economic Development and Cultural Change 35(2):257–77.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Judd, Ellen R. 1989. “Niangjia: Chinese Women and Their Natal Families.” Journal of Asian Studies 48(3):525–44.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Judd, Ellen R. 1990. “‘Men Are More Able': Rural Chinese Women's Conceptions of Gender and Agency.” Pacific Affairs 63(1):4062.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Judd, Ellen R. 1994. Gender and Power in Rural North China. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Judd, Ellen R. 1998. “Reconsidering China's Marriage Law Campaign: Toward a De-Orientalized Feminist Perspective.” Asian Journal of Women's Studies 4(2):826.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Judd, Ellen R. 2002. The Chinese Women's Movement Between State and Market. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Judge, Joan. 1997. “Citizens or Mothers of Citizens?: Reimagining Femininity in Late Qing Women's Textbooks.” Transactions of the International Conference of Eastern Studies, no. 42:102–14.Google Scholar
Judge, Joan. 2000. “Meng Mu Meets the Modern: Female Exemplars in Early-Twentieth-Century Textbooks for Girls and Women.” Jindai Zhongguo funü shi yanjiu/Research on Women in Modern Chinese History, no. 8:129–77.Google Scholar
Judge, Joan. 2001. “Talent, Virtue, and the Nation: Chinese Nationalisms and Female Subjectivities in the Early Twentieth Century.” American Historical Review 106(2):765803.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Judge, Joan. 2002a. “Citizens or Mothers of Citizens? Gender and the Meaning of ModernChinese Citizenship.” In Goldman and Perry 2002.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Judge, Joan. 2002b. “Reforming the Feminine: Female Literacy and the Legacy of 1898.” In Karl and Zarrow 2002.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Judge, Joan. 2003. “Beyond Nationalism: Gender and the Chinese Student Experience in Japan in the Early Twentieth Century.” In Luo and Lü 2003.Google Scholar
Kane, Penny. 1985. “The Single-Child Family Policy in the Cities.” In Croll, Davin, and Kane 1985.Google Scholar
Kane, Penny. 1987. The Second Billion: Population and Family Planning in China. New York: Penguin Books.Google Scholar
Karl, Rebecca E. 2002. “‘Slavery,' Citizenship, and Gender in Late Qing China's Global Context.” In Karl and Zarrow 2002.Google Scholar
Karl, Rebecca E., and Peter, Zarrow, eds. 2002. Rethinking the 1898 Reform Period: Political and Cultural Change in Late Qing China. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Asia Center.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ko, Dorothy. 1994. Teachers of the Inner Chambers: Women and Culture in Seventeenth-Century China. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Kruks, Sonia, Rayna, Rapp, and Young, Marilyn B., eds. 1989. Promissory Notes: Women in the Transition to Socialism. New York: Monthly Review Press.Google Scholar
Kung, Lydia. 1994. Factory Women in Taiwan. Columbia Unviersity Press Morningside ed. New York: Columbia University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kwok, Pui-Lan. 1992. Chinese Women and Christianity, 1860–1927. Atlanta: Scholars Press.Google Scholar
Kwok, Pui-Lan. 1996. “Chinese Women and Protestant Christianity at the Turn of the Twentieth Century.” In Bays 1996.Google Scholar
Lan, Hua R., and Fong, Vanessa L., eds. 1999. Women in Republican China: A Sourcebook. Armonk, N.Y.: M. E. Sharpe.Google Scholar
Larson, Wendy. 1998. Women and Writing in Modern China. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lavely, William. 1991. “Marriage and Mobility Under Rural Collectivism.” In R. Watson and Ebrey 1991.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lee, Bernice J. 1981. “Female Infanticide in China.” In Guisso and Johannesen 1981.Google Scholar
Lee, Ching Kwan. 1998. Gender and the South China Miracle: Two Worlds of Factory Women. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lee, Gong-Way. 1991. “Critiques of Ch'iu Chin: A Radical Feminist and National Revolutionary (1875–1907).” Chinese Culture 32(2):5766.Google Scholar
Lee, Lily Xiao Hong. 2004. “The Chinese Women's Movement Before and After the Long March.” In J. Tao, Zheng, and Mow 2004.Google Scholar
Lee, Lily, Xiao, Hong, and Sue, Wiles. 1999. Women of the Long March. St. Leonards, NSW: Allen and Unwin.Google Scholar
Leith, Suzette. 1973. “Chinese Women in the Early Communist Movement.” In M. Young 1973.Google Scholar
Levy, Howard S. 1992. The Lotus Lovers: The Complete History of the Curious Erotic Custom of Footbinding in China. Buffalo, N.Y.: Prometheus Books.Google Scholar
Li, Danke. 2004. “Gender Inequality in Education in Rural China.” In J. Tao, Zheng, and Mow 2004.Google Scholar
Li, Danke, and Tsang, Mun C.. 2003. “Household Decisions and Gender Inequality in Education in Rural China.” China: An International Journal 1(2):224–48.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Li, Xiaojiang. 1994. “Economic Reform and the Awakening of Chinese Women's Collective Consciousness.” Trans. S. Katherine Campbell. In Gilmartin et al. 1994.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Li, Xiaojiang. 1999. “With What Discourse Do We Reflect on Chinese Women? Thoughts on Transnational Feminism in China.” Trans. Yajie Zhang. In M. Yang 1999c.Google Scholar
