Asian & Middle Eastern Studies : All Publications (in the database)


%% Baker, Sarah   
@article{fds369251,
   Author = {Baker, SL},
   Title = {Counting in Ugaritic: A New Analysis of kbd*},
   Journal = {Journal of Semitic Studies},
   Volume = {63},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {59-75},
   Publisher = {Oxford University Press (OUP)},
   Year = {2018},
   Month = {April},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jss/fgx036},
   Doi = {10.1093/jss/fgx036},
   Key = {fds369251}
}

@article{fds369250,
   Author = {Baker, SL},
   Title = {“And Now”: Transitions in Northwest Semitic Epigraphy
             and Narrative},
   Journal = {Maarav},
   Volume = {25},
   Number = {1-2},
   Pages = {17-30},
   Editor = {Kaplan, J and Pat-El, N},
   Year = {2022},
   Month = {August},
   Abstract = {The Canaanite phrase wꜤt ‘and now’ appears frequently
             both in epigraphic material from the first millennium B.C.E.
             and in direct speech within Biblical Hebrew narrative. As a
             macrosyntactic marker signaling a transition, wꜤt most
             commonly introduces a command, request, or other volitive
             expression that is logically connected with the preceding
             context. In Hebrew, Edomite, and Ammonite letters, wꜤt
             also marks the transition from the opening address to the
             main subject of the message. The supposed Aramaic cognates
             (w)kꜤn/kꜤnt/kꜤt exhibit similar behavior, though the
             broader epistolary witness in this language provides us with
             the opportunity to examine the function of these terms in
             more diverse contexts. This paper surveys wꜤt and its
             cognates across Northwest Semitic epigraphic material and
             the speech patterns reflected in Hebrew narrative,
             demonstrating how its use in each of these contexts
             elucidates its function and interpretation in the
             other.},
   Key = {fds369250}
}


%% Bardawil, Fadi A   
@article{fds363426,
   Author = {Bardawil, FA},
   Title = {The solitary analyst of doxas: An interview with Talal
             Asad},
   Journal = {Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle
             East},
   Volume = {36},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {152-173},
   Year = {2016},
   Month = {January},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/1089201x-3482183},
   Abstract = {“The Solitary Analyst of Doxas: An Interview with Talal
             Asad” explores Asad's intellectual trajectory. In Bardawil
             and Asad's intergenerational conversation Asad discusses his
             critique of the neutrality of the social sciences, his own
             critique of Orientalist scholarship (while touching on
             Edward Said's), as well as his thoughts on the
             anthropologist's positionality. He rebuts charges of
             nativism and revisits his own family history, thinking about
             the differences between how his father, who was an
             intellectual and a convert, inhabited being a Muslim
             differently than his own mother, who was born into it. The
             interview also touches on how Asad draws on the concept of
             tradition in his own work and examines the relationship
             between his early polemics on Elie Keddourie with his later
             disagreements with Salman Rushdie. The interview is preceded
             by a short preface that situates the themes of the
             conversation.},
   Doi = {10.1215/1089201x-3482183},
   Key = {fds363426}
}

@article{fds363425,
   Author = {Bardawil, FA},
   Title = {Dreams of a dual birth: Socialist Lebanon's world and
             ours},
   Journal = {Boundary 2},
   Volume = {43},
   Number = {3},
   Pages = {313-334},
   Year = {2016},
   Month = {August},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/01903659-3572854},
   Doi = {10.1215/01903659-3572854},
   Key = {fds363425}
}

@article{fds363424,
   Author = {Bardawil, FA},
   Title = {Sidelining Ideology: Arab Theory in the Metropole and
             Periphery, circa 1977},
   Pages = {163-180},
   Booktitle = {Arabic Thought against the Authoritarian Age: Towards an
             Intellectual History of the Present},
   Year = {2018},
   Month = {January},
   ISBN = {9781107193383},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/9781108147781.011},
   Abstract = {Revisiting Arabic Thought in the Liberal Age, a little more
             than two decades after its publication, Albert Hourani made
             a series of observations regarding the book’s context of
             inception in the late 1950s and early 1960s, as well as on
             the alternative directions the project could, or maybe
             should, have taken. These retrospective historiographical
             comments, included in the preface to the 1983 edition, fall
             into two major domains. The first comment has a disciplinary
             character. It pertains to the insufficiency of a “pure”
             history of ideas, and the need to supplement it “by asking
             how and why the ideas ofmy writers had an influence on
             theminds of others.},
   Doi = {10.1017/9781108147781.011},
   Key = {fds363424}
}

@article{fds363423,
   Author = {Bardawil, FA},
   Title = {Césaire with adorno: Critical theory and the colonial
             problem},
   Journal = {South Atlantic Quarterly},
   Volume = {117},
   Number = {4},
   Pages = {773-789},
   Year = {2018},
   Month = {October},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/00382876-7165857},
   Doi = {10.1215/00382876-7165857},
   Key = {fds363423}
}

@book{fds354983,
   Author = {Miles, SK},
   Title = {Revolution and Disenchantment: Arab Marxism and the Binds of
             Emancipation},
   Volume = {7},
   Pages = {611-613},
   Publisher = {Informa UK Limited},
   Year = {2022},
   Month = {May},
   ISBN = {1478007583},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23801883.2020.1806513},
   Abstract = {In Revolution and Disenchantment Fadi A. Bardawil
             redescribes for our present how an earlier generation of
             revolutionaries, the 1960s Arab New Left, addressed this
             question.},
   Doi = {10.1080/23801883.2020.1806513},
   Key = {fds354983}
}

@article{fds367197,
   Author = {Bardawil, FA},
   Title = {Moving Past Models},
   Journal = {Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle
             East},
   Volume = {42},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {555-558},
   Year = {2022},
   Month = {August},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/1089201X-9988074},
   Doi = {10.1215/1089201X-9988074},
   Key = {fds367197}
}


%% Benmamoun, Abbas   
@article{fds326457,
   Author = {AOUN, J and BENMAMOUN, E and SPORTICHE, D},
   Title = {AGREEMENT, WORD-ORDER, AND CONJUNCTION IN SOME VARIETIES OF
             ARABIC},
   Journal = {LINGUISTIC INQUIRY},
   Volume = {25},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {195-220},
   Publisher = {MIT PRESS},
   Year = {1994},
   Month = {March},
   Key = {fds326457}
}

@article{fds326454,
   Author = {Aoun, J and Benmamoun, E},
   Title = {Minimality, reconstruction, and PF movement},
   Journal = {Linguistic Inquiry},
   Volume = {29},
   Number = {4},
   Pages = {569-597},
   Publisher = {MIT Press - Journals},
   Year = {1998},
   Month = {January},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/002438998553888},
   Abstract = {We investigate the interaction of clitic left-dislocation
             (CLLD), wh-interrogatives, and topicalization in Lebanese
             Arabic. A wh-phrase or a topicalized phrase can be fronted
             across a CLLDed element derived by movement but not across a
             base-generated one. A CLLDed element cannot be fronted
             across another CLLDed element, a wh-phrase, or a topicalized
             phrase. These interception effects are accounted for only if
             Minimality is construed as a constraint on derivations
             rather than representations and if fronting of the CLLDed
             elements is seen to apply in the PF component. It is thus
             suggested that the mapping between overt Syntax and the
             Articulatory-Perceptual level is not trivial. © 1998 by the
             Massachusetts Institute of Technology.},
   Doi = {10.1162/002438998553888},
   Key = {fds326454}
}

@misc{fds326455,
   Author = {Benmamoun, E and Eid, M and Haeri, N},
   Title = {Perspectives on Arabic Linguistics XI - Papers from the
             Eleventh Annual Symposium on Arabic Linguistics -
             Introduction},
   Journal = {PERSPECTIVES ON ARABIC LINGUISTICS XI},
   Volume = {167},
   Pages = {1-6},
   Publisher = {JOHN BENJAMINS B V PUBL},
   Editor = {Benmamoun, E and Eid, M and Haeri, N},
   Year = {1998},
   Month = {January},
   ISBN = {1-55619-883-3},
   Key = {fds326455}
}

@book{fds331482,
   Author = {Benmamoun, E},
   Title = {Perspectives on Arabic Linguistics},
   Pages = {204 pages},
   Publisher = {John Benjamins Publishing Company},
   Editor = {Benmamoun, E},
   Year = {1999},
   ISBN = {1556199678},
   Abstract = {The papers in this volume deal with various topics in Arabic
             Linguistics. Most of the papers focus on new issues and
             introduce new empirical generalizations that haven't
             been studied before within the context of Arabic
             linguistics.},
   Key = {fds331482}
}

@article{fds326451,
   Author = {Aoun, J and Benmamoun, E and Sportiche, D},
   Title = {Further remarks on first conjunct agreement},
   Journal = {Linguistic Inquiry},
   Volume = {30},
   Number = {4},
   Pages = {669-681},
   Publisher = {MIT Press - Journals},
   Year = {1999},
   Month = {January},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/002438999554255},
   Abstract = {Aoun, Benmamoun, and Sportiche (ABS, 1994) propose an
             analysis of first conjunct agreement in VS sentences in
             Lebanese Arabic and Moroccan Arabic. On the basis of the
             distribution of number-sensitive items, they argue that this
             type of agreement is due to clausal coordination. Munn
             (1999) argues against ABS's account and proposes that first
             conjunct agreement in the Arabic dialects arises because
             coordination of NP subjects is semantically plural but
             syntactically singular. In this reply we show that Munn's
             alternative analysis is empirically inadequate. © 1999 by
             the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.},
   Doi = {10.1162/002438999554255},
   Key = {fds326451}
}

@article{fds326452,
   Author = {Benmamoun, E},
   Title = {Remarks and replies: The syntax of quantifiers and
             quantifier float},
   Journal = {Linguistic Inquiry},
   Volume = {30},
   Number = {4},
   Pages = {621-642},
   Year = {1999},
   Month = {January},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/002438999554237},
   Abstract = {The Arabic quantifier kull displays a Q_NP and NP_Q
             alternation. Shlonsky (1991) argues that in both patterns Q
             heads a QP projection with the NP as a complement that may
             undergo movement to [Spec, QP] or beyond to yield the NP_Q
             pattern and Q-float structures. On the contrary, I argue on
             the basis of evidence from reconstruction, Case, and
             agreement that the two patterns are radically different. In
             the Q_NP pattern Q is indeed the head of a QP projection
             that contains the NP. In the NP_Q pattern, however, Q heads
             a QP adjunct that modifies the NP and in some cases the VP.
             © 1999 by the Massachusetts Institute of
             Technology.},
   Doi = {10.1162/002438999554237},
   Key = {fds326452}
}

@article{fds326453,
   Author = {Benmamoun, E},
   Title = {Arabic morphology: The central role of the
             imperfective},
   Journal = {Lingua},
   Volume = {108},
   Number = {2-3},
   Pages = {175-201},
   Publisher = {Elsevier BV},
   Year = {1999},
   Month = {January},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0024-3841(98)00045-x},
   Abstract = {This article explores the nature and role of the
             imperfective verb in Arabic. It argues that the imperfective
             verb is not specified for tense. It is only the default form
             that is resorted to whenever the verb does not carry
             temporal features. Syntactically, the lack of temporal
             features on the imperfective verb explains why, contra the
             perfective verb which carries past tense, it occurs lower
             than negation and displays the SV order in idioms.
             Morphologically, the default unmarked status of the
             imperfective is consistent with its central role in word
             formation. This role will be shown to be more pervasive than
             previously thought. This, in turn, allows for a unified
             analysis of nominal and verbal morphology. The implication
             then is that important parts of Arabic word formation are
             word based rather than root based. © 1999 Elsevier Science
             B.V. All rights reserved.},
   Doi = {10.1016/s0024-3841(98)00045-x},
   Key = {fds326453}
}

@book{fds331481,
   Author = {Lappin, S and Benmamoun, E},
   Title = {Fragments Studies in Ellipsis and Gapping},
   Pages = {320 pages},
   Publisher = {Oxford University Press},
   Year = {1999},
   Month = {January},
   ISBN = {9780195352658},
   Abstract = {This volume contains essays on ellipsis -- the omission of
             understood words from a sentence -- and the closely related
             phenomena of gapping.},
   Key = {fds331481}
}

@misc{fds326449,
   Author = {Benmamoun, E},
   Title = {Agreement asymmetries and the PF interface},
   Journal = {RESEARCH IN AFROASIATIC GRAMMAR},
   Volume = {202},
   Pages = {23-40},
   Publisher = {JOHN BENJAMINS B V PUBL},
   Editor = {Lecarme, J and Lowenstamm, J and Shlonsky, U},
   Year = {2000},
   Month = {January},
   ISBN = {1-55619-980-5},
   Key = {fds326449}
}

@book{fds326448,
   Author = {Benmamoun, E},
   Title = {The Feature Structure of Functional Categories A Comparative
             Study of Arabic Dialects},
   Pages = {192 pages},
   Publisher = {Oxford University Press},
   Year = {2000},
   Month = {February},
   ISBN = {9780195353143},
   Abstract = {The book brings new insights to issues related to the syntax
             of functional categories, the relation between syntax and
             the morpho-phonological component, and comparative
             syntax.},
   Key = {fds326448}
}

@book{fds331479,
   Title = {Perspectives on Arabic Linguistics Papers from the ...
             Annual Symposium on Arabic Linguistics},
   Pages = {264 pages},
   Year = {2002},
   Abstract = {Causative constructions in English. 1998. 167. BENMAMOUN,
             Elabbas, Mushira EID and Niloofar HAERI (eds): Perspectives
             on Arabic Linguistics Vol. XI. Papers from the Eleventh
             Annual Symposium on Arabic Linguistics, Atlanta, 1997. 1998.
             168. RATCLIFFE, Robert R.: The "Broken" Plural
             Problem in Arabic and Comparative Semitic. Allomorphy and
             analogy in non-concatenative morphology. 1998. 169.
             GHADESSY, Mohsen (ed.): Text and Context in Functional
             Linguistics . 1999.},
   Key = {fds331479}
}

@book{fds331480,
   Author = {Parkinson, DB and Benmamoun, E},
   Title = {Perspectives on Arabic Linguistics XIII-XIV Papers from the
             Thirteenth and Fourteenth Annual Symposia on Arabic
             Linguistics},
   Pages = {248 pages},
   Publisher = {John Benjamins Publishing Company},
   Year = {2002},
   ISBN = {9781588112729},
   Abstract = {The papers in this collection derive from the Annual
             Symposia on Arabic Linguistics held in Stanford (1999) and
             Berkeley (2000).},
   Key = {fds331480}
}

@article{fds326447,
   Author = {Benmamoun, E},
   Title = {Agreement parallelism between sentences and noun phrases: A
             historical sketch},
   Journal = {Lingua},
   Volume = {113},
   Number = {8},
   Pages = {747-764},
   Publisher = {Elsevier BV},
   Year = {2003},
   Month = {August},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0024-3841(02)00127-4},
   Abstract = {This paper deals with a parallelism between sentences and
             noun phrases in Classical Arabic. The parallelism in
             question concerns the distribution of the number feature on
             the verb in the verb subject (VS) sequence and the
             (in-)definiteness feature on nouns in the N+NP sequence, the
             so-called semitic construct state (CS). In both cases, the
             verb and the head noun do not carry number and
             (in-)definiteness features respectively. Previous syntactic
             analyses have treated these two problems as two separate
             phenomena, thus denying any parallelism between the two
             constructions. This paper argues that this parallelism is
             genuine and is due to the verb in the VS sequence being
             historically a nominal element in a CS relation with the
             subject. © 2003 Published by Elsevier Science
             B.V.},
   Doi = {10.1016/S0024-3841(02)00127-4},
   Key = {fds326447}
}

@book{fds326446,
   Author = {Alhawary, MT and Benmamoun, E},
   Title = {Perspectives on Arabic Linguistics XVII-XVIII Papers from
             the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Annual Symposia on Arabic
             Linguistics},
   Pages = {315 pages},
   Publisher = {John Benjamins Publishing},
   Year = {2005},
   Month = {January},
   ISBN = {9789027247810},
   Abstract = {The papers in this volume are a selection from papers
             presented at the Annual Symposia on Arabic Linguistics, held
             in 2003 (Alexandria) and 2004 (Oklahoma).},
   Key = {fds326446}
}

@article{fds366832,
   Author = {Benmamoun, E and Kumar, R},
   Title = {The Overt Licensing of NPIs in Hindi},
   Pages = {31-48},
   Booktitle = {YEARBOOK OF SOUTH ASIAN LANGUAGES AND LINGUISTICS
             (2006)},
   Year = {2006},
   Key = {fds366832}
}

@article{fds326444,
   Author = {Benmamoun, E},
   Title = {Licensing configurations: The puzzle of head negative
             polarity items},
   Journal = {Linguistic Inquiry},
   Volume = {37},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {141-149},
   Publisher = {MIT Press - Journals},
   Year = {2006},
   Month = {December},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/ling.2006.37.1.141},
   Doi = {10.1162/ling.2006.37.1.141},
   Key = {fds326444}
}

@article{fds326445,
   Author = {Benmamoun, E and Lorimor, H},
   Title = {Featureless expressions: When morphophonological markers are
             absent},
   Journal = {Linguistic Inquiry},
   Volume = {37},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {1-23},
   Publisher = {MIT Press - Journals},
   Year = {2006},
   Month = {December},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/002438906775321157},
   Abstract = {Ackema and Neeleman (2003) discuss three phenomena that
             arise in the context of agreement and pronominals: agreement
             asymmetries, cliticization, and null subjects. They develop
             a unified analysis for these phenomena, claiming that they
             all involve a process of weakening within prosodic domains.
             While we agree with their important insight that the PF
             interface is responsible for some of these phenomena, we
             will argue against their weakening analysis. We provide
             arguments that agreement asymmetries cannot be uniformly
             analyzed as involving the same processes as phonological
             cliticization or null subjects. We instead propose that the
             observed asymmetries arise because of the alternative forms
             of spelling out features at the PF interface. © 2006 by the
             Massachusetts Institute of Technology.},
   Doi = {10.1162/002438906775321157},
   Key = {fds326445}
}

@book{fds326443,
   Author = {Benmamoun, E},
   Title = {Perspectives on Arabic Linguistics XIX Papers from the
             Nineteenth Annual Symposium on Arabic Linguistics, Urbana,
             Illinois, April 2005},
   Pages = {304 pages},
   Publisher = {John Benjamins Publishing},
   Year = {2007},
   ISBN = {9789027248046},
   Abstract = {Printbegrænsninger: Der kan printes 10 sider ad gangen og
             max. 40 sider pr. session},
   Key = {fds326443}
}

@article{fds366831,
   Author = {Benmamoun, E},
   Title = {Clause Structure and the Syntax of Verbless
             Sentences},
   Pages = {105-131},
   Booktitle = {FOUNDATIONAL ISSUES IN LINGUISTIC THEORY: ESSAYS IN HONOR OF
             JEAN-ROGER VERGNAUD},
   Year = {2008},
   Key = {fds366831}
}

