1
O’Brien P. Historiographical traditions and modern imperatives for the restoration of global history. Journal of Global History. 2006;1:3–39. doi: 10.1017/S1740022806000027
2
Hans van de Ven. Recent Studies of Modern Chinese History. Modern Asian Studies. 1996;30:225–69.
3
Allen Fung. Testing the Self-Strengthening: The Chinese Army in the Sino-Japanese War of 1894-1895. Modern Asian Studies. 1996;30:1007–31.
4
Benjamin A. Elman. Naval Warfare and the Refraction of China’s Self-Strengthening Reforms into Scientific and Technological Failure, 1865-1895. Modern Asian Studies. 2004;38:283–326.
5
Paul A. Cohen. The Contested Past: The Boxers as History and Myth. The Journal of Asian Studies. 1992;51:82–113.
6
Joan Judge. Public Opinion and the New Politics of Contestation in the Late Qing, 1904-1911. Modern China. 1994;20:64–91.
7
George T. Yu. The 1911 Revolution: Past, Present, and Future. Asian Survey. 1991;31:895–904.
8
Esherick JW. Reconsidering 1911: Lessons of a sudden revolution. Journal of Modern Chinese History. 2012;6:1–14. doi: 10.1080/17535654.2012.670511
9
Bai L. Children and the Survival of China: Liang Qichao on Education Before the 1898 Reform. Late Imperial China. 2001;22:124–55. doi: 10.1353/late.2001.0005
10
Kirby WC. The Internationalization of China: Foreign Relations At Home and Abroad in the Republican Era. The China Quarterly. 1997;150:433–58. doi: 10.1017/S0305741000052541
11
Louise Edwards. Policing the Modern Woman in Republican China. Modern China. 2000;26:115–47.
12
Hans van de Ven. The Military in the Republic. The China Quarterly. 1997;352–74.
13
Arthur Waldron. The Warlord: Twentieth-Century Chinese Understandings of Violence, Militarism, and Imperialism. The American Historical Review. 1991;96:1073–100.
14
Christina Gilmartin. Gender in the Formation of a Communist Body Politic. Modern China. 1993;19:299–329.
15
Arthur Waldron. War and the Rise of Nationalism in Twentieth-Century China. The Journal of Military History. 1993;57:87–104.
16
Hans J. van de Ven. War in the Making of Modern China. Modern Asian Studies. 1996;30:737–56.
17
Rana Mitter. Modernity, Internationalization, and War in the History of Modern China. The Historical Journal. 2005;48:523–43.
18
Schram SR. Some Recent Studies of Revolutionary Movements in China in the Early Twentieth Century. Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies. 1972;35. doi: 10.1017/S0041977X00121172
19
Building and State Building in Nanjing after the Taiping Rebellion. Late Imperial China. 2009;30:84–126. doi: 10.1353/late.0.0022
20
Man-Houng Lin. Late Qing Perceptions of Native Opium. Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies. 2004;64:117–44.
21
Frederic Wakeman, Jr. Licensing Leisure: The Chinese Nationalists’ Attempt to Regulate Shanghai, 1927-49. The Journal of Asian Studies. 1995;54:19–42.
22
Brian G. Martin. The Green Gang and the Guomindang State: Du Yuesheng and the Politics of Shanghai, 1927-37. The Journal of Asian Studies. 1995;54:64–92.
23
FERLANTI F. The New Life Movement in Jiangxi Province, 1934–1938. Modern Asian Studies. 2010;44:961–1000. doi: 10.1017/S0026749X0999028X
24
Lee LO -f. Shanghai Modern: Reflections on Urban Culture in China in the 1930s. Public Culture. 1999;11:75–107. doi: 10.1215/08992363-11-1-75
25
Yeh W-H. Shanghai Modernity: Commerce and Culture in a Republican City. The China Quarterly. 1997;150. doi: 10.1017/S0305741000052528
26
Bickers R. Incubator City: Shanghai and the Crises of Empires. Journal of Urban History. 2012;38:862–78. doi: 10.1177/0096144212449139
27
Eastman LE. Fascism in Kuomintang China: The Blue Shirts. The China Quarterly. 1972;49. doi: 10.1017/S0305741000036481
28
Mitter R. Goodbye Confucius: New Culture, New Politics. A bitter revolution: China’s struggle with the modern world. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2004:102–52.
29
Zarrow P. The reform movement and the monarchy and political modernity. Rethinking the 1898 reform period: political and cultural change in late Qing China. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Asia Center 2002:17–47.
30
Fung ESK. The Intellectual Foundations of Chinese Modernity. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2010.
31
Joseph Esherick. Making revolution in twentieth century China. A critical introduction to Mao. New York: Cambridge University Press 2010:31–62.
32
David S. G. Goodman. Revolutionary Women and Women in the Revolution: The Chinese Communist Party and Women in the War of Resistance to Japan, 1937-1945. The China Quarterly. 2000;915–42.
