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Chinese Studies in History
Editor: Q. Edward Wang, Rowan University (wangq@rowan.edu) Editor Emerita: Li Yu-ning, St. John's University
Chinese Studies in History makes noteworthy works and important trends of historical study in the Chinese-speaking world available to English-language readers. Thematic issues present original papers or articles from academic journals and anthologies that have been selected for translation because of their excellence, interest, and contribution to scholarship on the topic. Topical coverage ranges over all periods and subfields of Chinese and East Asian history as well as more general theoretical and historiographical questions of interest to historians of many specialties. Each issue includes a substantive introduction by the editor or specialist guest editor. The complete digital archives of Chinese Studies in History beginning with Volume 1 (1967) are available free of charge to current institutional subscribers for the life of the paid subscription. Volumes 1-34 (1967-2000) are also included in the Asian Studies digital archive collection available for one-time purchase to non-subscribers. "Critically important ... for any research library with an interest in Chinese affairs." -Magazines for Libraries
Abstracting and Indexing: America: History and Life, Arts and Humanities Citation Index, Bibliography of Asian Studies Online, Current Contents/Arts and Humanities, Historical Abstracts, MLA International Bibliography, and Scopus.
Click here for information on online access to Chinese Studies in History.Click here to view a sample issue online.
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0009-4633
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Vol. 46 (Fall 2012 - Summer 2013)
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4
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U.S. Individual Subscription Rate: $149.00 |
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U.S. Institutional Subscription Rate: $1040.00 |
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Foreign Individual Subscription Rate: $207.00 |
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Foreign Institutional Subscription Rate: $1124.00 |
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Editorial Board
Prasenjit Duara, National University of Singapore; Nicola Di Cosmo, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton; Mark Elliott, Harvard University; Benjamin Elman, Princeton University; Ko-wu (Max) Huang, Modern History Institute, Academia Sinica; Peng Jiang, World History Institute, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences; Wei-ying Ku, National Taiwan University; Li Yu-ning, St. John's University; Zhitian Luo, Peking University; Michael Nylan, University of California, Berkeley; Dominic Sachsenmaier, Jacobs University; Fan-sen Wang, Institute of History and Philology, Academia Sinica; Wen-hsin Yeh, University of California, Berkeley; Peter Zarrow, Modern History Institute, Academia Sinica; Zhenghui Zhu, East China Normal University
Table of Contents
Fall 2012
Vol.
46
No.
1
| The 1911 Revolution and the New Cultural History | | Editor's Introduction | | Q. EDWARD WANG | 3 | | Speech Activities and Social Mobilization | | The Sichuan Railway Protection Movement of the Late Qing Dynasty | | LIU SHILONG | 6 | | Subversive Laughter | | Carnival in the 1911 Revolution | | ZHANG SHIYING | 30 | | Marking the Centenary of the 1911 Revolution | | Martyrs' Shrines and the Memory of the 1911 Revolution During the Republican Era | | WANG NAN AND CHEN YUNQIAN | 71 |
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