@book{fds326442,
   Author = {Aoun, JE and Benmamoun, E and Choueiri, L},
   Title = {The syntax of Arabic},
   Volume = {9780521650175},
   Pages = {1-247},
   Publisher = {Cambridge University Press},
   Year = {2009},
   Month = {January},
   ISBN = {9780521650175},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511691775},
   Abstract = {Recent research on the syntax of Arabic has produced
             valuable literature on the major syntactic phenomena found
             in the language. This guide to Arabic syntax provides an
             overview of the major syntactic constructions in Arabic that
             have featured in recent linguistic debates, and discusses
             the analyses provided for them in the literature. A broad
             variety of topics are covered, including argument structure,
             negation, tense, agreement phenomena, and resumption. The
             discussion of each topic sums up the key research results
             and provides new points of departure for further research.
             The book also contrasts Standard Arabic with other Arabic
             varieties spoken in the Arab world. An engaging guide to
             Arabic syntax, this book will be invaluable to graduate
             students interested in Arabic grammar, as well as syntactic
             theorists and typologists.},
   Doi = {10.1017/CBO9780511691775},
   Key = {fds326442}
}

@article{fds326441,
   Author = {Albirini, A and Benmamoun, E and Saadah, E},
   Title = {Grammatical features of Egyptian and Palestinian Arabic
             heritage speakers' oral production},
   Journal = {Studies in Second Language Acquisition},
   Volume = {33},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {273-303},
   Publisher = {Cambridge University Press (CUP)},
   Year = {2011},
   Month = {June},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0272263110000768},
   Abstract = {This study presents an investigation of oral narratives
             collected from heritage Egyptian and Palestinian Arabic
             speakers living in the United States. The focus is on a
             number of syntactic and morphological features in their
             production, such as word order, use of null subjects,
             selection of prepositions, agreement, and possession. The
             degree of codeswitching in their narratives was also
             investigated. The goal was to gain some insights into the
             Arabic linguistic competence of this group of speakers. The
             results show that although Arabic heritage speakers display
             significant competence in their heritage colloquial
             varieties, there are gaps in that knowledge. There also
             seems to be significant transfer from English, their
             dominant language. © Copyright Cambridge University Press
             2011.},
   Doi = {10.1017/S0272263110000768},
   Key = {fds326441}
}

@misc{fds326440,
   Author = {Hasegawa-Johnson, M and Benmamoun, E and Mustafawi, E and Elmahdy, M and Duwairi, R},
   Title = {On the definition of theword "Segmental"},
   Journal = {Proceedings of the 6th International Conference on Speech
             Prosody, SP 2012},
   Volume = {1},
   Pages = {159-162},
   Year = {2012},
   Month = {January},
   ISBN = {9787560848693},
   Abstract = {Textbooks in phonology often specify a distinction between
             segmental features (e.g., place and manner of articulation)
             vs. suprasegmental features (stress and phrasing). The
             distinction between segmental and suprasegmental features is
             useful even in autosegmental models like Articulatory
             Phonology, because it distinguishes between features shared
             by the different instantiations of a phoneme vs. those not
             so shared. In a model like Articulatory Phonology, however,
             there is no requirement that a segmental feature should be
             synchronous with the other features of the same segment.
             Classification results are provided from Levantine Arabic,
             showing that features of the primary articulator of a
             fricative are acoustically signaled during frication, but
             that features of the secondary articulator are signaled
             during the preceding and following vowels, suggesting that
             the definition of the word "segmental" should not require
             synchronous implementation.},
   Key = {fds326440}
}

@misc{fds331541,
   Author = {Shosted, RK and Sutton, BP and Benmamoun, A},
   Title = {Using magnetic resonance to image the pharynx during Arabic
             speech: Static and dynamic aspects},
   Journal = {13th Annual Conference of the International Speech
             Communication Association 2012, INTERSPEECH
             2012},
   Volume = {3},
   Pages = {2179-2182},
   Year = {2012},
   Month = {December},
   ISBN = {9781622767595},
   Abstract = {Magnetic resonance imaging has been applied only recently to
             the study of Arabic speech production. Arabic has a
             relatively large number of sounds produced with
             constrictions in the pharynx, a part of the vocal anatomy
             well-suited to investigation using MRI. We show that static
             3D MRI techniques can be useful in distinguishing the
             pharyngeal sounds of Arabic and that average pixel intensity
             in MR images can be used to track pharyngeal articulations
             as a function of time.},
   Key = {fds331541}
}

@article{fds326438,
   Author = {Benmamoun, E and Abunasser, M and Al-Sabbagh, R and Bidaoui, A and Shalash, D},
   Title = {The Location of Sentential Negation in Arabic
             Varieties},
   Journal = {Brill's Journal of Afroasiatic Languages and
             Linguistics},
   Volume = {5},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {83-116},
   Publisher = {BRILL},
   Year = {2013},
   Month = {January},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/18776930-00501003},
   Abstract = {This paper revisits the issue of the representation of
             sentential negation in Arabic varieties with particular
             reference to Standard Arabic and four colloquial varieties,
             Egyptian Arabic, Gulf/Kuwaiti Arabic, Moroccan Arabic, and
             Jordanian Arabic/Levantine Arabic. The goals are both
             empirical and conceptual. Empirically, the paper
             incorporates data from different Arabic varieties including
             varieties that have not figured prominently in recent
             debates about sentential negation in Arabic. Conceptually,
             the paper aims to engage the important topic of the location
             of the negative projection relative to the projection that
             carries the temporal information of the clause. The paper
             also discusses some patterns that, so far, have not received
             extensive attention and which provide strong support for
             locating the negative projection above the temporal
             projection. The overall goal is to broaden the debate about
             the syntax and morphology of negation in Arabic varieties
             and add critical and novel facts that any diachronic or
             synchronic analysis would want to take into
             account.},
   Doi = {10.1163/18776930-00501003},
   Key = {fds326438}
}

@article{fds326439,
   Author = {Albirini, A and Benmamoun, E and Chakrani, B},
   Title = {Gender and number agreement in the oral production of Arabic
             Heritage speakers},
   Journal = {Bilingualism},
   Volume = {16},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {1-18},
   Publisher = {Cambridge University Press (CUP)},
   Year = {2013},
   Month = {January},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S1366728912000132},
   Abstract = {Heritage language acquisition has been characterized by
             various asymmetries, including the differential acquisition
             rates of various linguistic areas and the unbalanced
             acquisition of different categories within a single area.
             This paper examines Arabic heritage speakers' knowledge of
             subject-verb agreement versus noun-adjective agreement with
             the aim of contrasting their distributions and exploring
             areas of resilience and vulnerability within Arabic heritage
             speech and their theoretical implications. Two
             oral-production experiments were carried out, one involving
             two picture-description tasks, and another requiring an
             elicited narrative. The results of the study show that
             subject-verb agreement morphology is more maintained than
             noun-adjective morphology. Moreover, the unmarked singular
             masculine default is more robust than the other categories
             in both domains and is often over-generalized to other
             marked categories. The results thus confirm the existence of
             these asymmetries. We propose that these asymmetries may not
             be explained by a single factor, but by a complex set of
             morphological, syntactic, semantic, and frequency-related
             factors. Copyright © 2012 Cambridge University
             Press.},
   Doi = {10.1017/S1366728912000132},
   Key = {fds326439}
}

@article{fds326436,
   Author = {Benmamoun, E and Montrul, S and Polinsky, M},
   Title = {Defining an "ideal" heritage speaker: Theoretical and
             methodological challenges Reply to peer commentaries},
   Journal = {Theoretical Linguistics},
   Volume = {39},
   Number = {3-4},
   Pages = {259-294},
   Publisher = {WALTER DE GRUYTER GMBH},
   Year = {2013},
   Month = {November},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/tl-2013-0018},
   Doi = {10.1515/tl-2013-0018},
   Key = {fds326436}
}

@article{fds326437,
   Author = {Benmamoun, E and Montrul, S and Polinsky, M},
   Title = {Heritage languages and their speakers: Opportunities and
             challenges for linguistics},
   Journal = {Theoretical Linguistics},
   Volume = {39},
   Number = {3-4},
   Pages = {129-181},
   Publisher = {WALTER DE GRUYTER GMBH},
   Year = {2013},
   Month = {November},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/tl-2013-0009},
   Abstract = {In this paper, we bring to the attention of the linguistic
             community recent research on heritage languages. Shifting
             linguistic attention from the model of a monolingual speaker
             to the model of a multilingual speaker is important for the
             advancement of our understanding of the language faculty.
             Native speaker competence is typically the result of normal
             first language acquisition in an environment where the
             native language is dominant in various contexts, and
             learners have extensive and continuous exposure to it and
             opportunities to use it. Heritage speakers present a
             different case: they are bilingual speakers of an ethnic or
             immigrant minority language, whose first language often does
             not reach native-like attainment in adulthood. We propose a
             set of connections between heritage language studies and
             theory construction, underscoring the potential that this
             population offers for linguistic research. We examine
             several important grammatical phenomena from the standpoint
             of their representation in heritage languages, including
             case, aspect, and other interface phenomena. We discuss how
             the questions raised by data from heritage speakers could
             fruitfully shed light on current debates about how language
             works and how it is acquired under different conditions. We
             end with a consideration of the potential competing factors
             that shape a heritage language system in adulthood. ©
             [2013] by Walter de Gruyter Berlin Boston
             2013.},
   Doi = {10.1515/tl-2013-0009},
   Key = {fds326437}
}

@article{fds326434,
   Author = {Albirini, A and Benmamoun, E},
   Title = {Aspects of second-language transfer in the oral production
             of Egyptian and Palestinian heritage speakers},
   Journal = {International Journal of Bilingualism},
   Volume = {18},
   Number = {3},
   Pages = {244-273},
   Publisher = {SAGE Publications},
   Year = {2014},
   Month = {January},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1367006912441729},
   Abstract = {The nature and extent of the impact of language transfer in
             majority-minority language contexts have been widely debated
             in both second- and heritage-language acquisition. This
             study examines four linguistic areas in three oral
             narratives collected from Egyptian and Palestinian heritage
             speakers in the United States (namely, plural and dual
             morphology, possessive constructions, and restrictive
             relative clauses), with a special focus on how the second
             language (English) influences the structure and use of these
             areas in connected discourse. In addition, the study
             examines the relationship between second-language transfer
             and the incompleteness and attrition of heritage Arabic. The
             findings show that heritage speakers have various gaps in
             their knowledge of the examined areas, particularly in forms
             and patterns that diverge from their counterparts in their
             dominant L2. The results also suggest that transfer effects
             are restricted to specific forms that are marked (e.g.
             broken plurals), infrequent (duals), or characterized by
             processing difficulty (as seems to be the case with the
             dependencies in the relative clauses). Moreover, transfer
             effects are intimately related to both the attrition and
             incomplete acquisition of the speakers' knowledge of the
             four areas under study. The implications of the study for
             heritage language research are discussed. © The Author(s)
             2012.},
   Doi = {10.1177/1367006912441729},
   Key = {fds326434}
}

@article{fds326435,
   Author = {Benmamoun, E and Albirini, A and Montrul, S and Saadah,
             E},
   Title = {Arabic plurals and root and pattern morphology in
             Palestinian and Egyptian heritage speakers},
   Journal = {Linguistic Approaches to Bilingualism},
   Volume = {4},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {89-123},
   Publisher = {John Benjamins Publishing Company},
   Year = {2014},
   Month = {January},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/lab.4.1.04ben},
   Abstract = {This study investigates heritage speakers' knowledge of
             plural formation in their colloquial varieties of Arabic,
             which use both concatenative and non-concatentative modes of
             derivation. In the concatenative derivation, a plural suffix
             attaches to the singular stem (muhandis 'engineer-sg.' →
             muhandis-iin 'engineer-pl'); in the non-concatenative, the
             relation between the singular (gamal 'camel') and the plural
             (gimaal 'camels') typically involves vocalic and prosodic
             alternations with the main shared similarity between the two
             forms being the consonantal root (e.g., g-m-l). In
             linguistic approaches, non-concatenative patterns have been
             captured in different ways, though the earliest and most
             recognizable approach involves the mapping of a consonantal
             root onto a plural template. We investigated heritage
             speakers' knowledge of the root and pattern system in two
             independent experiments. In Experiment 1, oral narratives
             were elicited from 20 heritage speakers and 20 native
             speakers of Egyptian and Palestinian Arabic. In Experiment
             2, another group of 24 heritage speakers and 24 native
             speakers of the same dialects completed an oral
             picture-description task. The results of the two experiments
             show that heritage speakers' knowledge of the root and
             pattern system of Arabic is not target-like. Yet, they have
             a good grasp of the root and template as basic units of word
             formation in their heritage Arabic dialects. We discuss
             implications for debates about the acquisition of the root
             and pattern system of Arabic morphology.},
   Doi = {10.1075/lab.4.1.04ben},
   Key = {fds326435}
}

@article{fds326433,
   Author = {Albirini, A and Benmamoun, E},
   Title = {Concatenative and nonconcatenative plural formation in L1,
             L2, and heritage speakers of Arabic},
   Journal = {Modern Language Journal},
   Volume = {98},
   Number = {3},
   Pages = {854-871},
   Publisher = {WILEY},
   Year = {2014},
   Month = {September},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/modl.12126},
   Abstract = {This study compares Arabic L1, L2, and heritage speakers'
             (HS) knowledge of plural formation, which involves
             concatenative and nonconcatenative modes of derivation.
             Ninety participants (divided equally among L1, L2, and
             heritage speakers) completed two oral tasks: a picture
             naming task (to measure proficiency) and a plural formation
             task. The findings indicate that both L2 learners and
             heritage speakers have consistent problems with
             nonconcatenative plural morphology (particularly plurals
             with geminated and defective roots). However, the
             difficulties that heritage speakers displayed were mainly
             restricted to forms that are acquired late by L1 children,
             unlike L2 learners who displayed a sharp performance
             dichotomy between concatenative and nonconcatenative
             plurals. Furthermore, with regard to the default strategy,
             heritage speakers resorted to the language-specific default
             form, namely the sound feminine, whereas L2 learners opted
             for the sound masculine, which is likely a case of adhering
             to a universal tendency.},
   Doi = {10.1111/modl.12126},
   Key = {fds326433}
}

@article{fds326432,
   Author = {Albirini, A and Benmamoun, E},
   Title = {Factors affecting the retention of sentential negation in
             heritage Egyptian Arabic},
   Journal = {Bilingualism},
   Volume = {18},
   Number = {3},
   Pages = {470-489},
   Publisher = {Cambridge University Press (CUP)},
   Year = {2015},
   Month = {July},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S1366728914000066},
   Abstract = {This study investigates the areas of resilience and
             vulnerability in sentential negation in heritage Egyptian
             Arabic and explores their theoretical implications. Egyptian
             heritage speakers completed three narrative production
             tasks, five experimental production tasks, and a
             acceptability judgment task. The results indicate that they
             have a full grasp of the location of negation and its
             configurational properties, but diverge from native speakers
             in such aspects of sentential negation as merger with
             lexical heads and dependency or licensing relations. We
             propose that these asymmetric patterns are due to various
             factors, including the age at which a structure is typically
             acquired in the L1, as well as its morphological and
             syntactic characteristics. The results of this study have
             implications for the ongoing debate in heritage language
             research about the linguistic areas that display greater
             stability/vulnerability. For example, phrase structure seems
             less vulnerable than licensing dependencies and the mapping
             between syntax and the morphological interface.},
   Doi = {10.1017/S1366728914000066},
   Key = {fds326432}
}

@book{fds331478,
   Author = {Benmamoun, E and Bassiouney, R},
   Title = {Introduction},
   Pages = {1-8},
   Publisher = {Routledge},
   Year = {2017},
   Month = {January},
   ISBN = {9781138783331},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315147062},
   Abstract = {The poet Hafez Ibrahim has a memorable line in his famous
             poem on the Arabic language. In that line, Arabic boasts
             that it is a sea whose depths contain treasures and then
             wonders whether the diver has been asked about them. For
             modern linguists, that line applies to all natural
             languages. Though there has been extensive research on many
             languages from many regions of the globe, there are still
             too many unanswered questions and still many depths to
             plumb. What makes research on natural language challenging
             is its inherently multifaceted character. Language is a
             human faculty that can be acquired by both children and
             adults, and can get impaired. Those attributes engage
             psychology and neuroscience. Language also reflects social
             stratification and the dynamics of social interactions and
             relations, properties that engage fields such as Sociology
             and Anthropology. Unlike other cognitive faculties,
             individual languages undergo change, some of which is due to
             contact with other languages. The latter properties depend
             for their analysis on knowledge of history, population
             movement, and intimate familiarity with the languages in the
             contact situation. Language can also be modeled
             computationally, and due to advances in information
             technology we now have tools that can, with varying degrees
             of success, recognize and produce language. However, the
             most obvious property of language is that it is a means for
             communication and artistic expression. The communicative
             function of language is carried out through sounds, signs,
             words, and longer expressions, such as phrases, sentences,
             and extended discourse. These overt manifestations of
             language can also vary between languages but may display
             properties that are similar, raising questions about their
             nature and what they reflect about human cognition.
             Unfortunately, research on languages has been uneven, mostly
             due to lack of resources and expertise. Some languages,
             particularly English, have received extensive attention and
             have been explored from the different angles mentioned
             earlier. Other languages, however, have not been as
             fortunate - and some, including some Arabic varieties such
             as Sason Arabic discussed by Akkus in Chapter 25 - may never
             get that chance because they may become extinct in a few
             generations. The majority of Arabic varieties, including
             Standard Arabic, falls somewhere in between. Some aspects of
             the Arabic language have long featured prominently in
             linguistic research going back several centuries to the
             Arabic linguistic tradition. That research focused
             particularly on the sounds patterns of Arabic, word
             formation, some aspects of syntax and semantics, and
             dialectal/regional variation. Other aspects of Arabic have
             started getting the attention of the linguistic community
             only in the last century and early in this century. This
             handbook 2aims to take stock of where the research stands in
             many of those areas. The chapters in this volume aim to
             provide the reader with an overview of the state of the
             research in various areas of Arabic linguistics, describe
             the results and the research that led to them, and point to
             future directions. We could not do justice to all the areas
             of Arabic linguistics but we have tried to focus on research
             that has enriched the debates on Arabic and its varieties
             while also contributing to larger questions about natural
             language in its different manifestations, either because
             Arabic displays some properties that shed further light on
             some complex general issues, such as subject verb agreement,
             negation, tense, syllabification, acquisition of heritage
             Arabic, etc., or where Arabic can highlight properties that
             are not as well-known crosslinguistically, such as
             diglossia, the role of the consonantal root in word
             formation, and experimental and computational approaches to
             a language with a root and pattern system.},
   Doi = {10.4324/9781315147062},
   Key = {fds331478}
}

@article{fds326431,
   Author = {Benmamoun, E and Albirini, A},
   Title = {Is learning a standard variety similar to learning a new
             language?: Evidence from heritage speakers of
             Arabic},
   Journal = {Studies in Second Language Acquisition},
   Volume = {40},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {31-61},
   Publisher = {Cambridge University Press (CUP)},
   Year = {2018},
   Month = {March},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0272263116000383},
   Abstract = {This study examines heritage speakers' knowledge of Standard
             Arabic (SA) and compares their patterns of SA acquisition to
             those of learners of SA as second/foreign language (L2). In
             addition, the study examines the influence of previously
             acquired language varieties, including Colloquial Arabic
             (QA), on SA acquisition.1 To this end, the study compares 35
             heritage speakers, 28 L2 learners, and 16 controls with
             respect to sentential negation, an area where SA and QA
             diverge significantly. The participants completed five oral
             tasks targeting negation of eight different clause types.
             The findings showed that L2 learners and heritage speakers
             performed comparably, encountered similar difficulties, and
             produced similar patterns of errors. However, whereas L2
             learners did not display clear transfer effects from L1
             (English), heritage speakers showed both positive and
             negative influence of L1 (QA). The results shed light on the
             dynamics of the interaction between the spoken heritage
             languages and their written standard counterparts with
             specific focus on diglossic contexts.},
   Doi = {10.1017/S0272263116000383},
   Key = {fds326431}
}


