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A widespread conviction in the need to rescue Chinas children took hold in the early twentieth century. Amid political upheaval and natural disasters, neglected or abandoned children became a humanitarian focal point for Sino-Western cooperation and intervention in family life. Chinese academics and officials sought new scientific measures, educational institutions, and social reforms to improve childrens welfare. Successive regimes encouraged teachers to shape children into Qing subjects, Nationalist citizens, or Communist comrades. In Raising Chinas Revolutionaries, Margaret Mih Tillman offers a novel perspective on the political and scientific dimensions of experiments with early childhood education from the early Republican period through the first decade of the Peoples Republic. She traces transnational advocacy for child welfare and education, examining Christian missionaries, philanthropists, and the role of international relief during World War II. Tillman provides in-depth analysis of similarities and differences between Nationalist and Communist policy and cultural notions of childhood. While both Nationalist and Communist regimes drew on preschool institutions to mobilize the workforce and shape childrens political subjectivity, the Communist regime rejected the Nationalists commitment to the modern, bourgeois family. With new insights into the roles of experts, the cultural politics of fundraising, and child welfare as a form of international exchange, Raising Chinas Revolutionaries is an important work of institutional and transnational history that illuminates the evolution of modern concepts of childhood in China.
- Format: Inbunden
- ISBN: 9780231185585
- Språk: Engelska
- Antal sidor: 368
- Utgivningsdatum: 2018-10-02
- Förlag: Columbia University Press