Journals from A to I - H-Net
Journals from A to I - H-Net
Journals from A to I - H-Net
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013<br />
• “‘Wants Learn Cut, Finish People’: American Missionary Medical Education for Chinese<br />
Women and Cultural Imperialism in the Missionary Enterprise, 1890s-1920,” by<br />
Connie Shemo, 54-<br />
• “‘Cultural Christians’ and the Search for Civil Society in Contemporary China,” by Lian Xi,<br />
70-<br />
Forum<br />
• “From Texas <strong>to</strong> Zhejiang: The Intellectual Journey of a China Scholar - An Interview aith R.<br />
Keith Schoppa,” by Alan Baumler and R. Keith Schoppa, 88-<br />
Chinese Journal of International Politics, Vol. 6, No. 2 (Summer 2013)<br />
http://cjip.oxfordjournals.org/content/vol6/issue2/index.dtl?e<strong>to</strong>c<br />
• Edi<strong>to</strong>r's Choice: “China and the US: Comparable Cases of ‘Peaceful Rise’”? by Barry Buzan<br />
and Michael Cox, 109-<br />
• “Measuring Political Barriers in US Exports <strong>to</strong> China,” by Li Bin and Yang Xiao, 133-<br />
• “Enhancing Climate Change Mitigation Efforts through Sino-American Collaboration,” by<br />
Scott Vic<strong>to</strong>r Valentine, 159-<br />
• “Images of the United States: Explaining the Attitudes of Chinese Scholars and Students in<br />
the United States,” by Han Donglin, Chen Dingding, and Fang Changping, 183-<br />
Cold War His<strong>to</strong>ry, Vol.13, No.2 (May 2013)<br />
http://www.tandfonline.com/<strong>to</strong>c/fcwh20/13/2<br />
Special Issue: Radio Wars: Broadcasting during the Cold War<br />
• “Radio Wars: Broadcasting in the Cold War,” by Linda Risso, 145-<br />
• “‘A hideously difficult country’: British propaganda <strong>to</strong> France in the early Cold War,” by<br />
Hilary Footitt, 153-<br />
• “Did the RAI buy it? The role and limits of American broadcasting in Italy in the Cold War,”<br />
by Simona Tobia, 171-<br />
• “Voices, letters, and literature through the Iron Curtain: exiles and the (trans)mission of<br />
radio in the Cold War,” by Friederike Kind-Kovács, 193-<br />
• “Cold War radio and the Hungarian Uprising, 1956,” by Alban Webb, 221-<br />
• “Captive audience? GDR radio in the mirror of listeners' mail,” by Chris<strong>to</strong>ph Classen, 293-<br />
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