%% Cai, Jie   
@article{fds18103,
   Author = {Cai, Jie},
   Title = {Teaching Written Style Chinese (shumianyu) at
             Advanced},
   Journal = {SCCLT Conference Proceedings},
   Pages = {p.15-18},
   Year = {2002},
   Month = {November},
   Key = {fds18103}
}

@book{fds18111,
   Author = {Cai, Jie},
   Title = {Handbook of Contemporary Colloquial Expressions},
   Publisher = {Cheng & Tsui Publications},
   Year = {2004},
   Month = {October},
   Abstract = {http://www.cheng-tsui.com/},
   Key = {fds18111}
}

@book{fds53299,
   Author = {J. Cai},
   Title = {Pop Chinese: a Cheng & Tsui handbook of contemporary
             colloquial expressions, 2nd edtion},
   Year = {2006},
   url = {http://www.cheng-tsui.com/product.cfm?sid=22030218D04345012216002C1166708620764P66Z249Z66Z176Y45816184H498&p=14241},
   Key = {fds53299}
}

@article{fds213839,
   Author = {Cai, Jie},
   Title = {A Sociolinguistic Profile of High-level Heritage Learners
             for the Development of CFL Teaching Materials},
   Series = {1st ed},
   Pages = {432-440},
   Booktitle = {Research on Concepts and Practice of Developing Chinese
             Language Teaching Materials},
   Publisher = {ZheJiang University Press},
   Editor = {Weimin Xu and Wenchao He},
   Year = {2012},
   Month = {June},
   ISBN = {978-7-308-10088-5},
   Key = {fds213839}
}


%% Chen, Yunchuan   
@article{fds354161,
   Author = {Chen, Y},
   Title = {Two types of possessive passives in Japanese},
   Journal = {Concentric. Studies in Linguistics},
   Volume = {45},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {192-210},
   Publisher = {John Benjamins Publishing Company},
   Year = {2019},
   Month = {November},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/consl.00008.che},
   Abstract = {<jats:title>Abstract</jats:title> <jats:p>Many East Asian
             languages have possessive passives, whose subjects are
             interpreted as the possessor of the direct object. This
             paper investigates Japanese Possessive Passives (JPPs) and
             proposes that there are two types of possessive passives in
             Japanese: one with a ‘<jats:italic>by</jats:italic>-phrase’
             headed by <jats:italic>ni</jats:italic> (<jats:italic>ni</jats:italic>
             JPPs) and the other with a ‘<jats:italic>by</jats:italic>-phrase’
             headed by <jats:italic>ni yotte</jats:italic>
             (<jats:italic>ni yotte</jats:italic> JPPs). While previous
             studies assumed that JPPs are a sub-type of indirect
             passive, I propose that such an analysis is untenable.
             Instead, JPPs exhibit the same dichotomy as
             <jats:italic>ni</jats:italic>-passives and <jats:italic>ni
             yotte</jats:italic>-passives exhibit (<jats:xref>Kuroda
             1979</jats:xref>, <jats:xref>Kitagawa &amp; Kuroda
             1992</jats:xref>): While subjects of <jats:italic>ni</jats:italic>
             JPPs are base-generated like <jats:italic>ni</jats:italic>-passives,
             subjects of <jats:italic>ni yotte</jats:italic> JPPs undergo
             NP movement like <jats:italic>ni yotte</jats:italic>-passives.</jats:p>},
   Doi = {10.1075/consl.00008.che},
   Key = {fds354161}
}

@article{fds355515,
   Author = {Chen, Y},
   Title = {Anaphor reconstruction in Japanese relative
             clauses},
   Journal = {Language and Linguistics / 語言暨語言學},
   Volume = {22},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {243-271},
   Publisher = {John Benjamins Publishing Company},
   Year = {2021},
   Month = {March},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/lali.00082.che},
   Abstract = {<jats:title>Abstract</jats:title><jats:p>This study
             conducted two experiments to examine the derivation of the
             head noun phrase in Japanese relative clauses, with a focus
             on whether the anaphors<jats:italic>jibun</jats:italic>‘self’
             and<jats:italic>jibun-jishin</jats:italic>‘self-self’
             within the head noun phrase can be co-referential with the
             relative clause subject. It aims to settle a long-standing
             debate among the previous studies concerning the
             interpretation of the anaphors inside the head noun phrase:
             while several studies claimed that the co-reference between
             the anaphor<jats:italic>jibun</jats:italic>‘self’ and
             the relative clause subject is prohibited, many other
             studies argued that such co-reference is possible. In
             addition, it has been claimed that while co-indexing the
             anaphor<jats:italic>jibun</jats:italic>with the relative
             clause subject might be marginally acceptable, it would
             become fully acceptable if we replace<jats:italic>jibun</jats:italic>with
             the morphologically complex anaphor<jats:italic>jibun-jishin</jats:italic>‘self-self’,
             which implies that the morphological make-up of an anaphor
             may affect its ability to be co-indexed with the relative
             clause subject.</jats:p><jats:p>The results of two carefully
             controlled truth value judgment experiments show that
             neither the simplex anaphor<jats:italic>jibun</jats:italic>nor
             the complex anaphor<jats:italic>jibun-jishin</jats:italic>within
             the head noun phrase of relative clauses can take the
             relative clause subject as its antecedent, which suggests
             that the head noun phrase does not reconstruct and therefore
             lends support to the<jats:italic>pro</jats:italic>-binding
             analysis of Japanese relative clauses. Moreover, the
             findings also suggest that the morphological make-up of an
             anaphor does not affect its ability to take the relative
             clause subject as its antecedent, despite the claim that it
             is more acceptable to co-index the complex
             anaphor<jats:italic>jibun-jishin</jats:italic>with the
             relative clause subject than the simplex
             anaphor<jats:italic>jibun</jats:italic>.</jats:p>},
   Doi = {10.1075/lali.00082.che},
   Key = {fds355515}
}

@article{fds354297,
   Author = {Chen, Y},
   Title = {Acquisition of Japanese relative clauses by L1 Chinese
             learners: Evidence from reflexive pronoun
             resolution},
   Journal = {Second Language Research},
   Volume = {38},
   Number = {3},
   Pages = {499-529},
   Year = {2022},
   Month = {July},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0267658320978502},
   Abstract = {This article investigates whether first-language (L1)
             Chinese-speaking learners of Japanese as a second language
             (L2) can acquire the knowledge that the reflexive pronoun
             jibun ‘self’ within the head noun phrase of Japanese
             relative clauses cannot refer to the relative clause
             subject. Successful acquisition would suggest that learners
             are able to acquire the underlying syntactic knowledge that
             the head noun phrase of Japanese relative clauses is
             base-generated external to the relative clause. A truth
             value judgment experiment was conducted and the findings
             suggest that L1 Chinese learners can indeed acquire the
             target syntactic knowledge in Japanese relative clauses,
             which argues against the Representational Deficit hypotheses
             and supports the Full Functional Representation hypotheses
             of L2 acquisition.},
   Doi = {10.1177/0267658320978502},
   Key = {fds354297}
}

@article{fds370397,
   Author = {Chen, Y and Huan, T},
   Title = {Scope assignment in Quantifier-Negation sentences in Tibetan
             as a heritage language in China},
   Journal = {Second Language Research},
   Year = {2023},
   Month = {January},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/02676583231161164},
   Abstract = {Quantifier-Negation sentences allow an inverse scope reading
             in Tibetan but not in Chinese. This difference can be
             attributed to the underlying syntactic difference: the
             negation word can be raised at Logical Form in Tibetan but
             not in Chinese. This study investigated whether
             Chinese-dominant Tibetan heritage speakers know such
             difference. We conducted a sentence–picture matching truth
             value judgment task with 28 Chinese-dominant Tibetan
             heritage speakers, 25 baseline Tibetan speakers and 31
             baseline Chinese speakers. Our baseline data first confirmed
             the difference between Tibetan and Chinese: the inverse
             scope reading is allowed in Tibetan but prohibited in
             Chinese. Our heritage participants’ data showed a
             divergence: one group of heritage speakers allow the inverse
             scope reading in both Tibetan and Chinese while another
             group prohibit it in both languages. There is a third group
             of heritage speakers who are aware of the difference between
             Tibetan and Chinese. Our findings suggest that while it is
             possible for heritage speakers to attain nativelike
             knowledge of an interface phenomenon that differs in their
             two languages, they may also be subject to crosslinguistic
             influence and adopt one of two opposite strategies. Both
             strategies can minimize syntactic differences between their
             two grammars so an economy of syntactic representations in
             their repository of grammars can be achieved.},
   Doi = {10.1177/02676583231161164},
   Key = {fds370397}
}

@article{fds376275,
   Author = {Chen, Y},
   Title = {An experimental approach to the reconstruction of the head
             quantifier phrase in Chinese relative clauses},
   Journal = {Canadian Journal of Linguistics},
   Year = {2024},
   Month = {January},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/cnj.2024.6},
   Abstract = {Aoun and Li (2003) argued that whether the head of Chinese
             relative clauses can reconstruct at Logical Form is
             determined by its phrasal category. When the head is a noun
             phrase, it can reconstruct; but when it is a quantifier
             phrase, it cannot. This paper uses a sentence-picture
             matching experiment to investigate this claim. The results
             showed that a quantifier phrase can reconstruct. Thus, we do
             not need to stipulate a noun phrase/quantifier phrase
             distinction for the reconstruction of heads in Chinese
             relative clauses. Both types of phrases can reconstruct,
             predicted by the head-raising analysis of relative
             clauses.},
   Doi = {10.1017/cnj.2024.6},
   Key = {fds376275}
}

@article{fds376822,
   Author = {Chen, Y},
   Title = {An Experimental Investigation into the Scope Assignment of
             Japanese and Chinese Quantifier-Negation
             Sentences},
   Journal = {Languages},
   Volume = {9},
   Number = {3},
   Pages = {111-111},
   Publisher = {MDPI AG},
   Year = {2024},
   Month = {March},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/languages9030111},
   Abstract = {Quantifier-Negation sentences such as all teachers did not
             use Sandy’s car are known to allow an inverse scope
             interpretation in English. However, there is a lack of
             experimental evidence to determine whether this
             interpretation is allowed in equivalent sentences in
             Japanese and Chinese. To address this issue, this study
             conducted a sentence–picture matching truth value judgment
             experiment in both Japanese and Chinese. The data suggested
             that Japanese Quantifier-Negation sentences do allow inverse
             scope readings, which suggests that the subject may be
             interpreted within the scope of negation. In contrast,
             Chinese Quantifier-Negation sentences prohibit inverse scope
             readings, which is in accordance with the strong scope
             rigidity consistently observed in this language. This paper
             also discussed how to develop a valid experiment for
             investigating scope ambiguities.},
   Doi = {10.3390/languages9030111},
   Key = {fds376822}
}


%% Ching, Leo   
@book{fds285033,
   Author = {Ching, L},
   Title = {Becoming “Japanese”: Colonial Taiwan and the Politics of
             Identity Formation},
   Publisher = {University of California Press},
   Year = {2000},
   Key = {fds285033}
}

@article{fds285031,
   Author = {Ching, L},
   Title = {Savage Construction and Civility Making: Japanese Colonial
             Discourse and Taiwanese Aborigines},
   Series = {a special issue of positions: east asia cultures
             critique},
   Pages = {795-818},
   Booktitle = {Japan and Cultural Imperialism},
   Editor = {Weisenfeld, G},
   Year = {2000},
   Month = {Winter},
   Key = {fds285031}
}

@article{fds285032,
   Author = {Ching, L},
   Title = {’Give Me Japan and Nothing Else!’: Postcoloniality,
             Identity, and the Traces Colonialism” in Millennial Japan:
             Rethinking the Nation in the Age of Recession},
   Journal = {South Atlantic Quarterly},
   Pages = {763-788},
   Editor = {Harootunian, H and Yoda, T},
   Year = {2000},
   Month = {Fall},
   Key = {fds285032}
}

@article{fds285036,
   Author = {Ching, L},
   Title = {Globalizing the regional, regionalizing the global: Mass
             culture and Asianism in the age of late capital},
   Journal = {Public Culture},
   Volume = {12},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {233-257},
   Year = {2000},
   Month = {January},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/08992363-12-1-233},
   Doi = {10.1215/08992363-12-1-233},
   Key = {fds285036}
}

@article{fds24178,
   Author = {L. Ching},
   Title = {Regionalizing the Global; Globalizing the Regional: Mass
             Culture and Asianism in the Age of Late Capital},
   Journal = {Criterios, Cuban Journal on Theory of Culture, Arts and
             Literature},
   Year = {2003},
   Month = {Summer},
   Key = {fds24178}
}

@book{fds285034,
   Author = {Ching, L},
   Title = {"Cheng wei ’ribenren’" (Becoming ’Japanese’)},
   Publisher = {Rye-Field Publishing},
   Year = {2006},
   Key = {fds285034}
}

@article{fds303145,
   Author = {Ching, L},
   Title = {"Japan in Asia"},
   Booktitle = {Blackwell Companion to Japanese History},
   Publisher = {Blackwell},
   Editor = {Tsutsui, W},
   Year = {2006},
   Key = {fds303145}
}

@article{fds285035,
   Author = {Ching, L},
   Title = {Japan in Asia},
   Pages = {407-423},
   Booktitle = {Blackwell Companion to Japanese History},
   Publisher = {BLACKWELL PUBLISHING LTD},
   Editor = {William Tsutsui},
   Year = {2007},
   Month = {December},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9780470751398.ch24},
   Doi = {10.1002/9780470751398.ch24},
   Key = {fds285035}
}

@article{fds324203,
   Author = {Ching, L},
   Title = {Inter-Asia cultural studies and the decolonial-turn},
   Journal = {Inter-Asia Cultural Studies},
   Volume = {11},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {184-187},
   Publisher = {Informa UK Limited},
   Year = {2010},
   Month = {June},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14649371003616102},
   Doi = {10.1080/14649371003616102},
   Key = {fds324203}
}

@article{fds324202,
   Author = {Ching, L},
   Title = {Champion of justice: How asian heroes saved Japanese
             imperialism},
   Journal = {PMLA},
   Volume = {126},
   Number = {3},
   Pages = {644-650},
   Publisher = {Modern Language Association (MLA)},
   Year = {2011},
   Month = {May},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1632/pmla.2011.126.3.644},
   Doi = {10.1632/pmla.2011.126.3.644},
   Key = {fds324202}
}

@article{fds324201,
   Author = {Ching, L},
   Title = {'Japanese Devils': The conditions and limits of
             anti-Japanism in China},
   Journal = {Cultural Studies},
   Volume = {26},
   Number = {5},
   Pages = {710-722},
   Publisher = {Informa UK Limited},
   Year = {2012},
   Month = {September},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09502386.2012.697728},
   Abstract = {The 2005 anti-Japan protests in China inaugurated a new era
             of Chinese popular nationalism with their pervasive
             visuality and virtuality. The outpouring of emotions in
             cityscapes and cyberspaces - anger, outrage, zealousness and
             even pleasure - requires us to take emotion, passion, hope
             or sheer delight seriously and to recognize the power of
             some of the more alarming forms of popular nationalist
             sentimentality. This chapter analyses one instance of
             Sino-Japanese relations: the epithet of 'riben guizi' or
             Japanese devils in Chinese popular culture in four
             historical moments: late-Sinocentric imperium, high
             imperialism, socialist nationalism and post-socialist
             globalization. I want to suggest that while this 'hate word'
             performs an affective politics of recognition stemming from
             an ineluctable trauma of imperialist violence, it ultimately
             fails in establishing a politics of reconciliation. I argue
             that anti-Japanism in China is less about Japan than China's
             own self-image mediated through its asymmetrical power
             relations with Japan throughout its modern history. © 2012
             Copyright Taylor and Francis Group, LLC.},
   Doi = {10.1080/09502386.2012.697728},
   Key = {fds324201}
}

@article{fds303146,
   Author = {Ching, L},
   Title = {"Shiko fukanosei toshite no Mushajiken” (The Musha
             Rebellion as Unthinkable)},
   Pages = {103-129},
   Booktitle = {"Kioku suru taiwan" (Taiwan Remembers: Encountering
             Empire)},
   Publisher = {Tokyo University Press},
   Editor = {Mitsa, W and Chie, T and Ying-che, H},
   Year = {2014},
   Month = {February},
   Key = {fds303146}
}

@article{fds358325,
   Author = {Ching, LTS},
   Title = {Neo-regionalism and neoliberal Asia},
   Pages = {39-52},
   Booktitle = {Routledge Handbook of New Media in Asia},
   Year = {2015},
   Month = {January},
   ISBN = {9781138026001},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315774626-11},
   Abstract = {Asian regionalism has been predominantly a Japanese-led
             discourse, strategy, and ideology throughout the region’s
             modern/colonial history. Asianism’s condition of
             possibility is inseparable from the history of Western and
             Japanese imperialism and colonialism. To be more precise,
             Japan’s evocation of regional solidarity is a response to
             the real and perceived threat of Western aggression and the
             justification of its own empire-building in Asia. Any
             discussion of regionalism cannot escape the West-Japan-Asia
             triad (Ching 2009). The relative lack of Japanese discourse
             on Asian regionalism today suggests two possible
             interpretations: that the West is no longer a threat and
             that the balance of power has shifted in the
             region.1.},
   Doi = {10.4324/9781315774626-11},
   Key = {fds358325}
}

@article{fds329782,
   Author = {Maitra, A and Chow, R},
   Title = {What’s“in”? Disaggregating Asia through new media
             actants},
   Pages = {17-27},
   Booktitle = {Routledge Handbook of New Media in Asia},
   Publisher = {Routledge},
   Year = {2016},
   Month = {January},
   ISBN = {9781138026001},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315774626},
   Doi = {10.4324/9781315774626},
   Key = {fds329782}
}

@article{fds371396,
   Author = {Ching, LTS},
   Title = {The Musha Rebellion as Unthinkable: Coloniality,
             Aboriginality, and the Epistemology of Colonial
             Difference},
   Pages = {43-62},
   Booktitle = {Identity Conflicts: Can Violence be Regulated?},
   Year = {2017},
   Month = {January},
   ISBN = {9781412806596},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203789285-3},
   Abstract = {From all aspects, their brutality was truly detestable….
             But I personally felt, somehow with virtuous persuasion and
             proper guidance, I would want to have them on the front line
             as part of the military under our command for future
             emergency. I remember this kind of idea came naturally to
             me.},
   Doi = {10.4324/9780203789285-3},
   Key = {fds371396}
}

@article{fds349070,
   Author = {Ching, LTS},
   Title = {Reconciliation otherwise: Intimacy, indigeneity, and the
             Taiwan difference},
   Journal = {Boundary 2},
   Volume = {45},
   Number = {3},
   Pages = {27-44},
   Year = {2018},
   Month = {August},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/01903659-6915557},
   Doi = {10.1215/01903659-6915557},
   Key = {fds349070}
}

