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- Title
Feminism, Pacifism and Political Violence in Europe and China in the Era of the World Wars.
- Authors
Siegel, Mona L.
- Abstract
This article examines international collaboration between Western and Chinese feminists in the interwar decades. Focusing on the 1927-28 'mission to Asia' sponsored by the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF), the article shows that, contrary to what existing historiography would lead us to suspect, neither feminist Orientalism nor colonial nationalism stood as a serious impediment to the formation of a truly international feminist alliance. Instead, European and Chinese women's varying experiences and memories of international conflict, and their varying understandings of the relationship between feminism, pacifism, militarism and political violence, defined the limits of global feminist collaboration in the late 1920s. The WILPF delegates, like many European women in the 1920s, were living in the shadow of the First World War, a conflict they condemned as futile and barbaric; their Chinese 'sisters' were living in the midst of a battle to determine the political future of their nation. For both sets of women, the question of women's emancipation was fundamentally entwined with broader national and international struggles. This article incorporates reports, personal letters and diaries of WILPF delegates as well as articles, speeches and letters by Chinese women to offer new insights into one of the earliest efforts to build a truly international women's movement and draw our attention to the centrality of warfare in defining the limits of global feminist collaboration in the twentieth century.
- Subjects
CHINA; EUROPE; WOMEN'S International League for Peace &; Freedom; WOMEN -- International cooperation; CROSS-cultural communication; ACTIVISTS; PACIFISM; INTERWAR Period (1918-1939); 20TH century feminism; TWENTIETH century; HISTORY; INTERNATIONAL relations
- Publication
Gender & History, 2016, Vol 28, Issue 3, p641
- ISSN
0953-5233
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/1468-0424.12243