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Joan Judge

Associate Professor of Humanities and Women’s Studies

 

Degrees:

BA University of Alberta
MA Institut d’Études Politiques de Paris
MA Columbia University
PhD Columbia University


Home Unit: Division of Humanities
Office Address: 144 Founders College
Phone: 416-736-2100 x 20593
Email Address: judge@yorku.ca

Research Interests:

Chinese women’s history and print culture

Teaching Areas:  

Modern Chinese cultural history and women’s history, Print Culture East and West

Awards/Grants:

2002-03   Chiang Ching-kuo Foundation for International Exchange,

Post-doctoral Research Grant

2002-03   Visitor, School of Historical Studies, Institute for Advanced Study

2001-02  Frederick Burkhardt Residential Fellowship for Recently Tenured Scholars, University of California President’s Research Fellowship in the Humanities (declined)

2001-02  American Association of University of Women, Post-Doctoral Fellowship (declined)

1998-99 ACLS/SSRC International Postdoctoral Fellowship

1996-97  Japan Foundation Fellowship, Institute for Research in the Humanities, Kyoto University, Kyoto Japan

1996-97  ACLS/Chiang Ching-kuo Foundation Fellowship (declined)

1992-93  Charlotte W. Newcombe Doctoral Dissertation Fellowship, Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation

1991-92  V. K. Wellington Koo Fellowship, Columbia University

1990-91  Committee for Scholarly Communication with the People’s Republic of China, Doctoral Research Scholarship

 

 

Research Publications:

The Precious Raft of History: China’s Woman Question and the Politics of Time at the Turn of the Twentieth Century. Stanford University Press (forthcoming).

Print and Politics: ‘Shibao’and the Culture of Reform in Late Qing China. Stanford University Press (December 1996).

 

“The Power of Print? Print Capitalism and the News Media in Late Qing and Republican China.” Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies 66:1 (June 2006), 233-54.

“Between Nei and Wai: Chinese Female Students in Japan in the Early Twentieth Century.” In Gender in Motion: Divisions of Labor and Cultural Change in Late Imperial and Modern China, ed. Bryna Goodman and Wendy Larson (Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield, 2005), 121-43.

“Blended Wish Images: Chinese and Western Exemplary Women at the Turn of the Twentieth Century.” In Beyond Tradition and Modernity: Gender, Genre, and Cosmopolitanism in Late Qing China, eds. Grace S. Fong, Nanxiu Qian, and Harriet T. Zurndorfer (Leiden: Brill, 2004), 102-35.

“Beyond Nationalism: Gender and the Chinese Student Experience in Japan in the Early 20th Century.” In Wusheng zhi sheng (III): Jindai Zhongguo de funü guojia (Voices Amid Silence [III]: Women and Culture in Modern China [1600-1950]), ed. Lo Chui-jung (Taipei: Institute for Modern History, Academia Sinica, 2003), 359-93.

“The Ideology of ‘Good Wives and Wise Mothers’: Meiji Japan and the Formulation of Feminine Modernity in Late Qing China.” In Sagacious Monks and Bloodthirsty Warriors: Chinese Views of Japan in the Ming-Qing Period, ed. Joshua A. Fogel (EastBridge, 2002), 218-48.

“Citizens or Mothers of Citizens?: Gender and the Meaning of Modern Chinese Citizenship.” In Citizenship in Modern China, ed. Elizabeth Perry and Merle Goldman (Cambridge, MA: Harvard Contemporary China Series, 2002), 23-43.

“Re-forming the Feminine: Female Literacy and the Legacy of 1898.” In The Historical Legacies of the 1898 Reforms in China, ed. Rebecca Karl and Peter Zarrow (Cambridge, MA: Harvard East Asian Center,

2002), 158-79.

“Talent, Virtue, and the Nation: Chinese Nationalism and Female Subjectivities in the Early-Twentieth Century.” American Historical Review 106.2 (June 2001), 765-803.

 

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