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Home / Rethinking JOSA(H)

Rethinking JOSA(H)

Rethinking JOSA(H)

The Australian Society of Asian Humanities is currently in the process of digitising the archives of the Journal of the Oriental Society of Australia (JOSA), now the Journal of the Society for Asian Humanities (JOSAH). In these short pieces, scholars reflect on the impact and significance of articles from the JOSA archives.

Rethinking JOSA(H)

Women were also warriors – Reflections on David L. Davis’s ‘The evolution of Bushidō to the Year 1500’ (1978)

Kate Sylvester
Rethinking JOSA(H)

Okinawa: a lesson for peaceful coexistence?—Reflections on Hugh Clarke’s ‘A Place for Okinawa: Changing perceptions of Japan’s Southern Islands’ (2009)

Adam Broinowski
Rethinking JOSA(H)

All this was Poetry—Reflections on A.J. Prince’s “The Countryman in the Life and Works of Shen Ts’ung-wen” (1978)

Jeffrey C. Kinkley
Rethinking JOSA(H)

Traditional Chinese family values were not so virtuous and Republican women were not so quiet—Reflections on Bernice Lee’s ‘Women and the Law in Republican China’ (1977)

Louise Edwards
Rethinking JOSA(H)

Creating space for feminist subjectivity and feminist history in China Studies—Reflections on T. Kobayashi’s ‘Chang Chu-chün for Women’s Rights’ (1976)

Louise Edwards
Australian Society for Asian Humanities
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