@book{fds342845,
   Author = {Ching, L},
   Title = {Anti-Japan: The Politics of Sentiment in Postcolonial East
             Asia},
   Pages = {177 pages},
   Publisher = {Duke University Press},
   Year = {2019},
   ISBN = {978-1-4780-0289-5},
   Key = {fds342845}
}

@article{fds362805,
   Author = {Ching, LTS},
   Title = {Beyond nation and empire},
   Journal = {American Quarterly},
   Volume = {73},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {383-388},
   Year = {2021},
   Month = {June},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/aq.2021.0020},
   Doi = {10.1353/aq.2021.0020},
   Key = {fds362805}
}

@article{fds362804,
   Author = {Ching, LTS and Chang, CHJ},
   Title = {An interview with Leo T. S. Ching: on the politics of
             sentiment, anti- and pro-Japanism, and the coalitional
             outlook},
   Journal = {Inter-Asia Cultural Studies},
   Volume = {23},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {134-144},
   Year = {2022},
   Month = {January},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14649373.2022.2026589},
   Abstract = {Inspired by his Anti-Japan: The Politics of Sentiment in
             Postcolonial East Asia (2019), this interview with Dr. Leo
             Ching invites the readers’ critical attention and
             examination on the temporally and spatially complicated
             coloniality and decolonial outlook in the Asia-Pacific. The
             postcolonial and post-Pacific-War sentiments encapsulated by
             the terms “anti-Japanism” and “pro-Japanism” are the
             anchor points for the inquiries about each of the East Asian
             subjects’ geo-historically specific psychological
             struggles. The interview covers the following aspects: (1)
             Dr. Ching’s familial experience and social observations
             that drove his book project; (2) The clarification of
             “sentiment” as a politically chosen concept that is
             differentiated from the psychoanalytical “affect” and
             logically connects with “feeling” and “emotion”; (3)
             the “trans-imperial” complicity between the imperial
             superpowers; (4) the search of alternative narratives that
             challenge the normative, linear, and masculinist narrative
             on the Japanese colonization in Taiwan; (5) the search of
             the sentiments that are not (fully) co-opted or regulated by
             nation-states; (6) Dr. Ching’s reflection on his gendered
             positionality and how that positionality takes part in his
             interpretation of the intersectionally oppressed female
             bodies. The interview concludes with the appeal for the
             coalitional politics that responds to contemporary racism
             and colonial residues.},
   Doi = {10.1080/14649373.2022.2026589},
   Key = {fds362804}
}

@article{fds373583,
   Author = {Ching, LTS},
   Title = {The new “Great Game”? Decolonizing wargames in the era
             of China’s rise},
   Journal = {Inter-Asia Cultural Studies},
   Volume = {24},
   Number = {5},
   Pages = {824-835},
   Year = {2023},
   Month = {January},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14649373.2023.2242147},
   Abstract = {The “new” Great Game suggests that, like the imperial
             competition of the past, we are witnessing a trans-imperial
             moment whereby Japan and China are vying for hegemony in
             East Asia. This is a new moment because East Asia, unlike
             Europe, has never had two co-existing superpowers. The
             prospect of a new imperial competition is complicated by the
             still-present American military power and the non-statist
             arena, especially in popular culture, where the imperial
             games are played out. Using two popular anti-Japan
             videogames, Glorious Mission Online (2013) and The Invisible
             Guardian (2019) as case studies, I argue these games are
             symptomatic of the relations between warfare and game in
             general. I then outline the trend in game development that
             subverts conventional wargames. Finally, I speculate on
             alternative game design over the disputed territories in the
             Southern China Sea that prioritizes ecology over human
             conflict and development.},
   Doi = {10.1080/14649373.2023.2242147},
   Key = {fds373583}
}

@article{fds373584,
   Author = {Ching, LTS and Shim, D and Yang, FC},
   Title = {Editorial introduction: East Asian pop culture in the era of
             China’s rise},
   Journal = {Inter-Asia Cultural Studies},
   Volume = {24},
   Number = {5},
   Pages = {737-743},
   Year = {2023},
   Month = {January},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14649373.2023.2242139},
   Doi = {10.1080/14649373.2023.2242139},
   Key = {fds373584}
}

@article{fds372240,
   Author = {Ching, LTS and Lim, H},
   Title = {Voices from Cheju (Jeju): Towards an Archipelagic
             Imagination},
   Journal = {Asia-Pacific Journal: Japan Focus},
   Volume = {21},
   Number = {7},
   Year = {2023},
   Month = {July},
   Abstract = {The essay profiles five artists and activists from Cheju
             Island and narrates their work and commitment to keeping the
             legacies of the vi cti ms of the i nfamous Chej u 4. 3 Inci
             dent al i ve i n publ i c di scourse. Thei r acti vi sm,
             embedded i n l ocal hi story and memory, is potentially
             transnational and archipelagic, inter-referencing and
             resonating with similar atrocities and related politics of
             memory and redress in Taiwan’s 2.28 Incident as well as
             the Battle of Okinawa. Together, each use their own methods
             and experienced to negotiate and resist nationalist
             historical revision and capitalist speculation, whose acts
             erase the voices of the dead.},
   Key = {fds372240}
}


%% Chow, Eileen C.   
@book{fds349571,
   Author = {Rojas, C and Chow, ECY},
   Title = {Rethinking chinese popular culture: Cannibalizations of the
             canon},
   Pages = {1-288},
   Year = {2008},
   Month = {December},
   ISBN = {9780415468800},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203886649},
   Abstract = {Through analyses of a wide range of Chinese literary and
             visual texts from the beginning of the twentieth century
             through the contemporary period, the thirteen essays in this
             volume challenge the view that canonical and popular culture
             are self-evident and diametrically opposed categories, and
             instead argue that the two cultural sensibilities are
             inextricably bound up with one another. An international
             line up of contributors present detailed analyses of
             literary works and other cultural products that have
             previously been neglected by scholars, while also examining
             more familiar authors and works from provocative new
             angles.The essays include investigations into the cultural
             industries and contexts that produce the canonical and
             popular, the position of contemporary popular works at the
             interstices of nostalgia and amnesia, and also the ways in
             which cultural texts are inflected with gendered and erotic
             sensibilities while at the same time also functioning as
             objects of desire in its own right. As the only volume of
             its kind to cover the entire span of the 20th century, and
             also to consider the interplay of popular and canonical
             literature in modern China with comparable rigor, Rethinking
             Chinese Popular Culture is an important resource for
             students and scholars of Chinese literature and
             culture.},
   Doi = {10.4324/9780203886649},
   Key = {fds349571}
}

@book{fds349570,
   Author = {Yu, H},
   Title = {Brothers: A Novel by Yu Hua},
   Publisher = {Pantheon},
   Year = {2009},
   Key = {fds349570}
}

@book{fds359126,
   Title = {The Oxford Handbook of Chinese Cinemas},
   Publisher = {Oxford University Press},
   Editor = {Rojas, C and Cheng-yin Chow and E},
   Year = {2013},
   Key = {fds359126}
}

@book{fds359157,
   Title = {Oxford Handbook of Chinese Cinemas},
   Publisher = {Oxford University Press},
   Editor = {Rojas, C and Chow, E},
   Year = {2013},
   Key = {fds359157}
}

@book{fds358278,
   Author = {Wang, DD-W},
   Title = {A New Literary History of Modern China},
   Pages = {1032 pages},
   Publisher = {Harvard University Press},
   Year = {2017},
   Month = {May},
   ISBN = {9780674967915},
   Abstract = {Featuring over 140 Chinese and non-Chinese contributors,
             this landmark volume, edited by David Der-wei Wang, explores
             unconventional forms as well as traditional genres,
             emphasizes Chinese authors’ influence on foreign writers
             as well as ...},
   Key = {fds358278}
}

@book{fds359125,
   Author = {Li, Y and Space, AP},
   Title = {Tolstoy Together: 85 Days of War and Peace with Yiyun
             Li},
   Pages = {256 pages},
   Publisher = {Public Space Books},
   Year = {2021},
   Month = {August},
   ISBN = {9781734590760},
   Abstract = {A reader&#39;s companion for Tolstoy&#39;s epic novel, War
             and Peace, inspired by the online book club led by Yiyun
             Li.},
   Key = {fds359125}
}


%% Conceison, Claire   
@article{fds298232,
   Author = {C Conceison},
   Title = {The Main Melody Campaign in Chinese Spoken
             Drama},
   Journal = {Asian Theatre Journal},
   Volume = {11},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {190-212},
   Year = {1994},
   Key = {fds298232}
}

@article{fds298233,
   Author = {C Conceison},
   Title = {Translating Collaboration: The Joy Luck Club and
             Intercultural Theatre},
   Journal = {The Drama Review (TDR)},
   Volume = {39},
   Number = {3 (T147)},
   Pages = {151-166},
   Year = {1995},
   Key = {fds298233}
}

@article{fds298250,
   Author = {C Conceison},
   Title = {The Occidental other on the Chinese stage: Cultural
             cross-examination in Guo Shixing's 'Bird
             Men'},
   Journal = {ASIAN THEATRE JOURNAL},
   Volume = {15},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {87-101},
   Year = {1998},
   ISSN = {0742-5457},
   url = {http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=WOS:000073439100006&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=47d3190e77e5a3a53558812f597b0b92},
   Doi = {10.2307/1124100},
   Key = {fds298250}
}

@article{fds298234,
   Author = {C Conceison},
   Title = {Between Orient and Occident: The Intercultural Spoken Other
             in China Dream},
   Journal = {Theatre InSight},
   Volume = {10},
   Number = {1 (Spring)},
   Pages = {14-26},
   Year = {1999},
   Key = {fds298234}
}

@article{fds298249,
   Author = {C Conceison},
   Title = {International casting in Chinese plays: A tale of two
             cities},
   Journal = {THEATRE JOURNAL},
   Volume = {53},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {277-290},
   Year = {2001},
   Month = {May},
   ISSN = {0192-2882},
   url = {http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=WOS:000168715500005&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=47d3190e77e5a3a53558812f597b0b92},
   Doi = {10.1353/tj.2001.0036},
   Key = {fds298249}
}

@article{fds298235,
   Author = {C Conceison},
   Title = {Face Time: Time to Face Realities of Cultural Production in
             the American University},
   Journal = {Studies in Theatre and Performance},
   Volume = {21},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {96-108},
   Year = {2001},
   Month = {July},
   ISSN = {1468-2761},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1386/stap.21.2.96},
   Doi = {10.1386/stap.21.2.96},
   Key = {fds298235}
}

@article{fds298236,
   Author = {C Conceison},
   Title = {Hot Tickets: China’s New Generation Takes the
             Stage},
   Journal = {Persimmon: Asian Literature, Arts, and Culture},
   Volume = {3},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {18-27},
   Year = {2002},
   Key = {fds298236}
}

@article{fds298237,
   Author = {C Conceison},
   Title = {No Ordinary Days},
   Journal = {American Theatre},
   Number = {May/June},
   Pages = {28-31},
   Year = {2002},
   ISSN = {8750-3255},
   Key = {fds298237}
}

@misc{fds298223,
   Author = {C Conceison},
   Title = {Swing in Beijing (media review)},
   Journal = {Asian Theatre Journal},
   Publisher = {University of Hawaii Press},
   Year = {2002},
   ISSN = {1527-2109},
   Key = {fds298223}
}

@misc{fds298226,
   Author = {C Conceison},
   Title = {Acting the Right Part: Political Theater and Popular Drama
             in Contemporary China by Xiaomei Chen},
   Journal = {China Review International},
   Year = {2002},
   Key = {fds298226}
}

@article{fds298238,
   Author = {C Conceison},
   Title = {Fleshing out the Dramaturgy of Gao Xingjian},
   Journal = {Modern Chinese Literature and Culture},
   Year = {2002},
   Month = {November},
   ISSN = {8755-8963},
   url = {http://u.osu.edu/mclc/onlineseries/},
   Key = {fds298238}
}

@misc{fds298224,
   Author = {C Conceison},
   Title = {Misreading the Chinese Character: Images of the Chinese in
             Euroamerican Drama to 1925 by Dave Williams},
   Journal = {China Review International},
   Year = {2003},
   Key = {fds298224}
}

@article{fds298252,
   Author = {C Conceison},
   Title = {What's New-and Renewed-Onstage in China},
   Journal = {TDR/The Drama Review},
   Volume = {47},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {74-80},
   Year = {2003},
   Month = {March},
   ISSN = {1054-2043},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/105420403321250008},
   Doi = {10.1162/105420403321250008},
   Key = {fds298252}
}

@book{fds298247,
   Author = {C Conceison},
   Title = {Significant Other: Staging the American in
             China},
   Journal = {manual},
   Publisher = {University of Hawai’i Press},
   Year = {2004},
   Key = {fds298247}
}

@misc{fds298225,
   Author = {C Conceison},
   Title = {National Abjection: The Asian American Body Onstage by Karen
             Shimakawa},
   Journal = {Asian Theatre Journal},
   Year = {2004},
   Key = {fds298225}
}

@misc{fds298227,
   Author = {C Conceison},
   Title = {Gao Xingjian and Transcultural Chinese Theater by Sy Ren
             Quah},
   Journal = {Theatre Journal},
   Year = {2005},
   Key = {fds298227}
}

@misc{fds298228,
   Author = {C Conceison},
   Title = {Shashibiya: Staging Shakespeare in China by Ruru
             Li},
   Journal = {Journal of Asian Studies},
   Pages = {709-711},
   Year = {2005},
   Key = {fds298228}
}

@article{fds298239,
   Author = {C Conceison},
   Title = {In Memoriam: Ying Ruocheng 1929-2003},
   Journal = {American Theatre},
   Pages = {26-27},
   Year = {2005},
   Month = {January},
   ISSN = {8750-3255},
   Key = {fds298239}
}

@misc{fds298230,
   Author = {C Conceison},
   Title = {A Cruel World: Boundary-Crossing and Exile in The Great
             Going Abroad},
   Journal = {manual},
   Booktitle = {Contested Modernities in Chinese Literature},
   Publisher = {Palgrave Macmillan},
   Year = {2005},
   Month = {June},
   ISBN = {1403981337},
   Key = {fds298230}
}

@article{fds298240,
   Author = {C Conceison},
   Title = {Ordinary People, Beijing Style},
   Journal = {American Theatre},
   Volume = {12},
   Year = {2005},
   Month = {December},
   ISSN = {8750-3255},
   Key = {fds298240}
}

@misc{fds298229,
   Author = {C Conceison},
   Title = {Huang Zuolin Festival (performance review)},
   Journal = {Theatre Journal},
   Volume = {October 2007},
   Pages = {491-493},
   Year = {2007},
   Month = {October},
   Key = {fds298229}
}

@book{fds298241,
   Author = {C Conceison},
   Title = {水流云在:英若诚自传 (Chinese version of ’Voices
             Carry’)},
   Journal = {manual},
   Publisher = {Beijing: CITIC Press},
   Year = {2009},
   Key = {fds298241}
}

@book{fds298248,
   Author = {C Conceison},
   Title = {Voices Carry: Behind Bars and Backstage during China’s
             Revolution and Reform},
   Journal = {manual},
   Publisher = {Rowman & Littlefield},
   Year = {2009},
   url = {http://voicescarrybook.wordpress.com/},
   Key = {fds298248}
}

@article{fds298243,
   Author = {C Conceison},
   Title = {The French Gao Xingjian, Bilingualism, and Ballade
             Nocturne},
   Journal = {Hong Kong Drama Review},
   Volume = {October 2009},
   Number = {No. 8},
   Pages = {303-322},
   Year = {2009},
   Key = {fds298243}
}

@misc{fds178212,
   Author = {Translated by C. Conceison},
   Title = {"Ballade Nocturne" by Gao Xingjian},
   Series = {American University of Paris Cahiers Series},
   Publisher = {Sylph Editions},
   Address = {UK},
   Year = {2010},
   Key = {fds178212}
}

@article{fds298251,
   Author = {C Conceison},
   Title = {Behind the play: The world and works of Nick Rongjun
             Yu},
   Journal = {Theatre Journal},
   Volume = {63},
   Number = {3},
   Pages = {311-321},
   Year = {2011},
   ISSN = {0192-2882},
   Abstract = {The dramaturgy of Nick Rongjun Yu, the most prolific
             playwright in China, has been omitted from English-language
             anthologies and is overlooked by many Beijingcentric
             scholars, but his plays written during the past decade have
             been staged more than those of any other living Chinese
             playwright. He is deputy general manager of the Shanghai
             Dramatic Arts Centre (SDAC) and also its long-time director
             of publicity, marketing, and programming. As a writer, he
             plays a unique game with government censors; as an
             administrator at SDAC, he has instituted reforms and
             successful commercial strategies; and his efforts at
             expanding pan-Asian and international collaboration have
             transformed the Shanghai theatre scene. This essay gives a
             brief overview of his career and an introduction to his play
             Behind the Lie, translated for this special issue of Theatre
             Journal. © 2011 Project MUSE®.},
   Key = {fds298251}
}

@misc{fds197553,
   Author = {Translated by C. Conceison},
   Title = {"Behind the Lie" by Yu Rongjun},
   Journal = {Theater Journal},
   Volume = {63},
   Number = {3},
   Pages = {323-364},
   Year = {2011},
   Key = {fds197553}
}

@misc{fds219644,
   Author = {Interview of Claire Conceison by Jeffrey
             Wasserstrom},
   Title = {"A Transnational Translingual Writer: Claire Conceison on
             Gao Xingjian"},
   Journal = {L.A. Review of Books},
   Year = {2013},
   url = {http://lareviewofbooks.org/interview/claire-conceison-on-gao-xingjian},
   Key = {fds219644}
}

@misc{fds298244,
   Author = {C Conceison},
   Title = {China's Experimental Mainstream: The Badass Theatre of Meng
             Jinghui},
   Journal = {TDR/The Drama Review},
   Volume = {58},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {64-88},
   Year = {2014},
   Month = {March},
   ISSN = {1054-2043},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/DRAM_a_00328},
   Doi = {10.1162/DRAM_a_00328},
   Key = {fds298244}
}

@misc{fds298231,
   Author = {C Conceison},
   Title = {Eating red: Performing maoist nostalgia in Beijing's
             revolution-themed restaurants},
   Journal = {scopus},
   Pages = {100-115},
   Booktitle = {Food and Theatre on the World Stage},
   Year = {2015},
   Month = {June},
   ISBN = {9781317618010},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315752396},
   Doi = {10.4324/9781315752396},
   Key = {fds298231}
}


%% cooke, miriam   
@article{fds320247,
   Author = {Cooke, M},
   Title = {The First Lesson},
   Journal = {Journal of Arabic Literature},
   Volume = {11},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {68-75},
   Publisher = {BRILL},
   Year = {1980},
   Month = {January},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/157006480X00072},
   Doi = {10.1163/157006480X00072},
   Key = {fds320247}
}

@article{fds285062,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Yahya Haqqi as Literary Critic and Nationalist},
   Journal = {International Journal of Middle Eastern Studies},
   Volume = {13},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {21-34},
   Publisher = {Cambridge University Press (CUP)},
   Year = {1981},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0020743800055057},
   Doi = {10.1017/S0020743800055057},
   Key = {fds285062}
}

