Journal of American-East Asian Relations (ISSN 1058-3947)
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Publication Update as of April 3, 2010
Please renew, we’re back on schedule!
A Note to All Institutional Subscribers: All delayed issues of JAEAR have been published: Vol. 12 (2003); Vol. 13 (2004-2006); Vol. 14 (2007); and Vol. 15 (2008). Vol. 16, No. 4 (Winter 2009) is being mailed. Please note that Vol. 13 is associated with the years 2004-2006 (the only variation). We strongly suggest that you renew your subscriptions to the current Vol. 16. JAEAR will have an online as well as print editions in 2010, and all subscriptions renewed to Vol. 16 are considered standing orders for Vol. 17, which will be billed to you through your agents or directly if you do not subscribe through one.
All back volumes from Vol. 9 are available. For inquiries, please contact us at imppub@aol.com.
"The Journal of American-East Asian Relations was started in the early 1990s, coinciding with what has amounted to a historiographic revolution. During the last twenty years, historians have vigorously promoted newer, broader ways of looking at the past in such frameworks as world history, global history, and transnational history. The Journal has played an important role in this revolution and is committed to further promoting it."—Akira Iriye, Harvard University, January 2009
Vol. 12 (Spring-Summer 2003)
Evan N. Dawley, “Changing Minds: American Missionaries, Chinese Intellectuals, and Cultural Internationalism, 1919–1921” / Tae Yang Kwak, “The Nixon Doctrine and the Yusin Reforms: American Foreign Policy, the Vietnam War, and the Rise of Authoritarianism in Korea, 1968–1973” / Yuji Tosaka, “The Discourse of Anti-Americanism and Hollywood Movies: Film Import Controls in Japan, 1937–1941” / Meghan Nealis, “America in Indochina, 1957–1963: British Perceptions, Hopes, and Strategy” / Robert S. La Forte, “Resistance in Japanese Prison Camps during World War II” / Michael A. Schneider, “The Book Review in an Age of e-Politics” (Review Essay)
Vol. 12 (Fall-Winter 2003)
Wang Guanhua, “‘Friendship First’: China’s Sports Diplomacy during the Cold War” / Tristan Grunow, “A Reexamination of the “Shock of Hiroshima”: The Japanese Bomb Projects and the Surrender Decision” / Qian Jun, “The Mad Chinese Man in America: Zhang Xiguo’s ‘Wife Killing’” /
Christopher Gerteis, “Labor’s Cold Warriors: The American Federation of Labor and “Free Trade Unionism” in Cold War Japan” / Qin Yucheng, “A Century-old “Puzzle”: The Six Companies’ Role in Chinese Labor Importation in the Nineteenth Century”
Vol. 13 (2004-2006)
Theme Volume:
Christianity as an Issue in the History of U.S.-China Relations
Edited by Dong Wang (Paul Sorrell and Tom Wells. Managing Editors)
Daniel H. Bays, ”Study of the History of Christianity in U.S.-China Relations: A New Departure?” / Dong Wang, “Introduction: Christianity as an Issue in the History of U.S.-China Relations” / Xu Yihua,
“Union Theological Seminary and the Christian Church in China” / Arthur Lewis Rosenbaum, “Christianity, Academics, and National Salvation in China: Yenching University, 1924-1949” / Charles A. Keller, “The Christian Student Movement, YMCAs, and Transnationalism in Republican China” / Dong Wang, “Portraying Chinese Christianity: The American Press and U.S.-China Relations since the 1920s” / Timothy Tseng, “Protestantism in Twentieth-Century Chinese America: The Impact of Transnationalism on the Chinese Diaspora” / Ian Welch, “Our Neighbors but Not Our Countrymen”: Christianity and the Chinese in Nineteenth-Century Victoria (Australia) and California”
Vol. 14 (2007)
Theme Volume:
Yenching University and Sino-American Interactions, 1919-1952
Edited by Arthur Lewis Rosenbaum