Li, Xiaojiang. 2001. “From ‘Modernization' to ‘Globalization': Where Are Chinese Women?” Trans. Tani E. Barlow. Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 26(4):1274–78.Google Scholar
Li, Xiaojiang. 2004. “The Center for Gender Studies at Dalian University.” In J. Tao, Zheng, and Mow 2004.Google Scholar
Li, Xiaojiang, and Xiaodan, Zhang. 1994. “Creating a Space for Women: Women's Studies in China in the 1980s.” Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 20(1):137–51.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Li, Yongshan. 1997. “Tears of Blood: The Path of Prostitution.” In Jeffreys 1997b.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Li, Yu-Ning. 1984. “Hsu Tsung-Han: Tradition and Revolution.” Republican China 10(1)(A):1328.Google Scholar
Li, Yu-Ning. 1988. “Sun Yat-Sen and Women's Transformation.” Chinese Studies in History 21(4):5878.Google Scholar
Li, Yu-Ning. 1992. Chinese Women Through Chinese Eyes. Armonk, N.Y.: M. E. Sharpe.Google Scholar
Liang, Zai, and Yiu, Por Chen. 2004. “Migration and Gender in China: An Origin-Destination Linked Approach.” Economic Development and Cultural Change 52(2):423–43.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lin, Chun. 2003. “Toward a Chinese Feminism: A Personal Story.” In Wasserstrom 2003.Google Scholar
Liu, Bohong. 2001. “The All China Women's Federation and Women's NGOs.” In Hsiung, Jaschok, and Milwertz 2001.Google Scholar
Liu, Dalin, Man, Lun Ng, Li, Ping Zhou, and Haeberle, Erwin J.. 1997. Sexual Behavior in Modern China: Report on the Nationwide Survey of 20,000 Men and Women {Zhongguo dangdai xing wenhua}. English-language edition ed. Man, lun Ng and Haeberle, Erwin J.. New York: Continuum.Google Scholar
Liu, Fei-Wen. 2001. “The Confrontation between Fidelity and Fertility: Nüshu, Nüge, and Peasant Women's Conceptions of Widowhood in Jiangyong County, Hunan Province, China.” Journal of Asian Studies 60(4):1051–84.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Liu, Huiying. 2003. “Feminism: An Organic or an Extremist Position? On Tien Yee as Represented by He Zhen.” Trans. Yan Hairong. positions: east asia cultures critique 11(3):779800.Google Scholar
Liu, Judith, and Kelly, Donald P.. 1996. “‘Oasis in a Heathen Land': St. Hilda's School for Girls, Wuchang, 1928–1936.” In Bays 1996.Google Scholar
Liu, Lydia H. 1994. “The Female Body and Nationalist Discourse.” In Zito and Barlow 1994.Google Scholar
Liu, Lydia H. 1995. Translingual Practice: Literature, National Culture, and Translated Modernity—China, 1900–1937. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Liu, Meng. 2002. “Rebellion and Revenge: The Meaning of Suicide of Women in China.” International Journal of Social Welfare 11(4):300309.Google Scholar
Liu, Ying. 2004. “The Lives and Needs of Elderly Women in Urban China.” In J. Tao, Zheng, and Mow 2004.Google Scholar
Lou, Binbin, Zheng, Zhenzhen, Rachel, Connelly, and Roberts, Kenneth D.. 2004. “The Migration Experiences of Young Women from Four Counties in Sichuan and Anhui.” In Gaetano and Jacka 2004.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lu, Meiyi. 2004. “The Awakening of Chinese Women and the Women's Movement in the Early Twentieth Century.” In J. Tao, Zheng, and Mow 2004.Google Scholar
Lu, Tonglin, ed. 1993. Gender and Sexuality in Twentieth-Century Chinese Literature and Society. Albany: State University of New York Press.Google Scholar
Lu, Weijing. 1998. “Uxorilocal Marriage Among Qing Literati.” Late Imperial China 19(2):64110.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Luo, Jiurong and , Miao-Fen, eds. 2003. Jindai Zhongguo de funü yu wenhua (1600–1950) [Women and Culture in Modern China (1600–1950)]. Vol. 3 of Wusheng zhi sheng [Voices amid Silence]. Taipei: Zhongyang yanjiuyuan jindaishi yanjiusuo.Google Scholar
Ma, Wanhua. 2004. “The Readjustment of China's Higher Education Structure and Women's Higher Education.” In J. Tao, Zheng, and Mow 2004.Google Scholar
Ma, Yuxin. 2003. “Male Feminism and Women's Subjectivities: Zhang Xichen, Chen Xuezhao, and The New Woman.” Twentieth-Century China 29(1):137.Google Scholar
Makley, Cherlene E. 2002. “On the Edge of Respectability: Sexual Politics in China's Tibet.” positions: east asia cultures critique 10(3):575630.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mann, Susan. 1992. “Women's Work in the Ningbo Area, 1900–1936.” In Chinese History in Economic Perspective, ed. Rawski, Thomas G. and Li, Lillian M. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Mann, Susan. 1994. “The Cult of Domesticity in Republican Shanghai's Middle Class.” Jindai Zhongguo funü shi yanjiu/Research on Women in Modern Chinese History, no. 2:179201.Google Scholar