33
Robert A. Scalapino. The Evolution of a Young Revolutionary--Mao Zedong in 1919-1921. The Journal of Asian Studies. 1982;42:29–61.
34
Goodman DSG. Reinterpreting the Sino–Japanese War: 1939–1940, peasant mobilisation, and the road to the PRC. Journal of Contemporary China. 2013;22:166–84. doi: 10.1080/10670564.2012.716950
35
Michael M. Sheng. Chinese Communist Policy toward the United States and the Myth of the ‘Lost Chance’ 1948-1950. Modern Asian Studies. 1994;28:475–502.
36
Goodman DSG. Chalmers Johnson and Peasant nationalism : the Chinese revolution, social science, and base area studies. The Pacific Review. 2011;24:3–7. doi: 10.1080/09512748.2010.546877
37
Joseph W. Esherick. Ten Theses on the Chinese Revolution. Modern China. 1995;21:45–76.
38
Suzanne Pepper. The Political Odyssey of an Intellectual Construct: Peasant Nationalism and the Study of China’s Revolutionary History: A Review Essay. The Journal of Asian Studies. 2004;63:105–25.
39
Wang Q. Rocks rolling downhill: The continuity and progress of the Chinese revolution in the twentieth century. Journal of Modern Chinese History. 2013;7:135–55. doi: 10.1080/17535654.2013.850861
40
Elizabeth J. Perry. Reclaiming the Chinese Revolution. The Journal of Asian Studies. 2008;67:1147–64.
41
Cheek T. The importance of revolution as an historical topic. Journal of Modern Chinese History. 2013;7:250–3. doi: 10.1080/17535654.2013.850865
42
Pye LW. Reassessing the Cultural Revolution. The China Quarterly. 1986;108:597–612. doi: 10.1017/S0305741000037085
43
Jian C. Bridging Revolution and Decolonization: The "Bandung Discourse” in China’s Early Cold War Experience. The Chinese Historical Review. 2008;15:207–41.
44
Jian C. China’s Involvement in the Vietnam War, 1964–69. The China Quarterly. 1995;142:356–87. doi: 10.1017/S0305741000034974
45
Rana Mitter. Old Ghosts, New Memories: China’s Changing War History in the Era of Post-Mao Politics. Journal of Contemporary History. 2003;38:117–31.
46
Chang-tai Hung. The Red Line: Creating a Museum of the Chinese Revolution. The China Quarterly. 2005;914–33.
47
Merle Goldman. Restarting Chinese History. The American Historical Review. 2000;105:153–64.
48
Lowell  Dittmer ,. Taiwan and the Issue of National Identity. Asian Survey. 2004;44:475–83.
49
Bruce J. Dickson. The Lessons of Defeat: The Reorganization of the Kuomintang on Taiwan, 1950-52. The China Quarterly. 1993;56–84.
50
Stuart R. Schram. Mao Zedong a Hundred Years On: The Legacy of a Ruler. The China Quarterly. 1994;125–43.
51
Prasenjit Duara. The Great Leap Forward in China: An Analysis of the Nature of Socialist Transformation. Economic and Political Weekly. 1974;9:1365–90.
52
S. A. Smith. Talking toads and chinless ghosts: The politics of ‘superstitious’ rumors in the People’s Republic of China, 1961-1965. The American Historical Review. 2006;111:405–27.
53
Julia C. Strauss. The Evolution of Republican Government. The China Quarterly. 1997;329–51.
54
Donald G. Gillin and Charles Etter. Staying On: Japanese Soldiers and Civilians in China, 1945-1949. The Journal of Asian Studies. 1983;42:497–518.
55
Young L. Japan’s Wartime Empire in China. The shadows of total war: Europe, East Asia, and the United States, 1919-1939. Washington, DC: German Historical Institute 2003:327–46.
56
Young L. Ideologies of Difference and the Turn to Atrocity: Japan’s War on China. A world at total war: global conflict and the politics of destruction, 1937-1945. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2005:333–54.
57
Yang D. Atrocities in Nanjing: Searching for Explanations. The scars of war: the impact of warfare on modern China. Vancouver, B.C.: UBC Press 2001:76–98.
58
Cohen P. Reflections on a Watershed Date: The 1949 Divide in Chinese History. Twentieth-century China : new approaches. London: Routledge 2003:27–36.
59
MacFarquhar R, Schoenhals M. Introduction. Mao’s Last Revolution. Cambridge, Mass.: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press 2006:1–13.
60
Dittmer L. China’s Search for Its Place in the World. Contemporary Chinese politics in historical perspective. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 1991:209–61.
61
Perry E. Permanent Rebellion? Continuities and Discontinuities in Chinese Protest. Popular protest in China. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press 2008:205–16.
62
Shapiro J. Introduction to Mao’s war against nature: politics and the environment in Revolutionary China. Mao’s war against nature: politics and the environment in Revolutionary China. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2001:1–20.