Page 9 - Chinese Woman Living and Working
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Contributors
Stephanie Hemelryk Donald is Associate Professor and Head of Film and
Television at the Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane. She has edited Media
in China: Content, Consumption, and Crisis (Curzon 2001) (with Michael Keane); Picturing
Power in the People’s Republic of China: Posters of the Cultural Revolution (1999) (with
Harriet Evans); and Belief in China; Art and Politics, Deities and Mortality (1996) (with
Robert Benewick). She has also authored the Global Media Atlas (2001), The State of
China Atlas (1999), and Public Secrets, Public Spaces; Cinema and Civility in China (2000).
Louise Edwards teaches Chinese and Asian Studies at the Australian National
University, Canberra. She is PhD graduate from Griffith University; her publications
include Men and Women in Qing China (E.J.Brill 1994, University of Hawaii, 2001),
Censored by Confucius (M.E.Sharpe, 1996) (with Kam Louie) and Women in Asia: Tradition,
Modernity and Globalisa tion (Allen & Unwin, University of Michigan Press, 2000) (with
Mina Roces).
David S.G.Goodman is Director of the Institute for International Studies, University
of Technology, Sydney. Recent publications include Social and Political Change in
Revolutionary China (2000); Shanxi in Reform: Everyday Life in a North China Province (2000);
and China’s Communist Revolutions (2002). He is currently completing a book on social
and political change in Shanxi Province during the 1990s.
Elaine Jeffreys lectures in Chinese Studies at the University of Technology, Sydney.
She obtained her doctorate from the University of Melbourne, Department of Political
Science. Forthcoming is a book, China, Sex and Prostitution, from Routledge. She has
published widely on issues relating to the nature of Chinese studies, feminist theory and
activism, and the ‘selling and buying of sex’ in present-day China.
Anne E.McLaren is a Senior Lecturer in Chinese literature, language and culture at
the University of Melbourne. Her research interests include popular culture in late
imperial China, oral and literate culture and Chinese marriage systems. Publications
include Chinese Popular Culture and Ming Chantef ables (Leiden: Brill, 1998), Dress, Sex and
Text in Chinese Culture (co-edited with Antonia Finnane, Monash Asia Institute, 1999)
and The Chinese Femme Fatale: Stories from the Ming Period (University of Sydney East Asia
Monographs, 1994).
Sally Sargeson is a Senior Lecturer in the Institute of Contemporary Chinese Studies
at the University of Nottingham. Her research focuses on local governance, labour and