Mann, Susan. 1997. Precious Records: Women in China's Long Eighteenth Century. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mann, Susan. 1998. “Western Missionary Views of Educated Chinese Women at the Turn of the Twentieth Century.” In Tradition and Metamorphosis in Modern Chinese History: Essays in Honor of Professor Kwang-Ching Liu's Seventy-Fifth Birthday, ed. Hao, Yanping and Wei, Xiumei. Vol. 2. Taipei: Academia Sinica Institute of Modern History.Google Scholar
Martin, Emily. 1988. “Gender and Ideological Differences in Representations of Life and Death.” In J. Watson and Rawski 1988.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mathieu, Christine. 1999. “History and Other Metaphors in Chinese-Mosuo Relations Since 1956.” In Finnane and McLaren 1999.Google Scholar
Maurer-Fazio, Margaret, Rawski, Thomas G., and Wei, Zhang. 1999. “Inequality in the Rewards for Holding Up Half the Sky: Gender Wage Gaps in China's Urban Labour Market, 1988–1994.” China Journal, no. 41:5588.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mcintyre, Tanya. 1999. “Images of Women in Popular Prints.” In Finnane and McLaren 1999.Google Scholar
Mclaren, Anne. 1996. “Women's Voices and Textuality: Chastity and Abduction in Chinese Nüshu Writing.” Modern China 22(4):382416.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mclaren, Anne. 1998. “Crossing Gender Boundaries in China: Nüshu Narratives.” Intersections, inaugural issue. http://wwwsshe.murdoch.edu.au/hum/as/ intersections.Google Scholar
Mclaren, Anne. 1999. “On Researching Invisible Women: Abduction and Violation in Chinese Women's Script Writing.” In Finnane and McLaren 1999.Google Scholar
Meijer, Marinus Johan. 1971. Marriage Law and Policy in the Chinese People's Republic. Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press.Google Scholar
Michelson, Ethan, and Parish, William L.. 2000. “Gender Differentials in Economic Success: Rural China in 1991.” In Entwisle and Henderson 2000.Google Scholar
Miers, Suzanne. 1994. “Mui Tsai Through the Eyes of the Victim: Janet Lim's Story of Bondage and Escape.” In Jaschok and Miers 1994a.Google Scholar
Milwertz, Cecilia N. 1997. Accepting Population Control: Urban Chinese Women and the One-Child Family Policy. Richmond, Surrey: Curzon Press.Google Scholar
Min, Anchee. 1995. Red Azalea. New York: Berkley Books.Google Scholar
Min, Dongchao. 1999. “The Development of Women's Studies: From the 1980s to the Present.” In West et al. 1999.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mittler, Barbara. 2003. “Defy(N)ing Modernity: Women in Shanghai's Early News-Media (1872–1915).” Jindai Zhongguo funü shi yanjiu/Research on Women in Modern Chinese History, no. 11:215–59.Google Scholar
Mu, Aiping. 1999. “To Have a Son: The One-Child Family Policy and Economic Change in Rural China.” In West et al. 1999.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mueggler, Erik. 1998. “The Poetics of Grief and the Price of Hemp in Southwest China.” Journal of Asian Studies 57(4):9791008.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Murphy, Rachel. 2004. “The Impact of Labor Migration on the Well-Being and Agency of Rural Chinese Women.” In Gaetano and Jacka 2004.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ngai, Pun. 1999. “Becoming Dagongmei (Working Girls): The Politics of Identity and Difference in Reform China.” China Journal, no. 42:118.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ngai, Pun. 2000. “Opening a Minor Genre of Resistance in Reform China: Scream, Dream, and Transgression in a Workplace.” positions: east asia cultures critique 8(2):531–55.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Niu, Yangzi. 1997. “Exploring the Phenomenon of ‘Foreign Prostitutes.’” In Jeffreys 1997b.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nivard, Jacqueline. 1984. “Women and the Women's Press: The Case of The Ladies' Journal (Funü Zazhi), 1915–1931.” Republican China 10(1)(B):3755.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nivard, Jacqueline. 1986. “L'Evolution de la Press Feminine Chinoise de 1898–1949” [The Evolution of the Chinese Women's Press of 1898–1949]. Études Chinoises, nos. 1–2:157–84.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ocko, Jonathan K. 1991. “Women, Property, and Law in the People's Republic of China.” In R. Watson and Ebrey 1991.Google Scholar
Ong, Aihwa. 1999. Flexible Citizenship: The Cultural Logics of Transnationality. Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press.Google Scholar
Ono, Kazuko. 1989. Chinese Women in a Century of Revolution, 1850–1950. Trans. Kathryn Bernhardt et al.; ed. Fogel, Joshua A. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Ouyang, Tao. 1997. “Prostitution Offenses in Contemporary China: Characteristics and Countermeasures.” In Jeffreys 1997b.Google Scholar
Parish, William L., and Sarah, Busse. 2000. “Gender and Work.” In Tang and Parish 2000.Google Scholar
Parish, William L., and James, Farrer. 2000. “Gender and Family.” In Tang and Parish 2000.Google Scholar
Parish, William L., and Martin King, Whyte. 1978. Village and Family in Contemporary China. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Pasternak, Burton, and Salaff, Janet W.. 1993. Cowboys and Cultivators: The Chinese of Inner Mongolia. Boulder, Colo.: Westview.Google Scholar