@article{fds285063,
   Author = {Cooke, M},
   Title = {Egypt-Baptism of Earth},
   Journal = {Arabiyya},
   Volume = {14},
   Pages = {5978-5978},
   Year = {1981},
   Key = {fds285063}
}

@article{fds285064,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Lebanon - Is there a Future? Echos from Contemporary
             Lebanese Women Writers},
   Journal = {South Atlantic Quarterly},
   Volume = {81},
   Number = {3},
   Pages = {261-270},
   Year = {1982},
   Key = {fds285064}
}

@article{fds285065,
   Author = {Cooke, M},
   Title = {Lebanon at Bay. Redefining the Self through
             War},
   Journal = {Journal of Arab Affairs},
   Volume = {2},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {103-121},
   Year = {1982},
   Key = {fds285065}
}

@article{fds285066,
   Author = {Cooke, M},
   Title = {Lebanon. Theatre of the Absurd...Theatre of
             Dreams},
   Journal = {Journal of Arabic Literature},
   Volume = {13},
   Pages = {124-141},
   Year = {1982},
   Key = {fds285066}
}

@article{fds285067,
   Author = {Cooke, M},
   Title = {Ibn Khaldun and Language: From Linguistic Habit to
             Philological Craft},
   Journal = {Journal of Asian and African Studies},
   Volume = {18},
   Number = {3-4},
   Pages = {179-188},
   Publisher = {SAGE Publications},
   Year = {1983},
   Month = {January},
   ISSN = {0021-9096},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/002190968301800304},
   Doi = {10.1177/002190968301800304},
   Key = {fds285067}
}

@article{fds340098,
   Author = {Cooke, M},
   Title = {Ibn Khaldun and Language: From Linguistic Habit to
             Philological Craft},
   Journal = {Journal of Asian and African Studies},
   Volume = {18},
   Number = {3-4},
   Pages = {179-188},
   Publisher = {BRILL},
   Year = {1983},
   Month = {January},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/156852183X00317},
   Doi = {10.1163/156852183X00317},
   Key = {fds340098}
}

@book{fds285092,
   Author = {Haqqi Y},
   Title = {The Anatomy of an Egyptian Intellectual: Yahya
             Haqqi},
   Pages = {188 pages},
   Publisher = {Three Continents Press},
   Year = {1984},
   ISBN = {0894103962},
   Abstract = {Arabic translation by Egyptian Cultural Council Press, 2005.
             2nd edition, 2009.},
   Key = {fds285092}
}

@book{fds305908,
   Author = {Haqqi, Y},
   Title = {The Anatomy of an Egyptian Intellectual: Yahya
             Haqqi},
   Publisher = {Three Continents Press},
   Year = {1984},
   Abstract = {Arabic translation by Egyptian Cultural Council Press, 2005.
             2nd edition, 2009.},
   Key = {fds305908}
}

@article{fds285068,
   Author = {Cooke, M},
   Title = {Telling Their Lives. A Hundred Years of Arab Women's
             Writings},
   Journal = {World Literature Today},
   Volume = {60},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {212-216},
   Year = {1986},
   Key = {fds285068}
}

@book{fds317998,
   Author = {Haqqi Y},
   Title = {Good Morning!: And Other Stories},
   Publisher = {Passeggiata Press},
   Year = {1987},
   Abstract = {Translation and edition of stories. Partially reprinted in
             Clerk & Siegel, Modern Literatures of the Non-Western World,
             Harper Collins 1994.},
   Key = {fds317998}
}

@article{fds285069,
   Author = {Cooke, M},
   Title = {Trends in Modern Arabic Literary Criticism},
   Journal = {Arabiyya},
   Volume = {20},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {277-296},
   Year = {1987},
   Key = {fds285069}
}

@misc{fds317997,
   Author = {Cooke, M},
   Title = {Women Write War: The Centering of the Beirut
             Decentrists},
   Journal = {Papers on Lebanon},
   Number = {6},
   Pages = {22 pages},
   Year = {1987},
   Abstract = {Republication: "Women Write War. The Feminization of
             Lebanese Society in the War Literature of Emily Nasrallah"
             in British Society for Middle Eastern Studies Bulletin vol.
             14 no.1 (1988) 52-67.},
   Key = {fds317997}
}

@book{fds285093,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {War's Other Voices: Women Writers on the Lebanese Civil
             War},
   Publisher = {Cambridge University Press},
   Year = {1988},
   Abstract = {This book challenges the assumption that men write of war,
             women of the hearth. The Lebanese war has seen the
             publication of many more works of fiction by women than by
             men. Miriam Cooke has termed these women the Beirut
             Decentrists, as they are decentered or excluded from both
             literary canon and social discourse. Although they may not
             share religious or political affiliation, they do share a
             perspective which holds them together. Cooke traces the
             transformation in consciousness that has taken place among
             women who observed and recorded the progress towards chaos
             in Lebanon. During the so-called "two-year" war of 1975-76,
             little comment was made about those (usually men in search
             of economic security) who left the saturnalia of violence,
             but with time attitudes changed. Women became aware that
             they had remained out of a sense of responsibility for
             others and that they had survived. Consciousness of survival
             was catalytic: the Beirut Decentrists began to describe a
             society that had gone beyond the masculinization normal in
             most wars and achieved an almost unprecedented
             femininization. Emigration, the expected behavior for men
             before 1975, was rejected. Staying, the expected behavior
             for women before 1975, became the sine qua non for Lebanese
             citizenship. The writings of the Beirut Decentrists offer
             hope of an escape from the anarchy. If men and women could
             espouse the Lebanese women's sense of responsibility, the
             energy that had fueled the unrelenting savagery could be
             turned to reconstruction. But that was before the invasion
             of 1982. Paperback by Syracuse University Press, 1996.
             Arabic translation by Egyptian Cultural Council Press
             2006.},
   Key = {fds285093}
}

@article{fds285070,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Prisons. Women Write about Islam},
   Journal = {Religion and Literature},
   Volume = {20},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {139-153},
   Year = {1988},
   ISSN = {0888-3769},
   Key = {fds285070}
}

@article{fds285071,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Naguib Mahfouz},
   Journal = {Middle East Journal},
   Volume = {43},
   Number = {3},
   Pages = {507-511},
   Year = {1989},
   ISSN = {1940-3461},
   Key = {fds285071}
}

@misc{fds317996,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Deconstructing War Discourse: Women's Participation in the
             Algerian Revolution},
   Journal = {For Women in International Development},
   Number = {Working Paper #187},
   Pages = {26 pages},
   Publisher = {Michigan State University},
   Year = {1989},
   Month = {June},
   Key = {fds317996}
}

@book{fds305907,
   Title = {Opening the Gates: A Century of Arab Feminist
             Writing},
   Publisher = {Virago/ Indiana University Press},
   Editor = {Cooke, M and Badran, M},
   Year = {1990},
   Abstract = {From Publishers Weekly: This collection of stories,
             speeches, essays, poems and memoirs bears fierce testimony
             to a tradition of brave Arab feminist writing in the face of
             subjugation by a Muslim patriarchy. Palestinian Fadwa
             Tuqan's father demanded that she compose political poetry
             yet kept her secluded from the outside world. Zainaba (last
             name omitted), a nurse from Mauritania, West Africa, who
             herself underwent female circumcision, or clitoridectomy,
             says, "It is not a sin if it is not done, but it is better
             if it is," and exhorts a group of midwives to modify the
             disfigurement ("A woman with no clitoris is like a mud wall,
             a piece of cardboard, without spark, without goals, without
             desire. . . . It must not be all cut off!") and to use
             antiseptics. And Egyptian Alifa Rifaat, who wrote in the
             secrecy of her bathroom until her husband's death, offers
             stories about a girl undergoing a clitoridectomy and about a
             bride who fears her husband will discover she isn't a virgin
             so she inserts powdered glass inside herself to draw blood
             on her wedding night. Egyptians Ihsan Assal's and Andree
             Chedid's fiction depicts, respectively, a husband who
             incarcerates his "recalcitrant" young wife with the
             permission of the courts and a 60-year-old woman who plots
             the murder of her husband. An editorial by Egyptian Amina
             Said laments the return of the veil. Badran translated and
             edited Harem Years: The Memoirs of an Egyptian Feminist,
             1879-1924 ; Cooke is the author of War's Other Voices: Women
             Writers in the Lebanese Civil War.},
   Key = {fds305907}
}

@article{fds317995,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Postmodern Wars. Phallomilitary Spectacle in The
             DTO},
   Journal = {Journal of Urban and Cultural Studies},
   Pages = {27-40},
   Year = {1991},
   Key = {fds317995}
}

@article{fds320246,
   Author = {Cooke, M},
   Title = {Notes and comments},
   Journal = {International Journal of Middle East Studies},
   Volume = {23},
   Number = {3},
   Pages = {477-478},
   Publisher = {Cambridge University Press (CUP)},
   Year = {1991},
   Month = {January},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0020743800057925},
   Doi = {10.1017/S0020743800057925},
   Key = {fds320246}
}

@misc{fds317994,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {The Heart's Directions},
   Journal = {World and I},
   Year = {1991},
   Month = {March},
   Abstract = {Reprinted partially under the title "The Veil Does Not
             Prevent Women from Working" in Ourselves Among Others:
             Cross-Cultural Readings for Writers (ed. Carol Verburg) St.
             Martin's Press,1994.},
   Key = {fds317994}
}

@article{fds285072,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Phallomilitary Spectacle in The DTO},
   Journal = {Journal of Urban and Cultural Studies},
   Pages = {27-40},
   Year = {1991},
   Month = {November},
   Key = {fds285072}
}

@article{fds285039,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Arab Women Writers},
   Pages = {443-462},
   Booktitle = {Cambridge History of Arabic Literature, Modern Arabic
             Literature},
   Publisher = {Cambridge University Press},
   Editor = {Badawi, MM},
   Year = {1992},
   Abstract = {Translated into Arabic “Al-katibat al-`arabiyat” in
             Al-adab al-`arabi al-hadith, Jeddah: Al-nadi al-adabi
             al-thaqafi 2002.},
   Key = {fds285039}
}

@article{fds285040,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Men Constructed in the Mirror of Prostitution},
   Pages = {106-125},
   Booktitle = {Naguib Mahfouz: From Regional Fame to Global
             Recognition},
   Publisher = {Syracuse University Press},
   Editor = {Beard, M and Haydar, A},
   Year = {1993},
   Abstract = {Reprinted in Peter F. Murphy (ed.), Fictions of Masculinity:
             Crossing Cultures Crossing Sexualities, New York University,
             1994, 96-120.},
   Key = {fds285040}
}

@article{fds285041,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Apple, Nabila and Ramza Arab Women's Narratives of
             Resistance},
   Pages = {85-96},
   Booktitle = {To Speak or to be Silent: The Paradox of Disobedience in the
             Lives of Women},
   Publisher = {Chiron Publications},
   Editor = {Ross, L},
   Year = {1993},
   Key = {fds285041}
}

@article{fds317992,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Wo-man. Retelling the War Myth},
   Pages = {177-204},
   Booktitle = {Gendering War Talk},
   Publisher = {Princeton University Press},
   Editor = {Cooke, MG and Woollacott, A},
   Year = {1993},
   Key = {fds317992}
}

@misc{fds317993,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Femmes Arabes. Guerres Arabes},
   Journal = {Peuples Mediterraneens},
   Volume = {64 & 65},
   Pages = {25-48},
   Year = {1993},
   Key = {fds317993}
}

@book{fds285095,
   Author = {M Cooke and R Rustomji-Kerns},
   Title = {Blood Into Ink: 20th Century South Asian and Middle Eastern
             Women Write War},
   Pages = {239 pages},
   Publisher = {Westview Press},
   Editor = {Cooke, M and Rustomji-Kerns, R},
   Year = {1994},
   ISBN = {0813386616},
   Abstract = {This anthology of 20th-century South Asian and Middle
             Eastern women's writings illustrates how they have become
             active participants in conflicts, speaking about war not
             only as an extraordinary experience, but also as an ordinary
             experience of coping with violence on a daily basis. They
             show that women's involvements with the rituals of violence
             do not begin or end with traditional war, but that their
             daily struggles for survival stretch seamlessly into the
             more public arena of political war.},
   Key = {fds285095}
}

@book{fds317991,
   Title = {Blood Into Ink: 20th Century South Asian and Middle Eastern
             Women Write War},
   Pages = {239 pages},
   Publisher = {Westview Press},
   Editor = {cooke, M and Rustomji-Kerns, R},
   Year = {1994},
   ISBN = {0813386616},
   Abstract = {This anthology of 20th-century South Asian and Middle
             Eastern women's writings illustrates how they have become
             active participants in conflicts, speaking about war not
             only as an extraordinary experience, but also as an ordinary
             experience of coping with violence on a daily basis. They
             show that women's involvements with the rituals of violence
             do not begin or end with traditional war, but that their
             daily struggles for survival stretch seamlessly into the
             more public arena of political war.},
   Key = {fds317991}
}

@article{fds285074,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Arab Women Arab Wars},
   Journal = {Cultural Critique},
   Pages = {5-29},
   Year = {1994},
   Key = {fds285074}
}

@article{fds285073,
   Author = {Cooke, M},
   Title = {Zaynab al-ghazālī: saint or subversive?},
   Journal = {Die Welt Des Islams},
   Volume = {34},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {1-20},
   Publisher = {BRILL},
   Year = {1994},
   Month = {January},
   ISSN = {0043-2539},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/157006094X00017},
   Doi = {10.1163/157006094X00017},
   Key = {fds285073}
}

@article{fds285042,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Death and Desire in Iraqi War Fiction},
   Pages = {184-199},
   Booktitle = {Love and Sexuality in Modern Arabic Literature},
   Publisher = {Saqi Press},
   Editor = {Allen, R and Kilpatrick, H and de Moor, E},
   Year = {1995},
   Key = {fds285042}
}

@article{fds285043,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Reimagining Lebanon},
   Pages = {1075-1102},
   Booktitle = {Nations, Identities, Cultures},
   Publisher = {South Atlantic Quarterly},
   Editor = {Mudimbe, V},
   Year = {1995},
   Key = {fds285043}
}

@article{fds285045,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Prisms on Boundaries},
   Pages = {255-253},
   Booktitle = {Le Croisement des Cultures},
   Publisher = {Marrakesh University Press},
   Editor = {Benachir, B},
   Year = {1995},
   Key = {fds285045}
}

@article{fds285075,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Ayyam min hayati: The Prison Memoirs of a Muslim
             Sister},
   Journal = {Journal of Arabic Literature},
   Volume = {26},
   Number = {1-2},
   Pages = {147-164},
   Publisher = {BRILL},
   Year = {1995},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/157006495X00139},
   Abstract = {Reprint in The Postcolonial Crescent. Islam’s Impact on
             Contemporary Literature (John C. Hawley, ed.),
             1997.},
   Doi = {10.1163/157006495X00139},
   Key = {fds285075}
}

@article{fds317989,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {The Globalization of Arab Women Writers},
   Pages = {175-198},
   Booktitle = {Femme et Ecritures},
   Publisher = {Bahithat II},
   Year = {1995},
   Key = {fds317989}
}

@article{fds317990,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Al-mar'a wa qissat al-harb},
   Volume = {305},
   Pages = {105-112},
   Booktitle = {Al-Bayan (Kuwait)},
   Year = {1995},
   Key = {fds317990}
}

@article{fds285044,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Mothers, Rebels and Textual Exchanges},
   Pages = {140-156},
   Booktitle = {Beyond The Hexagon: Women Writing in French},
   Publisher = {Minnesota University Press},
   Editor = {Gould, K and Walker, K},
   Year = {1996},
   Key = {fds285044}
}

@article{fds285046,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Subverting the Dominant Paradigms},
   Pages = {235-269},
   Booktitle = {Women and the Military},
   Publisher = {Temple University Press},
   Editor = {Stiehm, J},
   Year = {1996},
   Key = {fds285046}
}

@article{fds285047,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Muslim Women Between Human Rights and Islamic
             Norms},
   Pages = {313-331},
   Booktitle = {Religious Diversity and Human Rights},
   Publisher = {Columbia University Press},
   Editor = {Lawrence, B and Bloom, I},
   Year = {1996},
   Key = {fds285047}
}

@book{fds285096,
   Author = {Cooke, M},
   Title = {Women and the War Story},
   Pages = {367 pages},
   Publisher = {Univ of California Press},
   Year = {1997},
   ISBN = {0520918096},
   Abstract = {In a book that radically and fundamentally revises the way
             we think about war, Miriam Cooke charts the emerging
             tradition of women's contributions to what she calls the
             "War Story," a genre formerly reserved for men.
             Concentrating on the contemporary literature of the Arab
             world, Cooke looks at how alternatives to the master
             narrative challenge the authority of experience and the
             permission to write. She shows how women who write
             themselves and their experiences into the War Story undo the
             masculine contract with violence, sexuality, and glory.
             There is no single War Story, Cooke concludes; the standard
             narrative—and with it the way we think about and conduct
             war—can be changed. As the traditional time, space,
             organization, and representation of war have shifted, so
             have ways of describing it. As drug wars, civil wars, gang
             wars, and ideological wars have moved into neighborhoods and
             homes, the line between combat zones and safe zones has
             blurred. Cooke shows how women's stories contest the
             acceptance of a dyadically structured world and break down
             the easy oppositions—home vs. front, civilian vs.
             combatant, war vs. peace, victory vs. defeat—that have
             framed, and ultimately promoted, war.},
   Key = {fds285096}
}

@article{fds285076,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {n to the Image Speak},
   Journal = {Cultural Values},
   Volume = {1},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {101-117},
   Publisher = {Informa UK Limited},
   Year = {1997},
   ISSN = {1362-5179},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14797589709367136},
   Abstract = {Reprint in Routledge Reader of Intercultural Communication,
             2004, 2nd ed. 2010, 3rd ed. 2016.},
   Doi = {10.1080/14797589709367136},
   Key = {fds285076}
}

@article{fds320245,
   Author = {Cooke, M},
   Title = {The other language and construction of the
             self},
   Journal = {Peuples Mediterraneens},
   Number = {78},
   Pages = {131-155},
   Year = {1997},
   Month = {December},
   Key = {fds320245}
}

@article{fds285048,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {La femme et l’histoire de la guerre},
   Pages = {179-187},
   Booktitle = {Le discours sur la femme},
   Publisher = {Rabat},
   Editor = {Rhissassi, F},
   Year = {1998},
   Key = {fds285048}
}

@article{fds317988,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {The Other Language},
   Journal = {Peuples Mediterraneens},
   Pages = {131-156},
   Year = {1998},
   Abstract = {Reprint in S. Morton & C. Schlote (eds) Reading Literature
             from the Middle East and its Diasporas, 2009.},
   Key = {fds317988}
}

@article{fds285049,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Mapping Peace},
   Pages = {73-89},
   Booktitle = {Women and War in Lebanon},
   Publisher = {Florida University Press},
   Editor = {Shehadeh, L},
   Year = {1999},
   Key = {fds285049}
}

@article{fds285077,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Recent Scholarship on Women in the Middle
             East},
   Journal = {National Women'S Studies Association Journal},
   Volume = {11},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {178-184},
   Year = {1999},
   Key = {fds285077}
}

