Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 424
Trim: 6⅜ x 9½
978-1-4422-1568-9 • Hardback • September 2018 • $128.00 • (£98.00)
978-1-4422-1569-6 • Paperback • September 2018 • $45.00 • (£35.00)
978-1-4422-1570-2 • eBook • September 2018 • $42.50 • (£35.00)
Gail Hershatter is Distinguished Professor of History at the University of California, Santa Cruz. Her books include The Gender of Memory: Rural Women and China’s Collective Past and Women in China’s Long Twentieth Century.
List of Photos
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1 The Gendered Labor of Empire, 1800–1840
2 Disturbances, 1840–1900
3 Revolutionary Currents, 1895–1912
4 Imagined Futures, 1912–27
5 Regulatory Regimes, 1928–37
6 Wartime Women, 1928–41
7 Wartime Women, 1935–49
8 The Socialist Construction of Women, 1949–78
9 Capitalized Women, 1978–
Glossary
Notes
Works Cited
Index
About the Author
With refreshing perspective, Hershatter brings to life the stories of those women . . . who were usually in the footnotes of grand writings of Chinese history. . . . Despite the difficulty of obtaining historical materials, Hershatter does a remarkable job reconstructing history.— Los Angeles Review of Books
It takes rare academic courage and intellectual breadth to dare to write a book such as this. Gail Hershatter's narrative focus on women and gender alters what we thought we knew about modern Chinese history; her case for the centrality of women's labor to the past and to the present—Chinese or otherwise is compelling, persuasive, irrefutable. A teachable text, an eminently readable book, a critical work for our fraught global times.
— Rebecca E. Karl, New York University
Women and China’s Revolutions asks one of the most important questions in the study of gender: how does women’s history intersect with and alter our understanding of Big History? In answering this question, Hershatter draws on decades of her own pathbreaking research and synthesizes a vast range of literatures and approaches. Highly engaging and richly illustrated, this book brings together rural and urban developments and social and cultural methodologies in ways that are both illuminating and unprecedented.
— Joan Judge, York University
Based on exhaustive reading of the secondary literature, and on her own deep acquaintance with the history of women and gender in modern China, Hershatter traces women’s lives over the two centuries since 1800 through a dual spotlight on women’s labor and ‘Woman’ as symbol of big debates about national strengthening and social transformation. Hershatter’s analysis demonstrates how a focus on women and gender raises new questions about mainstream narratives of China’s modern history. Beautifully and accessibly written, there is no other volume to compete with this; it should become essential reading for all students of modern China.
— Harriet Evans, University of Westminster
This innovative and challenging book looks anew at China since 1800 through the lens of gender—and gives us not just one but many new perspectives. It is clear and comprehensive enough to use as a core book in an introductory class, and probing enough to make established scholars reconsider long-held opinions. From warfare to popular culture, economics to literature, family life to mass movements—choose your topic, and Gail Hershatter will help you reframe it in stimulating ways.
— Kenneth Pomeranz, University of Chicago
traces women’s role in Chinese history from 1800 to the present
introduces modern Chinese history through the lens of gender
explores women’s role in revolution, socialist construction, and post-Mao economic development
includes key primary sources for discussion
written by the leading scholar of women and gender in China