Pearson, Veronica, and Leung, Benjamin K. P., eds. 1995. Women in Hong Kong. New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Pearson, Veronica, and Meng, Liu. 2002. “Ling's Death: An Ethnography of a Chinese Woman's Suicide.” Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior 32(4):347–58.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Pearson, Veronica, Phillips, Michael R., Fengsheng, He, and Huiyi, Ji. 2002. “Attempted Suicide among Young Rural Women in the People's Republic of China: Possibilities for Prevention.” Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior 32(4):359–69.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Perry, Elizabeth J. 1993. Shanghai on Strike: The Politics of Chinese Labor. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Perry, Elizabeth J., and Mark, Selden, eds. 2003. Chinese Society: Change, Conflict, and Resistance. 2nd ed. London and New York: RoutledgeCurzon.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Phillips, Michael R., Xianyun, Li, and Yanping, Zhang. 2002a. “Suicide Rates in China, 1995–1999.” Lancet 359(9309):835–40. http://www.thelancet.com/journal.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Phillips, Michael R., Xianyun, Li, and Yanping, Zhang. 2002b. “Suicide Rates in China: Authors' Reply.” Lancet 359(9325):2274–75. http://www.thelancet.com/journal.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Potter, Sulamith Heins. 1985. “Birth Planning in Rural China: A Cultural Account.” Working paper 103, Women in International Development, Michigan State University.Google Scholar
Potter, Sulamith Heins, and Potter, Jack M.. 1990. China's Peasants: The Anthropology of a Revolution. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Prazniak, Roxann. 1986. “Weavers and Sorcerers of Chuansha: The Social Origins of Political Activism Among Rural Chinese Women.” Modern China 12(2):202–29.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Prazniak, Roxann. 1989. “Feminist Humanism: Socialism and Neofeminism in the Writings of Zhang Jie.” In Dirlik and Meisner 1989.Google Scholar
Prazniak, Roxann. 1997. “Mao and the Woman Question in an Age of Green Politics: Some Critical Reflections.” In Critical Perspectives on Mao Zedong's Thought, ed. Arif, Dirlik, Paul, Healy, and Nick, Knight. Atlantic Highlands, N.J.: Humanities Press.Google Scholar
Prazniak, Roxann. 1999. Of Camel Kings and Other Things: Rural Rebels Against Modernity in Late Imperial China. Lanham, Md.: Rowman and Littlefield.Google Scholar
Pruitt, Ida. 1967. A Daughter of Han: The Autobiography of a Chinese Working Woman. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Pruitt, Ida. 1979. Old Madam Yin: A Memoir of Peking Life, 1926–1938. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Qian, Changfu. 1997. “The Nature and Handling of Group Participation in Prostitution Behavior.” In Jeffreys 1997b.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rankin, Mary Backus. 1975. “The Emergence of Women at the End of the Ch'ing: The Case of Ch'iu Chin.” In M. Wolf and Witke 1975.Google Scholar
Remick, Elizabeth J. 2003. “Prostitution Taxes and Local State Building in Republican China.” Modern China 29(1):3870.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Riley, Nancy E. 1997. “Gender Equality in China: Two Steps Forward, One Step Back.” In China Briefing: The Contradictions of Change, ed. Joseph, William A.. Armonk, N.Y.: M. E. Sharpe.Google Scholar
Roberts, Rosemary. 1999. “Women's Studies in Literature and Feminist Literary Criticism in Contemporary China.” In Finnane and McLaren 1999.Google Scholar
Robinson, Jean C. 1985. “Of Women and Washing Machines: Employment, Housework, and the Reproduction of Motherhood in Socialist China.” China Quarterly, no. 101:3257.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rofel, Lisa. 1989. “Hegemony and Productivity: Workers in Post-Mao China.” In Dirlik and Meisner 1989.Google Scholar
Rofel, Lisa. 1992. “Rethinking Modernity: Space and Factory Discipline in China.” Cultural Anthropology 7(1):93114.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rofel, Lisa. 1994a. “Liberation Nostalgia and a Yearning for Modernity.” In Gilmartin et al. 1994.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rofel, Lisa. 1994b. “‘Yearnings': Televisual Love and Melodramatic Politics in Contemporary China.” American Ethnologist 1(4):700722.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rofel, Lisa. 1999a. “Museum as Women's Space: Displays of Gender in Post-Mao China.” In M. Yang 1999c.Google Scholar
Rofel, Lisa. 1999b. Other Modernities: Gendered Yearnings in China After Socialism. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rogaski, Ruth. 1997. “Beyond Benevolence: A Confucian Women's Shelter in Treaty-Port China.” Journal of Women's History 8(4):5490.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rong, Tiesheng. 1983. “The Women's Movement in China Before and After the 1911 Revolution.” Chinese Studies in History 16(3–4):159200.Google Scholar