Arthur Lewis Rosenbaum, “Introduction: Looking Back at Yenching” / Arthur Lewis Rosenbaum, “Yenching University and Sino-American Interactions, 1919-1952” / John Israel, “The Beida‑Tsinghua Connection: Yenching in the World of Beijing's Elite Universities” / Liu Haiyan ,“Intellectual Group under the Influence of Two Cultures: A Historical Analysis of the Yenching Graduates in China” / Chen-main Wang, “Were Christian Members of the Yenching Faculty Unique?: An Examination of the Life Fellowship Movement, 1919‑1931” / Shi Jinghuan, “Cultural Mixture: Yenching Students and Missionary Christianity” / Carolyn Wakeman, “Beyond Gentility: The Mission of Women Educators at Yenching” / Philip West, “Reframing the Yenching Story”
Vol. 15 (2008)
Theme Volume:
Cold War Across the Pacific
Part I. “The United States and Japan: Shocks and Adjustments”
Edited by Roger Dingman
Robert D. Eldridge, “Prelude to Okinawa: Nuclear Agreements and the Return of the Ogasawara Islands to Japan” / Kusunoki Ayako, “The Sato Cabinet and the Making of Japan's Non-Nuclear Policy” / Kotani Tetsuo, “Presence and Credibility: Homeporting the USS Midway at Yokosuka” / James E. Auer, “Engaging Japan: An American Naval Officer's Relationship with Japan during the Cold War”
Part II. “The United States and China: New Evidence and Interpretations”
Edited by Xia Yafeng
Xia Yafeng, “Myth or Reality: Factional Politics, U.S.-China Relations, and Mao Zedong's Mentality in His Sunset Years, 1972-1976” / Midori Yoshii, “The Creation of the ‘Shock Myth’ and Japan's Reactions to U.S.-China Rapprochement, 1971-1972”/ Tao Peng, “China’s Changing Japan Policy in the Late 1960s and Early 1970s and the Impact on Relations with the United States” / Jean Kang, “Maintaining the Status Quo: U.S. Response to Chinese Nationalist Mainland Recovery Efforts, 1961–1963
Vol. 16, Nos. 1-2 (Spring-Summer 2009)
Theme Issue
From “Tribute System” to “Peaceful Rise”: American Historians, Political Scientists, and Policy Analysts Discuss China’s Foreign Relations
Edited by John E. Wills, Jr.
John E. Wills, Jr., “Introduction” / Michael D. Swaine, “The Policy Analyst and Historical Perspectives: Notes of a Practitioner” / John E. Wills, Jr., “How Many Asymmetries?: Continuities, Transformations, and Puzzles in the Study of Chinese Foreign Relations” / Alice Lyman Miller, “Some Things We Used to Know about China’s Past and Present (But Now, Not So Much)” / James L. Hevia, “Tribute, Asymmetry and Imperial Formations; Rethinking Relations of Power in East Asia” / Peter C. Perdue, “China and Other Colonial Empires” / Brantly Womack, “Recognition, Deference, and Respect: Generalizing the Lessons of an Asymmetric Asian Order” / Harry Harding, “How the Past Shapes the Present: Five Ways in Which History Affects China’s Contemporary Foreign Relations”
Vol. 16, No. 3 (Fall 2009)
Theme Section
Race in American-East Asian Relations
Edited by K. Scott Wong
K. Scott Wong, “Introduction: Transnationalism, Race, and the Links between Asian and Asian American Studies” / Madeline Y. Hsu, “Befriending the ‘Yellow Peril’: Chinese Students and Intellectuals and the Liberalization of U.S. Immigration Laws, 1950-1965” / Catherine Ceniza Choy, “Race at the Center: The History of American Cold War Asian Adoption” / Eiichiro Azuma, “Brokering Race, Culture, and Citizenship: Japanese Americans in Occupied Japan and Postwar National Inclusion.
Cold War Across the Pacific (Continued)
Shiwei Chen, “History of Three Mobilizations: A Reexamination of the Chinese Biological Warfare Allegations against the United States in the Korean War”
Vol. 16, No. 4 (Winter 2009)
Theme Issue
Framing China
Edited by Charles W. Hayford
Framing China: An Introduction
Charles W. Hayford
Articles
To Educate China in the Humanities and Produce China Knowledge in the United States: The Founding of the Harvard-Yenching Institute, 1924-1928
Shuhua Fan
China by the Book: China Hands and China Stories 1848-1949
Charles W. Hayford
Speaking about China, Learning from China: Amateur China Experts in 1970s America
Sigrid Schmalzer