@article{fds285079,
   Author = {Cooke, M},
   Title = {Mediterranean thinking: From netizen to medizen},
   Journal = {Geographical Review},
   Volume = {89},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {290-300},
   Publisher = {WILEY},
   Year = {1999},
   Month = {January},
   ISSN = {0016-7428},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1931-0846.1999.tb00220.x},
   Abstract = {The Mediterranean has traditionally been approached from a
             geographical and historical perspective that has collapsed
             the material and political differences between water and
             land. This conflation has been instrumental in homogenizing
             the diversity of this interregional arena and turning it
             into a geopolitical area. Aquacentric thinking brings such
             approaches to the Mediterranean into question. Cybertheory,
             which despatializes interaction and helps us think of water
             as place, is applied to the Mediterranean to bring its
             multiplicity into dialogue and to explore the possibility of
             creating a new epistemology of place. Mediterraneanizing
             cybertheory introduces diachronicity into theories of
             simultaneity.},
   Doi = {10.1111/j.1931-0846.1999.tb00220.x},
   Key = {fds285079}
}

@article{fds285078,
   Author = {Cooke, M},
   Title = {Feminist transgressions in the postcolonial Arab
             world},
   Journal = {Critique: Critical Middle Eastern Studies},
   Volume = {8},
   Number = {14},
   Pages = {93-105},
   Publisher = {Informa UK Limited},
   Year = {1999},
   Month = {March},
   ISSN = {1066-9922},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10669929908720142},
   Abstract = {Translated into Chinese, Middle East Studies of Peking
             University vol.1, 2015.},
   Doi = {10.1080/10669929908720142},
   Key = {fds285078}
}

@book{fds285097,
   Author = {Cooke, M},
   Title = {Hayati, My Life A Novel},
   Pages = {152 pages},
   Publisher = {Syracuse University Press},
   Year = {2000},
   ISBN = {0815606710},
   Abstract = {Miriam Cooke's melic prose animates the existence of each of
             the women portrayed in her new novel. With Samya, we live in
             Palestine of the 1920s and are imprisoned during the
             imposition of the British Mandate; with Assia we experience
             the massacre of Deir Assin, the death of a son, and the
             establishment of the State of Israel; with Maryam we survive
             war and diaspora-the Suez War, the Intifada, the Iran-Iraq
             War, and the scattering of a family to three different
             countries. Finally, with the mute painter Araf's rape, we
             experience the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait, and when Hibba
             returns to Jerusalem the circle is complete. The historical
             and political aspects of Hayati (a term of endearment,
             literally meaning "my life") chart fresh territory for the
             American reader, showing us a Palestine and an Arab people
             we do not know from the inside and from a deeply imaginative
             and humanistic perspective. Cooke makes evident a trenchant
             grasp of the mechanics of everyday living-the politics may
             be Palestine-specific, but the theme of endurance is
             universal. Many novels entertain, while others inform. In
             this effective and dramatic post-modern novel, Cooke
             succeeds in accomplishing both. Arabic translation by
             al-Jundi Press in Damascus, 2004.},
   Key = {fds285097}
}

@article{fds285050,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Middle Eastern Literature},
   Pages = {345-382},
   Booktitle = {Understanding the Contemporary Middle Midde
             East},
   Publisher = {Lynne Rienner Publishing},
   Editor = {Gerner, D},
   Year = {2000},
   Abstract = {2nd edition 2004; 3rd edition 2008; 4th edition
             2013.},
   Key = {fds285050}
}

@article{fds285051,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Living in Truth},
   Pages = {203-221},
   Booktitle = {Tradition, Modernity and Postmodernity in Arabic
             Literature},
   Publisher = {Brill},
   Editor = {Kamal, A and Hallaq, W},
   Year = {2000},
   Key = {fds285051}
}

@article{fds285080,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Multiple Critique: Islamic Feminist Strategies},
   Journal = {Nepontala},
   Volume = {1},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {91-110},
   Year = {2000},
   Abstract = {Reprint in L. Donaldson & K. Pui-Lan, Postcolonialism,
             Feminism and Religious Discourse (eds) Routledge,
             2002.},
   Key = {fds285080}
}

@article{fds285081,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Women, Religion & Postcolonial Arab World},
   Journal = {Cultural Critique},
   Volume = {45},
   Pages = {150-184},
   Year = {2000},
   Key = {fds285081}
}

@book{fds285098,
   Author = {Cooke, M},
   Title = {Women Claim Islam Creating Islamic Feminism Through
             Literature},
   Pages = {240 pages},
   Publisher = {Routledge},
   Year = {2001},
   ISBN = {1135959439},
   Abstract = {This provocative collection addresses the ways in which Arab
             women writers are using Islam to empower themselves, and
             theorizes the conditions that have made the appearance of
             these new voices possible. Arabic translation by National
             Translation Center Press in Cairo, 2010. Chinese translation
             of chapter 5 in Newsletter of Eastern Literary Studies,
             Peking University, March 2012. Chapter One republished in
             Global Literary Theory, Richard Lane (ed.)
             2013.},
   Key = {fds285098}
}

@article{fds285082,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Ghassan al-Jaba`i. Prison Literature in Syria after
             1980},
   Journal = {World Literature Today},
   Volume = {75},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {237-245},
   Year = {2001},
   Key = {fds285082}
}

@misc{fds285053,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Censorship in Syria},
   Journal = {Censorship: a World Encyclopedia},
   Pages = {2363-2367},
   Booktitle = {Censorship: A World Encyclopedia},
   Year = {2001},
   Key = {fds285053}
}

@misc{fds285054,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Near Middle East and North African Culture},
   Journal = {International Encyclopedia of Social and Behavioral
             Sciences},
   Pages = {10426-10431},
   Booktitle = {International Encyclopedia of Social and Behavioral
             Sciences},
   Year = {2001},
   Key = {fds285054}
}

@article{fds285083,
   Author = {Cooke, M},
   Title = {War, Gender, and Military Studies},
   Journal = {Nwsa Journal},
   Volume = {13},
   Number = {3},
   Pages = {181-188},
   Publisher = {JSTOR},
   Year = {2001},
   Month = {October},
   ISSN = {1040-0656},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.2979/nws.2001.13.3.181},
   Doi = {10.2979/nws.2001.13.3.181},
   Key = {fds285083}
}

@article{fds285052,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {La pensee mediterraneenne},
   Pages = {15-28},
   Booktitle = {Mediterranee et Mediterraneens. Sociabilite,
             representations},
   Publisher = {Tunis},
   Editor = {Chaker, J},
   Year = {2002},
   Key = {fds285052}
}

@article{fds285055,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Humanist Nationalism},
   Pages = {125-140},
   Booktitle = {Social Constructions of Nationalism in the Middle
             East},
   Publisher = {SUNY Press},
   Editor = {Gocek, FM},
   Year = {2002},
   Key = {fds285055}
}

@article{fds285056,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {A la Recherche de la Langue Maternelle},
   Pages = {141-152},
   Booktitle = {L’identite. Choix ou combat},
   Editor = {Chaker, J and cooke, M},
   Year = {2002},
   Key = {fds285056}
}

@article{fds285084,
   Author = {Cooke, M},
   Title = {Beirut Reborn: The Political Aesthetics of
             Auto-Destruction},
   Journal = {The Yale Journal of Criticism},
   Volume = {15},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {393-424},
   Publisher = {Project Muse},
   Year = {2002},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/yale.2002.0018},
   Doi = {10.1353/yale.2002.0018},
   Key = {fds285084}
}

@article{fds285085,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Islamic Feminism before and after September
             11},
   Journal = {Journal of Gender Law and Policy},
   Volume = {9},
   Pages = {227-235},
   Year = {2002},
   Key = {fds285085}
}

@article{fds285086,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Saving Brown Women},
   Journal = {Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society},
   Volume = {28},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {468-470},
   Publisher = {University of Chicago Press},
   Year = {2002},
   Month = {September},
   ISSN = {0097-9740},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/340888},
   Doi = {10.1086/340888},
   Key = {fds285086}
}

@article{fds285058,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Al-adibat al-arabiyat fi al-qarn al-ishrin: manzur
             amriki},
   Pages = {105-112},
   Booktitle = {Al-mar’a al-`arabiya wa al-mutaghayyurat
             al-`alamiya},
   Publisher = {Cairo},
   Year = {2003},
   Key = {fds285058}
}

@misc{fds285057,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Euro-American Women’s Studies in Islamic
             Cultures},
   Journal = {Encyclopedia of Women in Islamic Cultures},
   Pages = {428-438},
   Booktitle = {Encyclopedia of Women in Islamic Cultures},
   Publisher = {Brill},
   Year = {2003},
   Key = {fds285057}
}

@article{fds285087,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Contesting Campus Watch},
   Journal = {Al Azhar Journal of Research},
   Volume = {7},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {5-31},
   Year = {2004},
   Abstract = {Republished on-line in Muntada al-kitab March
             2005},
   Key = {fds285087}
}

@book{fds285114,
   Author = {m. cooke and Cooke, M and Lawrence, B},
   Title = {Muslim Networks from Hajj to Hip Hop},
   Publisher = {UNC Press},
   Year = {2005},
   Abstract = {Crucial to understanding Islam is a recognition of the role
             of Muslim networks. The earliest networks were Mediterranean
             trade routes that quickly expanded into transregional paths
             for pilgrimage, scholarship, and conversion, each network
             complementing and reinforcing the others. This volume
             selects major moments and key players from the seventh
             century to the twenty-first that have defined Muslim
             networks as the building blocks for Islamic identity and
             social cohesion. Although neglected in scholarship, Muslim
             networks have been invoked in the media to portray post-9/11
             terrorist groups. Here, thirteen essays provide a long view
             of Muslim networks, correcting both scholarly omission and
             political sloganeering. New faces and forces appear, raising
             questions never before asked. What does the
             fourteenth-century North African traveler Ibn Battuta have
             in common with the American hip hopper Mos Def? What values
             and practices link Muslim women meeting in Cairo, Amsterdam,
             and Atlanta? How has technology raised expectations about
             new transnational pathways that will reshape the perception
             of faith, politics, and gender in Islamic civilization? This
             book invokes the past not only to understand the present but
             also to reimagine the future through the prism of Muslim
             networks, at once the shadow and the lifeline for the umma,
             or global Muslim community. Permanent Black Press, India,
             2006. Arabic translation by Oubekon, Saudi Arabia,
             2010.},
   Key = {fds285114}
}

@article{fds285088,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {No such thing as women’s literature},
   Journal = {Journal of Middle East Women’S Studies},
   Volume = {1},
   Number = {2},
   Year = {2005},
   Key = {fds285088}
}

@article{fds317987,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Foreword},
   Volume = {47},
   Pages = {337},
   Booktitle = {Women on Shifting Ground},
   Year = {2005},
   Key = {fds317987}
}

@article{fds367554,
   Author = {Cooke, M and Lawrence, BB},
   Title = {Muslim Networks from Hajj to Hip Hop Introduction},
   Pages = {1-28},
   Booktitle = {MUSLIM NETWORKS FROM HAJJ TO HIP HOP},
   Year = {2005},
   Key = {fds367554}
}

@misc{fds317986,
   Author = {cooke, M and Lawrence, B},
   Title = {In Search of Leo Africanus},
   Journal = {Transitions Abroad},
   Year = {2005},
   Month = {April},
   Key = {fds317986}
}

@article{fds285059,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Women’s jihad before and after 9/11},
   Pages = {165-183},
   Booktitle = {Terror, Culture, Politics: Rethinking 9/11},
   Publisher = {Indiana University Press},
   Editor = {Sherman, D and Nardin, T},
   Year = {2006},
   Key = {fds285059}
}

@article{fds285060,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Critique multiple : Les strategies rhetoriques feministes
             islamiques},
   Volume = {158},
   Pages = {189-200},
   Booktitle = {Feminismes - Theories, Mouvements, Conflits – L’Homme et
             la Societe},
   Publisher = {Editions Anthropos},
   Year = {2006},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/lhs.158.0169},
   Abstract = {Multiple Critique: Islamic Feminist Rhetorical Strategies
             Active Islamic feminists combine religious convictions with
             their struggle for equal rights between men and women
             through a multiple consciousness of their oppressed
             condition. This consciousness fosters a « multiple critique
             » derived from a plural identity (Muslim, feminist,
             ex-colonized people) that some consider irreconcilable with
             religion, feminism and/or nationality. Partisans of this
             multiple critique form networks and unconventional political
             alliances in order to advance their program. Multiple
             Critique: Islamic Feminist Rhetorical Strategies Active
             Islamic feminists combine religious convictions with their
             struggle for equal rights between men and women through a
             multiple consciousness of their oppressed condition. This
             consciousness fosters a « multiple critique » derived from
             a plural identity (Muslim, feminist, ex-colonized people)
             that some consider irreconcilable with religion, feminism
             and/or nationality. Partisans of this multiple critique form
             networks and unconventional political alliances in order to
             advance their program. © L'Harmattan.},
   Doi = {10.3917/lhs.158.0169},
   Key = {fds285060}
}

@article{fds317985,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Foreword},
   Pages = {viii-xi},
   Booktitle = {Voices of Resistance: Muslim Women on War, Faith and
             Sexuality},
   Publisher = {Seal},
   Editor = {Husain, S},
   Year = {2006},
   ISBN = {9781137338204},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137338211},
   Doi = {10.1057/9781137338211},
   Key = {fds317985}
}

@book{fds285115,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Dissident Syria: Making Oppositional Arts
             Officia},
   Publisher = {Duke University Press},
   Year = {2007},
   Abstract = {From 1970 until his death in 2000, Hafiz Asad ruled Syria
             with an iron fist. His regime controlled every aspect of
             daily life. Seeking to preempt popular unrest, Asad
             sometimes facilitated the expression of anti-government
             sentiment by appropriating the work of artists and writers,
             turning works of protest into official agitprop. Syrian
             dissidents were forced to negotiate between the desire to
             genuinely criticize the authoritarian regime, the risk to
             their own safety and security that such criticism would
             invite, and the fear that their work would be co-opted as
             government propaganda, as what miriam cooke calls
             “commissioned criticism.” In this intimate account of
             dissidence in Asad’s Syria, cooke describes how
             intellectuals attempted to navigate between charges of
             complicity with the state and treason against it. A renowned
             scholar of Arab cultures, cooke spent six months in Syria
             during the mid-1990s familiarizing herself with the
             country’s literary scene, particularly its women writers.
             While she was in Damascus, dissidents told her that to
             really understand life under Hafiz Asad, she had to speak
             with playwrights, filmmakers, and, above all, the authors of
             “prison literature.” She shares what she learned in
             Dissident Syria. She describes touring a sculptor’s
             studio, looking at the artist’s subversive work as well as
             at pieces commissioned by the government. She relates a
             playwright’s view that theater is unique in its ability to
             stage protest through innuendo and gesture. Turning to film,
             she shares filmmakers’ experiences of making movies that
             are praised abroad but rarely if ever screened at home.
             Filled with the voices of writers and artists, Dissident
             Syria reveals a community of conscience within Syria to
             those beyond its borders Arabic translation by Syrian Center
             for Political and Strategic Studies, 2014.},
   Key = {fds285115}
}

@article{fds285099,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Dying to be Free: Wilderness Writing from Lebanon, Arabia
             and Libya},
   Pages = {13-32},
   Booktitle = {On Evelyne Accad: Essays in Literature, Feminism and
             Cultural Studies},
   Publisher = {Summa Press},
   Editor = {Toman, C},
   Year = {2007},
   Key = {fds285099}
}

@article{fds285105,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Women and War in Iraq},
   Journal = {World Literature Today},
   Year = {2007},
   Key = {fds285105}
}

@article{fds317983,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Foreword},
   Volume = {5},
   Pages = {7-8},
   Booktitle = {Woman at Point Zero},
   Publisher = {Zed},
   Editor = {Saadawi, NE},
   Year = {2007},
   Key = {fds317983}
}

@article{fds317984,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Foreword},
   Pages = {v-viii},
   Booktitle = {Arab Women’s Lives Retold: Exploring Identity through
             Writing},
   Publisher = {University Press},
   Year = {2007},
   ISBN = {9781137521408},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/978-1-137-52141-5},
   Doi = {10.1057/978-1-137-52141-5},
   Key = {fds317984}
}

@misc{fds285037,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Women and Islamism in Europe},
   Journal = {Neo Magazine},
   Year = {2007},
   Month = {July},
   Key = {fds285037}
}

@article{fds285089,
   Author = {Cooke, M},
   Title = {The Muslimwoman},
   Journal = {Contemporary Islam},
   Volume = {1},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {139-154},
   Publisher = {Springer Nature},
   Year = {2007},
   Month = {August},
   ISSN = {1872-0218},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11562-007-0013-z},
   Abstract = {In the 6 years that have elapsed since the events of 9/11
             Muslims have become the Other and veiled Muslim women have
             become their visible representatives. Standing in for their
             communities, they have attracted international media
             attention. So intertwined are gender and religion that they
             have become one. I have coined the term the Muslimwoman to
             describe this erasure of diversity. Some women reject this
             label. Others use it to empower themselves and even to
             subvert the identification. In the process they are
             constructing a new kind of cosmopolitanism. This essay asks
             how women can derive agency from an ascribed identity that
             posits their invisibility and silence. © Springer
             Science+Business Media B.V. 2007.},
   Doi = {10.1007/s11562-007-0013-z},
   Key = {fds285089}
}

@article{fds285119,
   Author = {Cooke, M},
   Title = {Academic freedom: The "Danger"of critical
             thinking},
   Journal = {International Studies Perspectives},
   Volume = {8},
   Number = {4},
   Pages = {396-400},
   Publisher = {Oxford University Press (OUP)},
   Year = {2007},
   Month = {November},
   ISSN = {1528-3577},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1528-3585.2007.00306.x},
   Doi = {10.1111/j.1528-3585.2007.00306.x},
   Key = {fds285119}
}

@article{fds317982,
   Author = {Cooke, M},
   Title = {Baghdad burning: Women write war in Iraq},
   Journal = {World Literature Today},
   Volume = {81},
   Number = {6},
   Pages = {23-26},
   Year = {2007},
   Month = {December},
   Key = {fds317982}
}

@book{fds285116,
   Author = {Göknar, E and Cooke, M and Parker, G},
   Title = {Mediterranean Passages from Delos to Derrida},
   Pages = {425-425},
   Publisher = {UNC Press},
   Year = {2008},
   Abstract = {Through 100 texts and 30 images, _Mediterranean Passages_
             advocates for a re-reading of the sea as a contact zone and
             a space of encounter and conversion that tempers the
             dominance of the nation-state. The volume argues for a
             transcultural and networked approach to the understanding of
             religious and secular communities that are often presented
             monolithically and as being mutually exclusive. The primary
             sources assembled here cover three millenia, and the
             conceptual framework employed by editors cooke, Göknar, and
             Parker is informed by the works of Braudel, Goitein, Abu
             Lafia, Horden & Purcell, Braudel, and others.},
   Key = {fds285116}
}

@article{fds285061,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Yahya Haqqi: A Biography},
   Pages = {389-419},
   Booktitle = {Wujuh Yahya Haqqi},
   Publisher = {Egyptian Cultural Council Press},
   Editor = {Husayn, W},
   Year = {2008},
   Key = {fds285061}
}

@article{fds285120,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Deploying the Muslimwoman},
   Journal = {Journal for Feminist Studies of Religion},
   Volume = {24},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {91-99},
   Year = {2008},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.2979/FSR.2008.24.1.91},
   Abstract = {Including roundtable response to mc essay},
   Doi = {10.2979/FSR.2008.24.1.91},
   Key = {fds285120}
}