Ropp, Paul S. 1976. “The Seeds of Change: Reflections on the Condition of Women in the Early and Mid-Ch'ing.” Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 2(1):523.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ross, Heidi A. 1996. “‘Cradle of Female Talent': The McTyeire Home and School for Girls, 1892–1937.” In Bays 1996.Google Scholar
Ruan, Fang Fu. 1991. Sex in China: Studies in Sexology in Chinese Culture. New York and London: Plenum Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ruan, Fang Fu, and Bullough, Vern L.. 1992. “Lesbianism in China.” Archives of Sexual Behavior 21(3):217–26.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Salaff, Janet W. 1973. “Institutionalized Motivation for Fertility Limitation.” In M. Young 1973.Google Scholar
Salaff, Janet W. 1981. Working Daughters of Hong Kong: Filial Piety or Power in the Family? Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Salaff, Janet W. 1985. “The State and Fertility Motivation in Singapore and China.” In Croll, Davin, and Kane 1985.Google Scholar
Salaff, Janet W., and Judith, Merkle. 1973. “Women and Revolution: The Lessons of the Soviet Union and China.” In M. Young 1973.Google Scholar
Sang, Tze-Lan D. 2003. The Emerging Lesbian: Female Same-Sex Desire in Modern China. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Sankar, Andrea. 1984. “Spinster Sisterhoods.” In Sheridan and Salaff 1984.Google Scholar
Sankar, Andrea. 1985. “Sisters and Brothers, Lovers and Enemies: Marriage Resistance in Southern Kwangtung.” Journal of Homosexuality 11(3–4):6981.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Schein, Louisa. 1997. “Gender and Internal Orientalism in China.” Modern China 23(1):6998. Reprinted in Brownell and Wasserstrom 2002b.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schein, Louisa. 2000. Minority Rules: The Miao and the Feminine in China's Cultural Politics. Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press.Google Scholar
Schwarcz, Vera. 1986. The Chinese Enlightenment: Intellectuals and the Legacy of the May Fourth Movement of 1919. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of Californa Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Selden, Mark. 1993. “Family Strategies and Structures in Rural North China.” In Davis and Harrell 1993.Google Scholar
Shang, Xiaoyuan. 1999. “Women and the Public Sphere: Education, NGO Affiliation, and Political Participation.” In West et al. 1999.Google Scholar
Sheridan, Mary. 1976. “Young Women Leaders in China.” Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 2(1):5988.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sheridan, Mary, and Janet, Salaff, eds. 1984. Lives: Chinese Working Women. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.Google Scholar
Shih, Shu-Mei. 1996. “Gender, Race, and Semicolonialism: Liu Na'ou's Urban Shanghai Landscape.” Journal of Asian Studies 55(4):934–56.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shih, Shu-Mei. 1998. “Gender and a New Geopolitics of Desire: The Seduction of Mainland Women in Taiwan and Hong Kong Media.” Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 23(2):287320. Reprinted in M. Yang 1999c.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shou, Yuanjun. 2004. “Half the Sky: A Television Program for Women.” In J. Tao, Zheng, and Mow 2004.Google Scholar
Shui, Jingjun. 2001. “In Search of Sacred Women's Organizations.” In Hsiung, Jaschok, and Milwertz 2001.Google Scholar
Silber, Cathy. 1994. “From Daughter to Daughter-in-Law in the Women's Script of Southern Hunan.” In Gilmartin et al. 1994.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sinn, Elizabeth. 1994. “Chinese Patriarchy and the Protection of Women in 19th-Century Hong Kong.” In Jaschok and Miers 1994a.Google Scholar
Siu, Helen F. 1990. “Where Were the Women? Rethinking Marriage Resistance and Regional Culture in South China.” Late Imperial China 11(2):3262.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Siu, Helen F. 1993. “Reconstituting Dowry and Brideprice in South China.” In Davis and Harrell 1993.Google Scholar
Solinger, Dorothy. 1999. Contesting Citizenship in Urban China: Peasant Migrants, the State, and the Logic of the Market. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Song, Lina. 1999. “The Role of Women in Labour Migration: A Case Study in Northern China.” In West et al. 1999.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stacey, Judith. 1983. Patriarchy and Socialist Revolution in China. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Stockard, Janice E. 1989. Daughters of the Canton Delta: Marriage Patterns and Economic Strategies in South China, 1860–1930. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stranahan, Patricia. 1983a. “Labor Heroines of Yan'an.” Modern China 9(2):228–52.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stranahan, Patricia. 1983b. Yan'an Women and the Communist Party. Berkeley: Institute of East Asian Studies, University of California.Google Scholar
Sun, Wanning. 2004. “Indoctrination, Fetishization, and Compassion: Media Constructions of the Migrant Woman.” In Gaetano and Jacka 2004.Google Scholar
