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Teaching Resources Essay

Teaching Resources: Stories about Women in Asia

Author: EAA Editorial Office

  • Teaching Resources: Stories about Women in Asia

    Teaching Resources Essay

    Teaching Resources: Stories about Women in Asia

    Author:

Abstract

This month’s EAA Digest exclusive features, in all but one entry, several women’s memoirs, autobiographies, and personal stories. The focus is upon Japan, China, and Taiwan.

Keywords: China, China and Inner Asia, History, Japan, Literature, Northeast Asia, Taiwan

How to Cite:

Editorial Office, E., (2021) “Teaching Resources: Stories about Women in Asia”, Education About Asia .

Rights: https://www.asianstudies.org/publications/eaa/archives/teaching-resources-stories-about-women-in-asia/

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Published on
2021-11-11

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Teaching Resources: Stories about Women in Asia

This month’s EAA Digest exclusive features, in all but one entry, several women’s memoirs, autobiographies, and personal stories. The focus is upon Japan, China, and Taiwan.
  • In I am a Chinese English Teacher by Wang Ping (Vol. 20, No. 2, Fall 2015), master English teacher Wang Ping’s autobiographical sketch is a particularly illuminating account of the profound cultural, educational, and economic changes that occurred in the PRC from 1980 through the first decade and a half of the twenty-first century.
  • Prodigy of Taiwan, Diva of Asia: Teresa Teng by David B. Gordon (Vol. 17, No. 1, Spring 2012) introduces readers to a singer who was, in the 1970s and 1980s, a pop culture superstar in Taiwan, Hong Kong, the PRC, Japan, and ethnic Chinese communities worldwide. She also became increasingly unpopular in the PRC, in part because of her fame, but also because of her connections with the Taiwanese government, who attempted to exploit her popularity to achieve political objectives.

Other Teaching Resources: Touching Home in China

Touching Home in China” is a transmedia project created by Melissa Ludtke, Julie Mallozzi, and Jocelyn Ford that focuses upon the experiences of Chinese girls abandoned as infants during China's "one-child policy" era who were adopted by Americans and raised in the US and those who grew up in China as only-childs, and their interactions with each other. The stories, videos, and lesson plans of “Touching Home in China” include a wide range of topics and themes relevant for middle school, high school, and even college-level classes. For more information, see Kristin Hayward Strobel and Peter Gilmartin’s teaching resources essay “Teaching China Through the Lens of Girls’ and Women’s Lives” from the Fall 2019 issue (Volume 24, Number 2).
A photo of women's feet wearing red shoes in front of a serene pond. Text is layered on top which says "in search of missing girlhood."
Screen capture of the "Touching Home in China" main page at http://touchinghomeinchina.com/