MCLC: JBACS 9.1

MCLC LIST denton.2 at osu.edu
Thu Jan 31 09:35:10 EST 2019


MCLC LIST
JBACS 9.1
We are pleased to present issue 9.1 of the Journal of the British Association for Chinese Studies.
This issue focuses on Chinese female (academic) identities in a variety of different contexts starting with a though provoking essay by Yan Wu (University of Swansea) on the experience of being a Chinese female academic in the UK.
Li Meng (Hong Kong Polytechnic University) follows by asking in what ways well-educated Chinese women are stigmatised in popular culture.  Li argues that it is the two motifs of estrangement and escape that reflect how Chinese intellectual women are represented and rendered in the Chinese popular cultural context with frequent animosity, prejudice and discrimination. 
Xie Kailing (University of Warwick) investigates how gender affects the career and reproductive choices of China’s well-educated daughters, particularly those working in academia. Drawing on a sub-set of a larger data sample, Xie analyses how the existing socio-political discourse constructs a naturalised female subject bound by reproductive norms and the implication of this for women’s careers.
Zou Yejun (King’s College London) takes a comparative and historical view by examining the practicality of socialist feminism as an alternative model for contemporary Chinese feminism through an analysis of the depiction of women in the literary works of Ding Ling and Christa Wolf. Zou offers insights into the way their writings negotiate women’s concern with the official narrative of life in socialist states and the extent to which these texts illuminate alternative Chinese feminist approaches in a contemporary context.
Denise Kwan (University of Westminster) returns to the UK context in her examination of the ways that practices of dressing and adornment are employed to manage the otherness experienced by second generation British Chinese women. Employing a creative ethnographic methodology with a focus on material practices, her research vividly demonstrates the significance of everyday actions and objects in the negotiation of power in the formation of ethnic women’s identities.
The first issue of 2019 clearly reflects our mission as an open access, free for all, forward looking academic journal. As a journal we are committed to promoting Chinese Studies as a distinct discipline, providing dedicated editorial support for PhDs and early career researchers. Gender and ethnic equality in Chinese studies is of particular concern to us. Come and join us in a round table discussion on new models of open access publishing in Asian Studies at the AAS in Denver on Saturday 23 March.
Finally, a big shout out to Sarah Dauncey for her many years of selfless dedication to JBACS and a warm welcome to Heather Inwood who has now joined Gerda Wielander as co-editor of JBACS.
We hope you enjoy the new issue and hope it will inspire you to submit your next research article to us.
Gerda Wielander <G.Wielander at westminster.ac.uk>and Heather Inwood
by denton.2 at osu.edu on January 31, 2019
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