Tan, Lin, and Short, Susan E.. 2004. “Living as Double Outsiders: Migrant Women's Experiences of Marriage in a County-Level City.” In Gaetano and Jacka 2004.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tan, Shen. 2000. “The Relationship Between Foreign Enterprises, Local Governments, and Women Migrant Workers in the Pearl River Delta.” In Rural Labor Flows in China, ed. West, Loraine A. and Yaohui, Zhao. Berkeley: Institute of East Asian Studies, University of California.Google Scholar
Tan, Shen. 2004. “Leaving Home and Coming Back: Experiences of Rural Migrant Women.” In J. Tao, Zheng, and Mow 2004.Google Scholar
Tang, Wenfang, and Parish, William L., eds. 2000. Chinese Urban Life Under Reform: The Changing Social Contract. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Tao, Chia-Lin Pao. 1994. “The Anti-Footbinding Movement in Late Ch'ing China: Indigenous Development and Western Influence.” Jindai Zhongguo funü shi yanjiu/Research on Women in Modern Chinese History, no. 2:141–78.Google Scholar
Tao, Jie, Zheng, Bijun, and Mow, Shirley L., eds. 2004. Holding Up Half the Sky: Chinese Women Past, Present, and Future. New York: Feminist Press.Google Scholar
Terrill, Ross. 1992. Madame Mao, the White-Boned Demon: A Biography of Madame Mao Zedong. New York: Simon and Schuster.Google Scholar
Yuan, Tien H.. 1985. “Provincial Fertility Trends and Patterns.” In Croll, Davin, and Kane 1985.Google Scholar
Yuan, Tien H.. 1987. “Abortion in China: Incidence and Implications.” Modern China 13(4):441–68.Google Scholar
Topley, Marjorie. 1975. “Marriage Resistance in Rural Kwangtung.” In M. Wolf and Witke 1975.Google Scholar
Tsai, Kellee S. 2000. “Banquet Banking: Gender and Rotating Savings and Credit Associations in South China.” China Quarterly, no. 161:142–70.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Unger, Jonathan. 2002. The Transformation of Rural China. Armonk, N.Y.: M. E. Sharpe.Google Scholar
Verschuur-Basse, Denyse. 1996. Chinese Women Speak. Trans. Elizabeth Rauch-Nolan. Westport, Conn. and London: Praeger.Google Scholar
Walker, Kathy Le Mons. 1978. “The Party and Peasant Women.” In Chinese Communists and Rural Society, 1927–1934, ed. Huang, Philip C. C., Bell, Lynda S., and Kathy Le, Mons Walker. Berkeley: Center for Chinese Studies, University of California.Google Scholar
Walker, Kathy Le Mons. 1993. “Economic Growth, Peasant Marginalization, and the Sexual Division of Labor in Early Twentieth-Century China.” Modern China 19(3):354–86.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Walker, Kathy Le Mons. 1999. Chinese Modernity and the Peasant Path: Semicolonialism in the Northern Yangzi Delta. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wang, Dazhong. 1997. “Some Problems Concerning the Sending of Prostitution Offenders to Be Educated Through Labor and Compelling Them to Undergo Joint Detention and Education.” In Jeffreys 1997b.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wang, Di. 2004. “‘Masters of Tea’: Teahouse Workers, Workplace Culture, and Gender Conflict in Wartime Chengdu.” Twentieth-Century China 29(2):89–136.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wang, Feng. 2000. “Gendered Migration and the Migration of Genders in Contemporary China.” In Entwisle and Henderson 2000.Google Scholar
Wang, Qi. 1999. “State-Society Relations and Women's Political Participation.” In West et al. 1999.Google Scholar
Wang, Qingshu. 2004. “The History and Current Status of Chinese Women's Participation in Politics.” In J. Tao, Zheng, and Mow 2004.Google Scholar
Wang, Xingjuan. 2004. “Domestic Violence in China.” In J. Tao, Zheng, and Mow 2004.Google Scholar
Wang, Zheng. 1997. “Maoism, Feminism, and the UN Conference on Women: Women's Studies Research in Contemporary China.” Journal of Women's History 8(4):126–53.Google Scholar
Wang, Zheng. 1999. Women in the Chinese Enlightenment: Oral and Textual Histories. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Wang, Zheng. 2001. “Call Me Qingnian but Not Funü: A Maoist Youth In Retrospect.” Feminist Studies 27(1):936.Google Scholar
Wang, Zheng. 2003. “Gender, Employment and Women's Resistance.” In Perry and Selden 2003.Google Scholar
Wasserstrom, Jeffrey. 1984. “Resistance to the One-Child Family.” Modern China 10(3):345–74.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wasserstrom, Jeffrey., ed. 2003. Twentieth-Century China: New Approaches. London and New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Watson, James L., and Evelyn, Rawski, eds. 1988. Death Ritual in Late Imperial and Modern China. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Watson, Rubie S. 1984. “Women's Property in Republican China: Rights and Practice.” Republican China 10(1)(A):112.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Watson, Rubie S. 1986. “The Named and the Nameless: Gender and Person in Chinese Society.” American Ethnologist 13(4):619–31.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Watson, Rubie S. 1991. “Wives, Concubines, and Maids: Servitude and Kinship in the Hong Kong Region, 19001940.” In R. Watson and Ebrey 1991.Google Scholar
Watson, Rubie S. 1994. “Girls' Houses and Working Women: Expressive Culture in the Pearl River Delta, 19001941.” In Jaschok and Miers 1994a.Google Scholar
