(In Press) Holding up More Than Half the Sky: Chinese Women Garment Workers in New York City, 1948-92. Bao Xiaolan. Urbana: University of Illinois Press. 2001. On the translation team of turning this book into Chinese.
(Forthcoming). "Labor Migration, Gender, and the Rise of Neo-local Marriages in the Economic Boomtown of Dongguan, South China." Journal of Contemporary China.
2009. �Navigating a Space for Labor Activism: Emergent Labor NGOs in the Pearl River Delta of South China,� co-authored with Marsha Smith, a chapter in State and Society Responses to Social Welfare Needs in China: Serving the People , eds by Jonathan Schwartz and Shawn Shieh. New York/London: Routledge.
2009. �The New Realities of Aging in Contemporary China: Coping with the Decline of Family Care,� a book chapter for the 3rd edition of Cultural Context of Aging: World-Wide Perspective, edited by Jay Sokolovsky. Westport/CT: Greenwood Publishing Group.
2008. Translation of Selected Works of Western Feminist Literature and Culture (《西方女性主义文学文化译文集》). On the translation team. Guangxi Normal University Press.
2007. "From Resisting to �Embracing�? the One-Child Policy: Understanding New Fertility Trends in a Central Chinese Village." The China Quarterly . Vol. 192: 855-875.
2007. "China�s New Rural Daughters Coming of Age: Downsizing the Family and Firing up Cash Earning Power in the New Economy." Signs, Journal of Women in Culture and Society. Vol 32, no.3:671-698.
2007. �Toil and Tears behind the Shenzhen Miracle: Migrant Labor in Shenzhen.� Guest Editor�s Introduction. Chinese Economy (M.E. Sharpe). May-June 2007. Vol. 40, NO. 3, pp.3-11.
2007. On the Margins of Society: Migrant Labor in South China (Bianyuan ren: Shenzhen wailaigong yanjiu. Liu Kaiming. Xinhua Press, 2003). Translation of four chapters of the book for a special issue of Chinese Economy (M.E. Sharpe).May-June 2007. Vol. 40, NO. 3.
2007. �Who Will Care for Our Parents? Changing Boundaries of Family and Public Roles in Providing Care for the Aged in China.� Journal of Long Term Home Health Care. Vol. 25 (1):39-46.
2007. "Chinese Numeral Classifiers." Journal of East Asian Linguistics. 16:43-59.
2006. Chapter 6. "SARS Humor for the Virtual Community: Between the Chinese Emerging Public Sphere and the Authoritarian State." In Deborah Davis and Helen Hsu, eds., SARS: Reception and Interpretation in Three Chinese Cities. London/New York: Routledge. Pp. 119-145.
2006. �Family Care or Residential Care? The Moral and Practical Dilemmas Facing the Elderly in Urban China.� Asian Anthropology. Vol. 5:57-83.
2006. Chapter 8: "Making Light of the Dark Side: SARS Jokes and Humor in China. In Arthur Kleinman and James Watson, eds., SARS in China: Prelude to Pandemic? Stanford University Press. Use Internet Explorer to read the Chinese jokes used in this chapter. 2005. "Bracing for an Uncertain Future: A Case Study of New Coping Strategies of Rural Parents under China's Birth Control Policy, "The China Journal, pp.53-76. 2004. "Chinese Shamanism (Contemporary)," with Constantine Hriskos. In Mariko Walter and Eva Fridman (eds.), Encyclopedia of Shamanism. Santa Barbara (CA): ABC-CLIO Publishing, pp.713-721. 2004. 'Living Alone' and the Rural Elderly: Strategy and Agency in Post-Mao Rural China." In Charlotte Ikels (ed.), Filial Piety: Practice and Discourse in Contemporary East Asian Countries. CA: Stanford University Press, pp. 63-87. 2003. "Contemporary Chinese Shamanism: The Re-Invention of Tradition," with Constantine Hriskos, Cultural Survival Quarterly, Vol. 26 (6): 55-57. 2002. "Between Reality and Representation: Social Control and Gender Relations in Chinese Proverbs." In Marlis Hellinger and Hadumod Bussmann, (eds.), Gender Across Languages: The De/construction of Gender Roles through Language Variation and Change. Amsterdam: Benjamins, pp. 73-80. |