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ix | |
Preface |
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x | |
Acknowledgments |
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xii | |
Introduction: Postcolonial Feminism and China |
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1 | (13) |
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Significance: Binaries, Genders, and Colonialism |
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1 | (3) |
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Background: China and Chinese in Postcolonial Feminist Perspectives |
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4 | (2) |
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Theme: Self-Orientalism and Self-Feminization as a Practice of Globalization |
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6 | (3) |
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Topics: Leaders, Citizens, Professionals, and Their Strategic Femininity |
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9 | (3) |
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12 | (2) |
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1 Becoming China: Feminine Sovereignty in the Beginning of Modern Time |
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14 | (26) |
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Sovereignty as Gendered Relation |
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14 | (2) |
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Pre-sovereign China: Territory Unbounded, Indefensible, and Reimagined |
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16 | (4) |
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Chinas Way to the Sovereign World: A Failing Attempt to Rival |
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20 | (5) |
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Chinese Sovereignty during World War II: Clutching Alliance, Practicing Exclusion |
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25 | (4) |
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Sovereign China as an "Other" for the United States: To Care or Not to Care |
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29 | (5) |
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Feminine Sovereignty and Masculine Sovereignty |
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34 | (4) |
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38 | (2) |
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2 The Eros of Foreign Policy: Madame Chiang Kai-shek during World War II |
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40 | (23) |
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40 | (1) |
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Madame Chiang in the United States |
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41 | (2) |
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43 | (2) |
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45 | (1) |
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46 | (2) |
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48 | (2) |
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The Symbol of Common Cause |
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50 | (2) |
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52 | (6) |
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Reactions of the Congressmen |
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58 | (1) |
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59 | (4) |
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3 An Exotic City: A Relational Theory of Gender as Social Site |
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63 | (18) |
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63 | (2) |
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Expanding the Horizon of Critical International Relations |
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65 | (2) |
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Ambivalence between Seduction and Modernity |
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67 | (3) |
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Cheongsam and the Identity of Shanghai |
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70 | (3) |
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Cheongsam as a Practice of Shanghai |
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73 | (3) |
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Self-Romanticizing in International Relations Theory |
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76 | (4) |
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An Unassertive but Self-Content Way |
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80 | (1) |
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4 Navigating Globalization: Femininity, In-betweenness, and Emancipation |
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81 | (22) |
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Approaching the Binary through Professional Femininity |
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81 | (2) |
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Practicing Self-Feminizing by Taiwanese Financial Controllers |
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83 | (2) |
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Professional Women in Postcolonial Taiwan |
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85 | (5) |
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Self-Feminizing as Relating to Both Sides |
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90 | (4) |
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Feelings for the Business |
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94 | (2) |
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Illustration: International Relations of Taiwan |
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96 | (4) |
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Emancipation: How Plausible? |
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100 | (3) |
Conclusion: A Revisionist Engendering? |
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103 | (2) |
References |
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105 | (19) |
Index |
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124 | |