Watson, Rubie S. 1996. “Chinese Bridal Laments: The Claims of a Dutiful Daughter.” In Harmony and Counterpoint: Ritual Music in Chinese Context, ed. Bell, Yung, Rawski, Evelyn S., and Watson, Rubie S.. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Watson, Rubie S., and Patricia, Buckley Ebrey, eds. 1991. Marriage and Inequality in Chinese Society. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Wesoky, Sharon. 2002. Chinese Feminism Faces Globalization. New York and London: Routledge.Google Scholar
West, Jackie, Minghua, Zhao, Xiangqun, Chang, and Yuan, Cheng, eds. 1999. Women of China: Economic and Social Transformation. New York: St. Martin's Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
White, Sydney. 1997. “Fame and Sacrifice: The Gendered Construction of Naxi Identities.” Modern China 23(3):298327.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
White, Tyrene. 1994. “The Origins of China's Birth Planning Policy.” In Gilmartin et al. 1994.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
White, Tyrene. 2003. “Domination, Resistance, and Accommodation in China's One-Child Campaign.” In Perry and Selden 2003.Google Scholar
Whyte, Martin King 1990. “Changes in Mate Choice in Chengdu.” In Chinese Society on the Eve of Tiananmen: The Impact of Reform, ed. Deborah, Davis and Vogel, Ezra F.. Cambridge, Mass.: Council on East Asian Studies, Harvard University.Google Scholar
Whyte, Martin King. 1993. “Wedding Behavior and Family Strategies in Chengdu.” In Davis and Harrell 1993.Google Scholar
Wyte, Martin King. 2000. “The Perils of Assessing Trends in Gender Inequality in China.” In Entwisle and Henderson 2000.Google Scholar
Whyte, Martin King, and Parish, William L.. 1984. Urban Life in Contemporary China. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Witke, Roxane. 1970. “Transformation of Attitudes Towards Women During the May Fourth Era of Modern China.” PhD diss., University of California, Berkeley.Google Scholar
Witke, Roxane. 1973a. “Mao Tse-Tung, Women, and Suicide.” In M. Young 1973.Google Scholar
Witke, Roxane. 1973b. “Woman as Politician in China of the 1920s.” In M. Young 1973.Google Scholar
Witke, Roxane. 1975. “Chiang Ch'ing's Coming of Age.” In M. Wolf and Witke 1975.Google Scholar
Witke, Roxane. 1977. Comrade Chiang Ch'ing. Boston and Toronto: Little, Brown.Google Scholar
Wolf, Arthur P. 1975. “The Women of Hai-Shan: A Demographic Portrait.” In M. Wolf and Witke 1975.Google Scholar
Wolf, Margery. 1968. House of Lim: A Study of a Chinese Farm Family. New York: Appleton.Google Scholar
Wolf, Margery. 1972. Women and the Family in Rural Taiwan. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wolf, Margery. 1975. “Women and Suicide in China.” In M. Wolf and Witke 1975.Google Scholar
Wolf, Margery. 1985. Revolution Postponed: Women in Contemporary China. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wolf, Margery. 1992. A Thrice-Told Tale: Feminism, Postmodernism, and Ethnographic Responsibility. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Wolf, Margery, and Roxane, Witke, eds. 1975. Women in Chinese Society. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Wong, Yuk-Lin Renita. 1997. “Dispersing the ‘Public’ and the ‘Private’: Gender and the State in the Birth Planning Policy of China.” Gender and Society 11(4):509–25.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Woo, Margaret Y. K. 1994. “Chinese Women Workers: The Delicate Balance Between Protection and Equality.” In Gilmartin et al. 1994.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Woo, Margaret Y. K. 2002. “Law and the Gendered Citizen.” In Goldman and Perry 2002.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Xia, Xiaohong. 2004. “New Meanings in a Classic: Different Interpretations of Ban Zhao and Her Admonitions for Women in the Late Qing Dynasty.” In J. Tao, Zheng, and Mow 2004.Google Scholar
Xie, Bingying. 2001. A Woman Soldier's Own Story: The Autobiography of Xie Bingying. Trans. Lily Chia Brissman and Barry Brissman. New York: Columbia University Press.Google Scholar
Xiong, Yu. 2004. “The Status of Chinese Women in Marriage and the Family.” In J. Tao, Zheng, and Mow 2004.Google Scholar
Xu, Feng. 2000. Women Migrant Workers in China's Economic Reform. New York: St. Martin's Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Xu, Xiaoqun. 1996. “The Discourse on Love, Marriage, and Sexuality in Post-Mao China: A Reading of the Journalistic Literature on Women.” positions: east asia cultures critique 4(2):381414.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yan, Hairong. 2003. “Spectralization of the Rural: Reinterpreting the Labor Mobility of Rural Young Women in Post-Mao China.” American Ethnologist 30(4):578–96.Google Scholar
Yan, Yunxiang. 2002. “Courtship, Love, and Premarital Sex in a North China Village.” China Journal, no. 48:2953.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yan, Yunxiang. 2003. Private Life Under Socialism: Love, Intimacy, and Family Change in a Chinese Village, 1949–1999. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yang, Mayfair Mei-Hui, ed. 1994. Gifts, Favors, and Banquets: The Art of Social Relationships in China. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Yang, Mayfair Mei-Hui, ed. 1999a. “From Gender Erasure to Gender Difference: State Feminism, Consumer Sexuality, and Women's Public Sphere in China.” In M. Yang 1999c.Google Scholar