@article{fds317981,
   Author = {Cooke, M},
   Title = {'Soft weapons': Autobiography in transit},
   Volume = {27},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {190-192},
   Publisher = {Test accounts},
   Year = {2008},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/20455367},
   Doi = {10.2307/20455367},
   Key = {fds317981}
}

@book{fds148582,
   Author = {Edited by miriam cooke, Erdag Goknar and Grant
             Parker},
   Title = {Mediterranean Passages - Readings from Dido to
             Derrida},
   Year = {2008},
   Key = {fds148582}
}

@article{fds320244,
   Author = {Cooke, M},
   Title = {Rejoinder to "Muslimwoman" responses},
   Journal = {Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion},
   Volume = {24},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {116-119},
   Publisher = {Indiana University Press},
   Year = {2008},
   Month = {December},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.2979/FSR.2008.24.1.116},
   Doi = {10.2979/FSR.2008.24.1.116},
   Key = {fds320244}
}

@article{fds317979,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Foreword},
   Pages = {xi-xii},
   Booktitle = {Rim of the Lock},
   Publisher = {SensePublishers},
   Editor = {Naamani, H},
   Year = {2009},
   ISBN = {9462098298},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-6209-830-5},
   Doi = {10.1007/978-94-6209-830-5},
   Key = {fds317979}
}

@article{fds317978,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Egypt as a Woman: Nationalism, Gender and Politics * BY BETH
             BARON},
   Journal = {Journal of Islamic Studies},
   Volume = {20},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {141-143},
   Publisher = {Oxford University Press (OUP)},
   Year = {2009},
   Month = {January},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jis/etn068},
   Doi = {10.1093/jis/etn068},
   Key = {fds317978}
}

@book{fds285117,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Nazira Zeineddine. A Pioneer of Islamic Feminist
             Pioneer},
   Publisher = {Oxford: Oneworld Press},
   Year = {2010},
   Abstract = {In 1928, a young Lebanese woman, Nazira Zeineddine
             al-Halabi, wrote a book called "Unveiling and Veiling", an
             indictment of patriarchal oppression in which she boldly
             stated that the veil was un-Islamic, directly challenging
             the teachings of “wiser" male scholars. Considered by many
             an attack on Islam, it rocked the Muslim world and was
             banned by many clerics, although it quickly went into a
             second edition and was translated into several languages. In
             this latest addition to Makers of the Muslim World series,
             Miriam Cooke offers an intimate portrait of the life and
             work of this pioneering champion of Islamic feminism. Miriam
             Cooke is Professor of Modern Arabic literature and Culture
             at Duke University.},
   Key = {fds285117}
}

@article{fds285108,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Arab Feminist Research and activism: Bridging the gap
             between the theoretical and the practical},
   Journal = {Feminist Theory},
   Volume = {11},
   Number = {121},
   Year = {2010},
   Key = {fds285108}
}

@article{fds326152,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {“Yahya Haqqi: Arabic Wordsmith” in Roger Allen (ed.)
             Essays in Arabic Literary Biography 1850-1950 Harrassowitz
             Verlag 2010, 113-125},
   Year = {2010},
   Key = {fds326152}
}

@article{fds317977,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Yahya Haqqi: Arabic Wordsmith},
   Pages = {113-125},
   Booktitle = {Essays in Arabic Literary Biography 1850-1950},
   Publisher = {Harrassowitz Verlag},
   Editor = {Allen, R},
   Year = {2010},
   Key = {fds317977}
}

@article{fds317976,
   Author = {Cooke, M},
   Title = {Magical realism in Libya},
   Journal = {Journal of Arabic Literature},
   Volume = {41},
   Number = {1-2},
   Pages = {9-21},
   Publisher = {BRILL},
   Year = {2010},
   Month = {April},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/157006410X486701},
   Abstract = {This essay argues that the writings of Libyan Ibrahim
             al-Kuni, and particularly Nazif al-hajar with its emphasis
             on animal-human juxtapositions and metamorphoses, should be
             considered examples of Arab magical realism. The circular
             narrative tells the story of a multi-generational struggle
             of a Touareg family with a legendary animal called a waddan.
             The last scion, he is taken on a trip to the border between
             the natural and the supernatural where he metamorphoses into
             the predator, the legendary animal and the history that both
             contain. © Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden,
             2010.},
   Doi = {10.1163/157006410X486701},
   Key = {fds317976}
}

@article{fds317975,
   Author = {Cooke, M},
   Title = {Book Review: Joan Wallach Scott, The Politics of the Veil.
             Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2007. xii + 208
             pp. ISBN 978—0—691—12543—5},
   Journal = {Feminist Theory},
   Volume = {11},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {220-221},
   Publisher = {SAGE Publications},
   Year = {2010},
   Month = {August},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/14647001100110020804},
   Doi = {10.1177/14647001100110020804},
   Key = {fds317975}
}

@article{fds317974,
   Author = {Valassopoulos, A and Elsadda, H and Moghissi, H and Cooke,
             M},
   Title = {Dialogue section: Arab feminist research and activism:
             Bridging the gap between the theoretical and the
             practical},
   Journal = {Feminist Theory},
   Volume = {11},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {121-127},
   Publisher = {SAGE Publications},
   Editor = {Valassopoulos, A},
   Year = {2010},
   Month = {August},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1464700110366803},
   Doi = {10.1177/1464700110366803},
   Key = {fds317974}
}

@article{fds285107,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {The Cell Story: Syrian Prison Stories after Hafiz
             Asad},
   Journal = {Middle East Critique},
   Volume = {20},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {169-188},
   Year = {2011},
   Key = {fds285107}
}

@article{fds303149,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Performing Ibn Khaldun in Syria: The Role of the
             Intellectual in Troubled Times},
   Booktitle = {Figures d’Ibn Khaldun: Reception, Appropriation et Usages
             Algiers},
   Publisher = {CRNPAH},
   Editor = {Touati, H},
   Year = {2011},
   Key = {fds303149}
}

@article{fds285101,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {• Feminism in Islam},
   Booktitle = {Encyclopedia of Sciences and Religions},
   Year = {2012},
   Key = {fds285101}
}

@article{fds317973,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Foreword},
   Pages = {v-vii},
   Booktitle = {Beyond Love},
   Publisher = {University Press},
   Editor = {Hussein, H},
   Year = {2012},
   ISBN = {9783642250378},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-25038-5},
   Doi = {10.1007/978-3-642-25038-5},
   Key = {fds317973}
}

@misc{fds303147,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Inside Dissident Syria},
   Journal = {Al Jazeera},
   Year = {2012},
   Month = {October},
   Key = {fds303147}
}

@article{fds285091,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Réseaux d’artistes et d’écrivains dans la nouvelle
             Méditerranée},
   Journal = {Méditerranée/ Mondialisation},
   Publisher = {CNRS},
   Year = {2013},
   Key = {fds285091}
}

@article{fds285102,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Feminism in Islam},
   Booktitle = {Encyclopedia of Sciences and Religions},
   Year = {2013},
   Key = {fds285102}
}

@article{fds285110,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Emerging Voices in Comparative Literature from the Middle
             East},
   Journal = {Journal of Middle East Women’S Studies},
   Volume = {9},
   Number = {2},
   Year = {2013},
   Key = {fds285110}
}

@article{fds285111,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Tadmor’s Ghosts},
   Journal = {Review of Middle East Studies},
   Volume = {47},
   Number = {1},
   Year = {2013},
   Key = {fds285111}
}

@article{fds326151,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Emerging Voices in Comparative Literature from the Middle
             East},
   Year = {2013},
   Key = {fds326151}
}

@misc{fds285112,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Hopes and Disappointments: Revolutionary Narratives from
             Egyptian and Syrian Feminists},
   Journal = {Jadaliyya},
   Year = {2013},
   Key = {fds285112}
}

@article{fds320243,
   Author = {Cooke, M},
   Title = {Tadmor's Ghosts: Postscript on Syrian Art},
   Journal = {Review of Middle East Studies},
   Volume = {47},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {166-168},
   Publisher = {Cambridge University Press (CUP)},
   Year = {2013},
   Month = {January},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S2151348100058055},
   Abstract = {The situation in Syria has continued to deteriorate. The
             government has increased its aggression against the people,
             and outside elements with unclear motives have joined the
             opposition. On 21 August, the people of Ghuta suffered a
             chemical attack, and over a thousand died dreadful deaths.
             Despite his assertion in a cocky interview with Charlie Rose
             that he has not deployed his chemical arsenal, Bashar Al
             Assad is now apparently cooperating with the UN
             investigating team. Meanwhile, artists continue to respond
             to the violence with images, cartoons and
             films.},
   Doi = {10.1017/S2151348100058055},
   Key = {fds320243}
}

@article{fds317972,
   Author = {Cooke, M},
   Title = {Introduction},
   Journal = {Journal of Middle East Women'S Studies},
   Volume = {9},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {1-3},
   Publisher = {INDIANA UNIV PRESS},
   Year = {2013},
   Month = {March},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/jmw.2013.0011},
   Doi = {10.1353/jmw.2013.0011},
   Key = {fds317972}
}

@misc{fds285113,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {The New Empire},
   Journal = {Boundary 2},
   Year = {2013},
   Month = {May},
   Key = {fds285113}
}

@article{fds303148,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Hopes and Disappointments: Revolutionary Narratives from
             Egyptian and Syrian Feminists},
   Journal = {Jadaliyya},
   Year = {2013},
   Month = {July},
   Key = {fds303148}
}

@book{fds285118,
   Author = {Cooke, M},
   Title = {Tribal Modern: Branding New Nations in the Arab
             Gulf},
   Publisher = {University of California Press},
   Year = {2014},
   Abstract = {In the 1970s, one of the most torrid and forbidding regions
             in the world burst on to the international stage. The
             discovery and subsequent exploitation of oil allowed tribal
             rulers of the U.A.E, Qatar, Bahrain, and Kuwait to dream
             big. How could fishermen, pearl divers and pastoral nomads
             catch up with the rest of the modernized world? Even today,
             society is skeptical about the clash between the modern and
             the archaic in the Gulf. But could tribal and modern be
             intertwined rather than mutually exclusive? Exploring
             everything from fantasy architecture to neo-tribal sports
             and from Emirati dress codes to neo-Bedouin poetry contests,
             Tribal Modern explodes the idea that the tribal is primitive
             and argues instead that it is an elite, exclusive, racist,
             and modern instrument for branding new nations and shaping
             Gulf citizenship and identity—an image used for projecting
             prestige at home and power abroad.},
   Key = {fds285118}
}

@misc{fds317971,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Redrawing Borders: is the Tribal Governance Model worth
             trying in Iraq},
   Journal = {Islamicommentar},
   Year = {2014},
   Month = {June},
   Key = {fds317971}
}

@book{fds285094,
   Author = {M Cooke and A Woollacott},
   Title = {Gendering War Talk},
   Pages = {360 pages},
   Publisher = {Princeton University Press},
   Editor = {cooke, M and Woollacott, A},
   Year = {2014},
   Month = {July},
   ISBN = {1400863236},
   Abstract = {In a century torn by violent civil uprisings, civilian
             bombings, and genocides, war has been an immediate
             experience for both soldiers and civilians, for both women
             and men. But has this reality changed our long-held images
             of the roles women and men play in war, or the emotions we
             attach to violence, or what we think war can accomplish?
             This provocative collection addresses such questions in
             exploring male and female experiences of war--from World War
             I, to Vietnam, to wars in Latin America and the Middle
             East--and how this experience has been articulated in
             literature, film and drama, history, psychology, and
             philosophy. Together these essays reveal a myth of war that
             has been upheld throughout history and that depends on the
             exclusion of "the feminine" in order to survive. The
             discussions reconsider various existing gender images: Do
             women really tend to be either pacifists or Patriotic
             Mothers? Are men essentially aggressive or are they
             threatened by their lack of aggression? Essays explore how
             cultural conceptions of gender as well as discursive and
             iconographic representation reshape the experience and
             meaning of war. The volume shows war as a terrain in which
             gender is negotiated. As to whether war produces change for
             women, some contributors contend that the fluidity of war
             allows for linguistic and social renegotiations; others find
             no lasting, positive changes. In an interpretive essay Klaus
             Theweleit suggests that the only good war is the lost war
             that is embraced as a lost war.},
   Key = {fds285094}
}

@article{fds317968,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Ungendering Peace Talk},
   Pages = {25-42},
   Booktitle = {Women and Peace in the Islamic World: Gender, Agency and
             Influence},
   Publisher = {I.B. Tauris},
   Editor = {Haines, C},
   Year = {2015},
   Key = {fds317968}
}

@article{fds317970,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Jewish Arabs in the Israeli Asylum: A Literary
             Reflection},
   Pages = {239-258},
   Booktitle = {Studying Modern Arabic Literature: Mustafa Badawi Scholar
             and Critic},
   Publisher = {Edinburgh University Press},
   Editor = {Allen, R and Ostle, R},
   Year = {2015},
   ISBN = {9780748696628},
   Key = {fds317970}
}

@article{fds367553,
   Author = {Cooke, M},
   Title = {Nawal el Saadawi: Writer and Revolutionary},
   Pages = {214-229},
   Booktitle = {LITERATURE AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF FEMINIST
             THEORY},
   Year = {2015},
   Key = {fds367553}
}

@misc{fds317969,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Near Middle East/North Africa Studies: Culture},
   Journal = {International Encyclopedia of the Social & Behavioral
             Sciences},
   Volume = {16},
   Pages = {361-366},
   Publisher = {Elsevier},
   Editor = {Wright, JD},
   Year = {2015},
   ISBN = {9780080970868},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/B978-0-08-097086-8.10145-X},
   Abstract = {Fiction, drama, filmmaking, and art play a significant role
             in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA), where
             intellectuals are often considered spokespersons for the
             people to the regime. From Morocco to Iran, they have a
             moral authority that promises influence, imposes
             responsibility but also invites manipulation by those in
             power. This article provides a historical examination of the
             production of culture from the end of the nineteenth century
             to the revolutions of the twenty-first century. Language
             reform, war, Palestine, gender justice, Islam, and
             decoloniality have figured importantly on the MENA cultural
             scene. During the past 20 years systematic translation of
             MENA literature and new film festivals featuring MENA cinema
             have helped to globalize MENA culture.},
   Doi = {10.1016/B978-0-08-097086-8.10145-X},
   Key = {fds317969}
}

@misc{fds317967,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {It’s a Revolution: The Cultural Outpouring Fueled by
             Syrian War},
   Journal = {Ps 21: Project for the Study of the 21st
             Century},
   Year = {2015},
   Month = {March},
   Key = {fds317967}
}

@misc{fds317966,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Has Hospitality turned to Hostipitality for Syrian Refugees
             in Lebanon?},
   Journal = {Islamicommentary},
   Year = {2015},
   Month = {June},
   Key = {fds317966}
}

@misc{fds317965,
   Author = {Cooke, M and Hasso, F},
   Title = {Association tounissiet},
   Journal = {Journal of Middle East Women'S Studies},
   Volume = {11},
   Number = {3},
   Pages = {365-367},
   Publisher = {Duke University Press},
   Year = {2015},
   Month = {November},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/15525864-3142581},
   Doi = {10.1215/15525864-3142581},
   Key = {fds317965}
}

@article{fds317963,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Nazira Zeineddine A Pioneer of Islamic Feminism},
   Pages = {115-123},
   Booktitle = {Feminist Moments: Reading Feminist Texts},
   Publisher = {Bloomsbury},
   Editor = {Bruce, S and Smits, K},
   Year = {2016},
   ISBN = {1851687696},
   Key = {fds317963}
}

@article{fds317964,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Women and the Arab Spring: A transnational feminist
             movement},
   Pages = {31-44},
   Booktitle = {Women's Movements in the Post-Arab Spring North
             Africa},
   Publisher = {Palgrave Macmillan},
   Editor = {Sadiqi, F},
   Year = {2016},
   Key = {fds317964}
}

@misc{fds317962,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Queens of Syria},
   Journal = {South Writ Large},
   Year = {2016},
   Month = {May},
   Key = {fds317962}
}

@book{fds317961,
   Author = {cooke, M},
   Title = {Dancing in Damascus Creativity, Resilience, and the Syrian
             Revolution},
   Pages = {154 pages},
   Publisher = {Routledge},
   Year = {2016},
   Month = {October},
   ISBN = {1315532913},
   Abstract = {Countless numbers have been disappeared. These shocking
             statistics and the unstoppable violence notwithstanding, the
             revolution goes on. The story of the attempted crushing of
             the revolution is known.},
   Key = {fds317961}
}

@article{fds348364,
   Author = {Cooke, M},
   Title = {Editorial foreword},
   Journal = {Journal of Middle East Women'S Studies},
   Volume = {12},
   Number = {3},
   Pages = {301-302},
   Year = {2016},
   Month = {November},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/15525864-3637510},
   Doi = {10.1215/15525864-3637510},
   Key = {fds348364}
}

@article{fds367552,
   Author = {Cooke, M},
   Title = {DANCING IN DAMASCUS Creativity, Resilience, and the Syrian
             Revolution INTRODUCTION},
   Pages = {1-+},
   Booktitle = {DANCING IN DAMASCUS: CREATIVITY, RESILIENCE, AND THE SYRIAN
             REVOLUTION},
   Year = {2017},
   ISBN = {978-1-138-69217-6},
   Key = {fds367552}
}

@article{fds367551,
   Author = {Cooke, M},
   Title = {CRACKING THE WALL OF FEAR},
   Pages = {21-37},
   Booktitle = {DANCING IN DAMASCUS: CREATIVITY, RESILIENCE, AND THE SYRIAN
             REVOLUTION},
   Year = {2017},
   ISBN = {978-1-138-69217-6},
   Key = {fds367551}
}

@article{fds367549,
   Author = {Cooke, M},
   Title = {CURATING THE REVOLUTION},
   Pages = {73-89},
   Booktitle = {DANCING IN DAMASCUS: CREATIVITY, RESILIENCE, AND THE SYRIAN
             REVOLUTION},
   Year = {2017},
   ISBN = {978-1-138-69217-6},
   Key = {fds367549}
}

@article{fds367550,
   Author = {Cooke, M},
   Title = {CHOREOGRAPHING TRAUMA},
   Pages = {53-72},
   Booktitle = {DANCING IN DAMASCUS: CREATIVITY, RESILIENCE, AND THE SYRIAN
             REVOLUTION},
   Year = {2017},
   ISBN = {978-1-138-69217-6},
   Key = {fds367550}
}

@article{fds367547,
   Author = {Cooke, M},
   Title = {CREATING ON THE EDGE},
   Pages = {90-111},
   Booktitle = {DANCING IN DAMASCUS: CREATIVITY, RESILIENCE, AND THE SYRIAN
             REVOLUTION},
   Year = {2017},
   ISBN = {978-1-138-69217-6},
   Key = {fds367547}
}

@article{fds367548,
   Author = {Cooke, M},
   Title = {INSULTING BASHAR},
   Pages = {38-52},
   Booktitle = {DANCING IN DAMASCUS: CREATIVITY, RESILIENCE, AND THE SYRIAN
             REVOLUTION},
   Year = {2017},
   ISBN = {978-1-138-69217-6},
   Key = {fds367548}
}

