The Reach of the Revolutionary Propaganda State in Beijing, 1950-1953, with Prof. Zhao MA 馬釗 (Washington Univ) (March 21, 2023)

 

The BU Center for the Study of Asia and the BU Department of History
are pleased to present

 

 

About the Speaker, Zhao MA 馬釗  (from https://sites.wustl.edu/zhaoma/)

“I was born and grew up in Beijing. I received my Ph.D. in History from the Johns Hopkins University in 2007, and joined the Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures at Washington University in 2011. My first book, Runaway Wives, Urban Crimes, and Survival Strategies in Wartime Beijing, 1937-1949, was published by Harvard University Asia Center in 2015. It uses criminal case files to explore lower-class women’s role in remaking wartime Beijing’s social and moral order. I am currently writing a new book, Seditious Voices in Revolutionary China, 1950-1953. It examines the relationship between rumor-mongering and political propaganda during the Korean War campaign, and offers a lens through which to study the transformation of urban informational space against the backdrop of war fever and emerging revolutionary politics in Mao’s China. At Washington University, I teach courses on 20th-century Chinese history, city and women, material culture, historical landscape, socialist culture, and US-China relations since 1949.

Besides researching and teaching at Washington University, I have been a Public Intellectual Program (PIP) Fellow at the National Committee on US-China Relations since 2014. As a PIP fellow, I have opportunities to participate in the meetings with government officials of United States and China and joined the U.S. congressional delegation to visit China. I have also been working closely with public media, including writing op-eds for Chinese newspapers, giving interviews to New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Reuters, and PBS, and speaking frequently at Voice of America on topics of Chinese politics, society, and US-China relations.”

This event is sponsored by the BU Center for the Study of Asia and the BU Department of History.