Yang, Mayfair Mei-Hui, ed. 1999b. “Introduction.” In M. Yang 1999c.Google Scholar
Yang, Mayfair Mei-Hui, ed. 1999c. Spaces of Their Own: Women's Public Sphere in Transnational China. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.Google Scholar
Yang, Rae. 1997. Spider Eaters. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Yang, Xiushi. 2000. “Interconnections among Gender, Work, and Migration: Evidence from Zhejiang Province.” In Entwisle and Henderson 2000.Google Scholar
Ye, Weili. 1994. “‘Nüliuxuesheng’: The Story of American-Educated Chinese Women, 1880s–1920s.” Modern China 20(3):315–46.Google Scholar
Ye, Weili. 2001. Seeking Modernity in China's Name: Chinese Students in the United States, 1900–1927. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Ye, Xiaoqing. 1999. “Commercialization and Prostitution in Nineteenth Century Shanghai.” In Finnane and McLaren 1999.Google Scholar
Yeh, Catherine Vance. 1998. “Reinventing Ritual: Late Qing Handbooks for Proper Customer Behavior in Shanghai Courtesan Houses.” Late Imperial China 19(2):163.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Young, Helen Praeger. 2001. Choosing Revolution: Chinese Women Soldiers on the Long March. Urbana: University of Illinois Press.Google Scholar
Young, Marilyn B., ed. 1973. Women in China: Studies in Social Change and Feminism. Ann Arbor: Center for Chinese Studies, University of Michigan.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Young, Marilyn B., ed. 1989. “Chicken Little in China: Women After the Cultural Revolution.” In Kruks, Rapp, and Young 1989. Reprinted in Dirlik and Meisner 1989.Google Scholar
Zamperini, Paola. 2003. “On Their Dress They Wore a Body: Fashion and Identity in Late Qing Shanghai.” positions: east asia cultures critique 11(2):301–30.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zang, Xiaowei. 1999. “Family, Kinship, Marriage, and Sexuality.” In Gamer 1999.Google Scholar
Zarrow, Peter. 1988. “He Zhen and Anarcho-Feminism in China.” Journal of Asian Studies 47(4):796813.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zarrow, Peter. 1990. Anarchism and Chinese Political Culture. New York: Columbia University Press.Google Scholar
Zeng, Jifen. 1993. Testimony of a Confucian Woman: The Autobiography of Mrs. Nie Zeng Jifen, 1852–1942. Athens: University of Georgia Press.Google Scholar
Zhang, Heather Xiaoquan. 1999. “Understanding Changes in Women's Status in the Context of the Recent Rural Reform.” In West et al. 1999.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zhang, Li. 2000. “The Interplay of Gender, Space, and Work in China's Floating Population.” In Entwisle and Henderson 2000.Google Scholar
Zhang, Li. 2001. Strangers in the City: Reconfigurations of Space, Power, and Social Networks Within China's Floating Population. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Zhang, Mei. 1999. “Rural Privatisation and Women's Labour: Property Rights and Gender Concepts in Inner Mongolia and Xinjiang.” In West et al. 1999.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zhang, Naihua. 2001. “Searching for ‘Authentic’ NGOs: The NGO Discourse and Women's Organizations in China.” In Hsiung, Jaschok, and Milwertz 2001.Google Scholar
Zhang, Yanshang. 1997. “A Series of Psychological Profiles of Prostitute Clients.” In Jeffreys 1997b.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zhang, Yingjin. 1994. “Engendering Chinese Filmic Discourse of the 1930s: Configurations of Modern Women in Shanghai in Three Silent Films.” positions: east asia cultures critique 2(3):603–28.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zhang, Yingjin. 1996. The City in Modern Chinese Literature and Film: Configurations of Space, Time, and Gender. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Zhao, Liming. 2004. “The Women's Script of Jiangyong: An Invention of Chinese Women.” In J. Tao, Zheng, and Mow 2004.Google Scholar
Zhao, Minghua. 1999. “From Weaving Stars to Bitter Flowers: Tradition, Reform, and Their Implications for Women Textile Workers.” In West et al. 1999.Google Scholar
Zhao, Minghua, and Jackie, West. 1999. “State and Economy in the Making of Women's Lives: An Introduction.” In West et al. 1999.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zheng, Tiantian. 2004. “From Peasant Women to Bar Hostesses: Gender and Modernity in Post-Mao Dalian.” In Gaetano and Jacka 2004.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zhong, Xueping, Wang, Zheng, and Bai, Di. 2001. Some of Us: Chinese Women Growing Up in the Mao Era. New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers University Press.Google Scholar
Zhou, Kate Xiao. 1996. How the Farmers Changed China: Power of the People. Boulder, Colo.: Westview.Google Scholar
Zito, Angela, and Barlow, Tani E., eds. 1994. Body, Subject, and Power in China. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar