
Developing Mission
Description
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In Developing Mission, Joseph W. Ho offers a transnational cultural history of US and Chinese communities framed by missionary lenses through time and space-tracing the lives and afterlives of images, cameras, and visual imaginations from before the Second Sino-Japanese War through the first years of the People's Republic of China.
When American Protestant and Catholic missionaries entered interwar China, they did so with cameras in hand. Missions principally aimed at the conversion of souls and the modernization of East Asia, became, by virtue of the still and moving images recorded, quasi-anthropological ventures that shaped popular understandings of and formal foreign policy toward China. Portable photographic technologies changed the very nature of missionary experience, while images that missionaries circulated between China and the United States affected cross-cultural encounters in times of peace and war.
Ho illuminates the centrality of visual practices in the American missionary enterprise in modern China, even as intersecting modernities and changing Sino-US relations radically transformed lives behind and in front of those lenses. In doing so, Developing Mission reconstructs the almost-lost histories of transnational image makers, subjects, and viewers across twentieth-century China and the United States.
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Person
Joseph W. Ho is Associate Professor of History at Albion College and Center Associate at the Lieberthal-Rogel Center for Chinese Studies, University of Michigan. He is coeditor of War and Occupation in China.
Content
Introduction: All Things Visible and Invisible
1. New Lives, New Optics: Missionary Modernity and Visual Practices in Interwar Republican China
2. Converting Visions: Photographic Mediations of Catholic Identity in West Hunan, 1921-1929
3. The Movie Camera and the Mission: Vernacular Filmmaking as China-US Bridge, 1931-1936
4. Chaos in Three Frames: Fragmented Imaging and the Second Sino-Japanese War, 1937-1945
5. Memento Mori: Loss, Nostalgia, and the Future in Postwar Missionary Visuality
Epilogue: Latent Images
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