Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Fw: H-ASIA: "East Asian Studies Dissertation Reviews" - Invitation to AAS/Hawaii Info Session

----- Original Message -----
From: "Andrew Field" <shanghaidrew@GMAIL.COM>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Wednesday, February 09, 2011 1:58 PM
Subject: H-ASIA: "East Asian Studies Dissertation Reviews" - Invitation to
AAS/Hawaii Info Session


H-ASIA
Feb 9 2011

"East Asian Studies Dissertation Reviews" - Invitation to AAS/Hawaii
Info Session
*************************************
From: Thomas S. Mullaney <tsmullaney@stanford.edu>

Dear Colleagues and Students,

I am writing to introduce a new electronic resource that features non-
critical, author-permitted reviews of recently defended dissertations
in the field of Chinese history. Fourteen reviews have been posted
thus far, and are available at http://
dissertationreviews.wordpress.com (a complete list of the reviews,
authors, and reviewers is included below).

The site is currently geared towards Chinese history, but is in the
process of expanding. At present, Nancy Abelmann (UIUC - Anthropology,
Asian-American Studies, EALC) is working on the first pilot extension
into Korean social science, with six reviews already in the pipeline.
We are also in conversation with scholars interested in developing a
Japan studies site. With these expansions in mind, the current name
("Chinese History Dissertation Reviews") will soon change to "East
Asian Studies Dissertation Reviews."

Barely in its fourth month, the site has already been viewed 13,000
times, and has expanded to include reviewers and reviewees from
Columbia, Cornell, Georgia Southern, Guilford, Harvard, Johns Hopkins,
Kansas State, La Trobe University, Marmara University (Turkey),
Middlebury, MIT, NYU, Princeton, Simon Fraser, Stanford, Sun Yat-sen
University, UC Berkeley, UC Irvine, UCSD, University of British
Columbia, University of Colorado, University of Illinois, University
of Michigan, University of Minnesota, University of Oregon, University
of Toronto, and Yale, among others.

In an effort to develop this resource further, and to discuss the
expansion of the site beyond History, and the development of parallel
sites for Japan Studies and Korea Studies, we will be holding an
informational session at the Association for Asian Studies Annual
Meeting in Hawaii. The meeting information is as follows:

Saturday, April 2
12:00-1:30pm
Main Conference Center (Hawaii Convention Center/1801 Kalakaua Avenue)
Room 305A

We would be grateful if you would spread the word to any China, Japan,
or Korea studies colleagues or students who might be interested, and
we hope to see you in Hawaii!

Happy Year of the Rabbit,

Tom Mullaney, Stanford University
Nancy Abelmann, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Gina Russo, Stanford University

LIST OF REVIEWS THUS FAR

Buddhist Empires: Saṃgha-State Relations in Tenth-Century China. By
BENJAMIN BROSE (Review by Nicolas Tackett)

Yudahua: The Growth of An Industrial Enterprise in Modern China
1890-1957. By JUANJUAN PENG (Review by George Zhijian Qiao)

Fascism, Cultural Revolution, and National Sovereignty in 1930s China.
By MARGARET CLINTON. (Review by Kristin Mulready-Stone)

"Give Me a Day, and I Will Give You the World": Chinese Fiction
Periodicals in Global Context, 1900-1910. By DUN WANG. (Review by Yvon
Wang).

Organizing Shanghai's Youth: Communist, Nationalist, and
Collaborationist Strategies, 1920-1942. By KRISTIN MULREADY-STONE
(Review by Maggie Clinton)

Becoming Faithful: Christianity, Literacy, and Female Consciousness in
Northeast China, 1830-1930. By JI LI (Review by Brooks Jessup)

Marginal Constituencies: Qing Borderland Policies and Vernacular
Histories of Five Tribes on the Sino-Russian Frontier. By LORETTA
EUMIE KIM (Review by Eric Vanden Bussche)

On the Run: Women, City, and the Law in Beijing, 1937-1949. By ZHAO MA
(Review by Nicole Barnes)

Saintly Brokers: Uyghur Muslims, Trade, and the Making of Qing Central
Asia, 1696-1814. By KWANGMIN KIM (Review by Loretta Kim)

International and Wartime Origins of the Propaganda State: The Motion
Picture in China, 1897-1955. By MATTHEW DAVID JOHNSON (Review by Kevin
Carrico)

Stretching the Skin of the Nation: Chinese Intellectuals, the State,
and the Frontiers in the Nanjing Decade (1927-1937). (Author: ZHIHONG
CHEN | Reviewer: James Leibold)

Gu Hongming and the Re-invention of Chinese Civilization. (Author:
CHUNMEI DU | Reviewer: Hyungju Hur)

Law and Sensibility of Empire in the Making of Modern China,
1750-1900. (Author: LI CHEN | Reviewer: David Luesink)

Crossing the Urban-Rural Divide in Twentieth Century China. (Author:
JEREMY BROWN | Reviewer: Christopher Leighton)

-----
Thomas S. Mullaney
Assistant Professor
Department of History
Stanford University

Department Page:
http://www.stanford.edu/dept/history/people/mullaney_thomas.html
Chinese History Dissertation Reviews:
http://dissertationreviews.wordpress.com

[On Leave 2010-11]

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