Lexington Books
Pages: 202
Trim: 6 x 7¾
978-1-7936-0814-7 • Hardback • November 2021 • $100.00 • (£77.00)
978-1-7936-0815-4 • eBook • November 2021 • $45.00 • (£35.00)
Aihua Zhang is assistant professor in history at the Gardner–Webb University.
List of Figures
List of Tables
Introduction
Chapter One: Revisiting the New Woman: Bringing Christian Women into Discussion
Chapter Two: Materializing the Christian Faith
Chapter Three: Sponsoring Constructive Recreation and Launching Reforms in the Domestic Sphere
Chapter Four: Allying for Diverse Modernization Experiments and Extensive Outreach
Conclusion
Epilogue
Index
Bibliography
About the Author
Better Homes and Baby Welfare, camping trips, the establishment of children’s playgrounds, the promotion of education and constructive recreation, these select elements capture the progressive aims and ambitious scope of the YWCA’s programs in early 20th c. Beijing. Aihua Zhang shows us how the Chinese and foreign women of the Beijing YWCA endeavored to expand upon the social service imperatives of the Christian Social Gospel to promote feminism, nationalism, family reform, and more to develop China as a modern, democratic nation.
— Peter J. Carroll, Northwestern University
In the first close examination of the Beijing YWCA, Aihua Zhang complicates and enriches our understanding of Chinese “New Women” in the Republican era and ways in which Chinese women engaged with the project of modernity, along with exploring cultural transfer and adaptation. This is an important contribution to scholarship on Chinese Christianity, on transnational women’s organizations, and on the wide range of movements which could be considered “feminist” in Republican China.
— Connie Shemo, State University of New York at Plattsburgh