@article{fds349155,
   Author = {Cooke, M},
   Title = {Arab women writers 1980-2010},
   Pages = {40-53},
   Booktitle = {Arabic Literature for the Classroom: Teaching Methods,
             Theories, Themes and Texts},
   Year = {2017},
   Month = {January},
   ISBN = {9781138211964},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315451657},
   Doi = {10.4324/9781315451657},
   Key = {fds349155}
}

@article{fds348363,
   Author = {Cooke, M},
   Title = {Egyptian women's writings},
   Journal = {Journal of Middle East Women'S Studies},
   Volume = {13},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {69-70},
   Year = {2017},
   Month = {March},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/15525864-3728646},
   Doi = {10.1215/15525864-3728646},
   Key = {fds348363}
}

@article{fds367546,
   Author = {Cooke, M},
   Title = {Curating the Syrian Revolution Online},
   Pages = {103-122},
   Booktitle = {CONTEMPORARY REVOLUTIONS: TURNING BACK TO THE FUTURE IN
             21ST-CENTURY LITERATURE AND ART},
   Year = {2019},
   ISBN = {978-1-3500-4529-3},
   Key = {fds367546}
}

@article{fds348362,
   Author = {Cooke, M},
   Title = {Murad vs. ISIS: Rape as a weapon of genocide},
   Journal = {Journal of Middle East Women'S Studies},
   Volume = {15},
   Number = {3},
   Pages = {261-285},
   Year = {2019},
   Month = {January},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/15525864-7720627},
   Abstract = {This article analyzes recent Iraqi texts, some authorizing
             and others condemning rape as a weapon of war. The focus is
             on Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) perpetrators of
             sexual violence, their Yazidi victims, and two women's
             demands for reparative, restorative justice. Held in sexual
             slavery between 2014 and 2015, Farida Khalaf and 2018 Nobel
             Peace Prize laureate Nadia Murad published testimonials that
             detail their experiences. Determined to bring ISIS rapists
             to justice, they narrate the formerly unspeakable crimes
             that ISIS militants committed against them. Adjudicated as a
             crime against humanity at the end of the twentieth century,
             rape as a weapon of war, and especially genocide, no longer
             slips under the radar of international attention. This study
             argues that the Yazidi women's brave decision to speak out
             may help break the millennial silence of rape
             survivors.},
   Doi = {10.1215/15525864-7720627},
   Key = {fds348362}
}

@article{fds349154,
   Author = {Cooke, M},
   Title = {On Arabic: Reflections from Edinburgh University to Duke
             University},
   Pages = {63-68},
   Booktitle = {The Arabic Classroom: Context, Text and Learners},
   Year = {2019},
   Month = {April},
   ISBN = {9780429435713},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429435713},
   Doi = {10.4324/9780429435713},
   Key = {fds349154}
}

@article{fds349033,
   Author = {Cooke, M},
   Title = {Displacement, war, and exile in simone fattal's works and
             days},
   Journal = {Journal of Middle East Women'S Studies},
   Volume = {16},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {100-102},
   Publisher = {Duke University Press},
   Year = {2020},
   Month = {January},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/15525864-8016618},
   Doi = {10.1215/15525864-8016618},
   Key = {fds349033}
}

@article{fds369960,
   Author = {Cooke, M},
   Title = {Cold War Literature of the Middle East and North
             Africa},
   Pages = {591-611},
   Booktitle = {The Palgrave Handbook of Cold War Literature},
   Year = {2020},
   Month = {January},
   ISBN = {9783030389727},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-38973-4_30},
   Abstract = {Throughout the Cold War, writers in the Middle East and
             North Africa took the pulse of their times, attempting to
             make sense of local and global transformations. While the
             first ten years of the Cold War found countries struggling
             to free themselves from the yoke of French and British
             colonialisms, the following decades saw them struggling
             against the increasing influence of the superpowers. The
             period split regional allegiances between the US and its
             European allies on the one hand (the Gulf States, Saudi
             Arabia, Morocco, Israel and pre-1979 Iran) and the USSR on
             the other (Egypt, Algeria, Syria and Iraq). Organised
             chronologically, the chapter includes a discussion of
             writers from Israel, Palestine, Egypt, Lebanon, Syria, Iraq,
             Algeria, Tunisia, Turkey, Saudi Arabia and
             Iran.},
   Doi = {10.1007/978-3-030-38973-4_30},
   Key = {fds369960}
}

@article{fds358326,
   Author = {Cooke, M},
   Title = {Intelligent souls? Feminist orientalism in
             eighteenth-century English literature},
   Journal = {Journal of Middle East Women'S Studies},
   Volume = {17},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {271-273},
   Year = {2021},
   Month = {July},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/15525864-8949485},
   Doi = {10.1215/15525864-8949485},
   Key = {fds358326}
}

@article{fds367545,
   Author = {Cooke, M},
   Title = {Novel Traces of the Qur'an?},
   Journal = {Novel a Forum on Fiction},
   Volume = {54},
   Number = {3},
   Pages = {467-469},
   Publisher = {Duke University Press},
   Year = {2021},
   Month = {November},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/00295132-9353935},
   Doi = {10.1215/00295132-9353935},
   Key = {fds367545}
}

@article{fds370062,
   Author = {Cooke, M},
   Title = {Nazira Zeineddine: a jovem e os xeiques},
   Journal = {Sociologias},
   Volume = {24},
   Number = {61},
   Pages = {116-139},
   Year = {2022},
   Month = {January},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/18070337-125405PT},
   Doi = {10.1590/18070337-125405PT},
   Key = {fds370062}
}

@article{fds362961,
   Author = {Cooke, M},
   Title = {The Daughter of Isis at Duke University},
   Journal = {Journal of Middle East Women'S Studies},
   Volume = {18},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {150-155},
   Year = {2022},
   Month = {March},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/15525864-9494262},
   Doi = {10.1215/15525864-9494262},
   Key = {fds362961}
}

@article{fds363048,
   Author = {Cooke, M},
   Title = {Introduction},
   Journal = {Journal of Middle East Women'S Studies},
   Volume = {18},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {147-149},
   Year = {2022},
   Month = {March},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/15525864-9494248},
   Doi = {10.1215/15525864-9494248},
   Key = {fds363048}
}


%% Endo, Hitomi   
@article{fds293904,
   Author = {Endo, H},
   Title = {Textbook reviews: Japanese for Professionals and Writing
             Business Letters in Japanese},
   Journal = {Journal of the Association of Teachers of
             Japanese},
   Volume = {34},
   Year = {2000},
   Month = {April},
   Key = {fds293904}
}

@article{fds17825,
   Author = {H. Endo},
   Title = {1)Japanese for Professionals, 2) Writing Business Letters in
             Japanese},
   Journal = {Journal of the Association of Teachers of
             Japanese},
   Volume = {34},
   Number = {1},
   Year = {2000},
   Month = {April},
   Key = {fds17825}
}

@article{fds293906,
   Author = {Kurokawa, N and Endo, H},
   Title = {Facilitating Kanji Acquisition and Retention by Using
             Web-based Practice},
   Journal = {proceedings of the 19th SEATJ},
   Series = {Proceedings of the 2004 SEATJ Annual Conference},
   Publisher = {SEATJ},
   Editor = {Professor Toshiko Kishimoto and Clemson University},
   Year = {2004},
   Month = {Spring},
   url = {http://www.dukejapanese.org/},
   Abstract = {How can computer technology enhance learning kanji?
             Currently there are websites available, which introduce
             kanji (stroke order/readings/meanings), however, we are
             seeking to develop the site focused on practice. This
             paper’s objectives are two-fold. One is to introduce the
             web-based kanji practice supplementary material developed at
             Duke. The other is to report students’ feedback and
             discuss the effect of computer-assisted practice of kanji.
             Originally the web page was created by one of our students
             for his kanji practice and we are developing the material
             further to make it available to all students. This material
             is designed to help the students of 1st through 3rd year
             Japanese practice readings and meanings of kanji. It
             provides four types of practice and students can choose the
             practice based on their need. Approximately 800 kanji
             introduced in Genki I, II and Intermediate Japanese are
             included and it can be used as a review tool. We tested the
             material this semester and got the students’ feedback by
             questionnaires.},
   Key = {fds293906}
}

@article{fds293907,
   Author = {Endo, H},
   Title = {Issues Regarding Placement},
   Journal = {Proceedings of the 2005 SEATJ Annual Conference},
   Publisher = {SEATJ},
   Editor = {Kikuchi, M},
   Year = {2005},
   Month = {Fall},
   Abstract = {The number of the students who enter college with language
             background has been increasing and I would like to bring up
             the difficulties I have dealt with regarding placement. I
             have found placement to be quite complex involves many
             factors and there were even cases it failed. This
             presentation firstly provides information on a placement
             practice at Duke and then discusses various issues came up
             through the practice and shares ideas with participants. The
             issues include: articulation between high school curriculum
             and college curriculum, heritage learners, placement test
             materials, placement after study abroad, students’
             progress after being placed, etc. In addition, I would like
             to report the use of new proficiency testing materials I am
             going to try out during this semester.},
   Key = {fds293907}
}

@article{fds293908,
   Author = {Endo, H},
   Title = {Use of Mobile Technology and it’s Possibilities},
   Journal = {Journal of Japanese Language Teaching},
   Publisher = {NKG},
   Address = {Tokyo, Japan},
   Editor = {NKG Society of Teaching Japanese as A Foreign
             Language},
   Year = {2007},
   Month = {October},
   Key = {fds293908}
}

@article{fds293902,
   Author = {Endo, H},
   Title = {Development of Online Materials for Kanji Acquisition and
             Retention},
   Journal = {Journal of Japanese Language Teaching},
   Year = {2007},
   Month = {December},
   ISSN = {0389-4037},
   Key = {fds293902}
}

@article{fds293910,
   Author = {Endo, H and Saito, A},
   Title = {Effect of Group Project in Intermediate Japanese
             Course},
   Journal = {Proceedings of the 2009 SEATJ},
   Year = {2009},
   Month = {May},
   url = {http://www.wfu.edu/eal/SEATJ2009/},
   Abstract = {Proceedings of the 2009 SEATJ http://www.wfu.edu/eal/SEATJ2009/},
   Key = {fds293910}
}

@article{fds293909,
   Author = {Endo, H},
   Title = {Use of Self-assessment on Speaking Practice},
   Journal = {Proceedings of 2010 International Language Proficiency
             Symposium},
   Publisher = {Japanese Association of Language Proficiency},
   Editor = {Japanese Association of Language Proficiency},
   Year = {2010},
   Month = {July},
   Key = {fds293909}
}

@article{fds293905,
   Author = {Endo, H},
   Title = {Multimedia Project in Intermediate Japanese
             Course:},
   Year = {2011},
   Month = {August},
   Key = {fds293905}
}

@misc{fds214123,
   Author = {H. Endo},
   Title = {Multimedia Project in Intermediate Japanese
             Course},
   Year = {2011},
   Month = {August},
   Key = {fds214123}
}

@article{fds200484,
   Author = {H. Endo},
   Title = {Multimedia Project in Intermediate Japanese
             Course:},
   Year = {2011},
   Month = {August},
   Key = {fds200484}
}

@article{fds293903,
   Author = {Endo, H},
   Title = {Review on the Workshop "Can-Do Japanese" held on June 2011
             in Sapporo, Japan},
   Journal = {Newsletter of Hokkaido Teachers of Japanese
             Network},
   Number = {78},
   Publisher = {Hokkaido Teachers of Japanese Network},
   Year = {2011},
   Month = {September},
   Key = {fds293903}
}

@article{fds293911,
   Author = {Endo, H},
   Title = {Speech Contest as a Task Based Activity in the Japanese
             Curriculum},
   Journal = {Proceedings of the 2009 SEATJ},
   Year = {2012},
   Month = {October},
   Key = {fds293911}
}

@misc{fds222358,
   Author = {H. Endo and N. Kurokawa},
   Title = {Learners' Perspectives on Project Work in Japanese Courses
             (July 2013), NKG Hokkaido Conference, Sapporo,
             Japan},
   Year = {2013},
   Key = {fds222358}
}

@article{fds293912,
   Author = {Endo, H and Kurokawa, N},
   Title = {Learners’ Perspectives on Project Work in Japanese
             Courses},
   Journal = {NKG Hokkaido Conference Website},
   Year = {2013},
   Month = {July},
   Key = {fds293912}
}


%% Ezrahi, Sidra   
@book{fds42183,
   Author = {S. Ezrahi},
   Title = {By Words Alone: The Holocaust in Literature},
   Publisher = {University of Chicago Press},
   Year = {1980},
   Key = {fds42183}
}

@misc{fds42505,
   Author = {S. Ezrahi},
   Title = {Introduction to Re-Issue of Poems of T. Carmi, "Ein Perahim
             Shehorim},
   Publisher = {Tel Aviv: Dvir},
   Year = {1994},
   Key = {fds42505}
}

@misc{fds42430,
   Author = {S. Ezrahi},
   Title = {State and Real Estate: Territoriality and the Modern Jewish
             Imagination},
   Pages = {428-448},
   Booktitle = {Terms of Survival: The Jewish World Since
             1945},
   Publisher = {London: Routledge},
   Editor = {Robert Wistrich},
   Year = {1995},
   Key = {fds42430}
}

@misc{fds42316,
   Author = {S. Ezrahi},
   Title = {Memory, Coming and Going},
   Journal = {Jewish Social Studies},
   Volume = {1},
   Number = {3},
   Pages = {161-173},
   Year = {1995},
   Month = {Spring},
   Key = {fds42316}
}

@misc{fds42313,
   Author = {S. Ezrahi},
   Title = {Leyatzeg et Auschwitz},
   Journal = {Teoria u-vikorti ["Theory and Criticism"]},
   Volume = {8},
   Pages = {171-179},
   Year = {1996},
   Month = {Summer},
   Key = {fds42313}
}

@misc{fds42311,
   Author = {S. Ezrahi},
   Title = {Representing Auschwitz},
   Journal = {History and Memory},
   Volume = {7},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {121-154},
   Year = {1996},
   Month = {Winter},
   Key = {fds42311}
}

@misc{fds42315,
   Author = {S. Ezrahi},
   Title = {The Grapes of Roth: 'Diasporism' Between Portnoy and
             Shylock},
   Journal = {Studies in Contemporary Jewry},
   Pages = {148-158},
   Year = {1996},
   Month = {Winter},
   Key = {fds42315}
}

@misc{fds42309,
   Author = {S. Ezrahi},
   Title = {Ha-masa ha-yehudi: mi-bukovina li-yirushalayim-u-vehazara},
   Pages = {99-108},
   Booktitle = {Bein kfor le-ashan: mehkarim bi-yetzirato shel Aharon
             Appelfeld [Between Frost and Smoke: Studies in the Fiction
             of Aharon Appelfeld]},
   Publisher = {Beersheva: Ben Gurion University},
   Editor = {Itzhak Ben-Mordecai and Iris Parush},
   Year = {1997},
   Key = {fds42309}
}

@misc{fds42308,
   Author = {S. Ezrahi},
   Title = {See Under 'Memory': Reflections on Saul Friedlander's "When
             Memory Comes"},
   Journal = {History and Memory},
   Volume = {9},
   Series = {Special Festschrift in Honor of Saul Friedlander's
             Sixty-Fifth Birthday},
   Number = {1-2},
   Pages = {364-375},
   Year = {1997},
   Month = {Fall},
   Key = {fds42308}
}

@misc{fds42307,
   Author = {S. Ezrahi},
   Title = {Israel and Jewish Writing: The Next Fifty
             Years},
   Journal = {Religion and Literature},
   Volume = {30},
   Number = {3},
   Pages = {9-21},
   Year = {1998},
   Month = {Fall},
   Key = {fds42307}
}

@book{fds42182,
   Author = {S. Ezrahi},
   Title = {Booking Passage: On Exile and Homecoming in the Modern
             Jewish Imagination},
   Publisher = {Berkeley: University of California Press},
   Year = {2000},
   Key = {fds42182}
}

@misc{fds42306,
   Author = {S. Ezrahi},
   Title = {After Such Knowledge, What Laughter?},
   Journal = {Yale Journal of Criticism},
   Volume = {14},
   Series = {Special Issue on the Holocaust and Interpretation},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {287-317},
   Year = {2001},
   Key = {fds42306}
}

@misc{fds42305,
   Author = {S. Ezrahi},
   Title = {Acts of Impersonation: Barbaric Space as
             Theatre},
   Pages = {17-38},
   Publisher = {New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press and The Jewish
             Museum},
   Editor = {Norman Kleeblatt},
   Year = {2001},
   Month = {Fall},
   Key = {fds42305}
}

@misc{fds42304,
   Author = {S. Ezrahi},
   Title = {See Under: 'Apocalypse'},
   Journal = {Judaism},
   Volume = {51},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {61-70},
   Year = {2002},
   Month = {Winter},
   Key = {fds42304}
}

@misc{fds42283,
   Author = {S. Ezrahi},
   Title = {Diaspora: Homeland in Exile},
   Pages = {19, 21, 25, 28, 46, 48, 77, 99},
   Publisher = {New York: HarperCollins},
   Year = {2003},
   Key = {fds42283}
}

@misc{fds42284,
   Author = {S. Ezrahi},
   Title = {When Exiles Return: Jerusalem as Topos of the Mind and
             Soil},
   Pages = {39-52},
   Booktitle = {Placeless Topographies: Jewish Perspectives on the
             Literature of Exile},
   Publisher = {Tubingen: Max Niemeyer Verlag},
   Editor = {Bernhard Greiner},
   Year = {2003},
   Key = {fds42284}
}

@misc{fds42303,
   Author = {S. Ezrahi},
   Title = {Racism and Ethics: Constructing Alternative
             History},
   Pages = {118-128},
   Booktitle = {Impossible History: Contemporary Art after the
             Holocaust},
   Publisher = {New York and London: New York University
             Press},
   Editor = {Shelley Hornstein and Laura Levitt and Laurence J.
             Silberstein},
   Year = {2003},
   Key = {fds42303}
}

@misc{fds42187,
   Author = {S. Ezrahi},
   Title = {Questions of Authenticity},
   Series = {Modern Language Association Series on "Options for
             Teaching"},
   Pages = {52-67},
   Booktitle = {Teaching the Representation of the Holocaust},
   Publisher = {NY: The Modern Language Association of America},
   Editor = {Marianne Hirsch and Irene Kacandes},
   Year = {2004},
   Key = {fds42187}
}

@misc{fds42281,
   Author = {S. Ezrahi},
   Title = {Questions of Authenticity},
   Series = {Modern Language Association Series, "Options for
             Teaching"},
   Pages = {52-67},
   Booktitle = {Teaching the Representation of the Holocaust},
   Publisher = {New York: The Modern Language Association of
             America},
   Editor = {Marianne Hirsch and Irene Kacandes},
   Year = {2004},
   Key = {fds42281}
}

@misc{fds42282,
   Author = {S. Ezrahi},
   Title = {Sentient Dogs, Liberated Rams, and Talking Asses: Agnon's
             Biblical Zoo--Or Rereading Timol shilshom},
   Journal = {AJS Review},
   Volume = {28},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {105-135},
   Year = {2004},
   Month = {April},
   Key = {fds42282}
}

@misc{fds42184,
   Author = {S. Ezrahi},
   Title = {"Tzion, halo tishali? Yerushalayim ke-metaphora nashit"
             [Hebrew]},
   Series = {in honor of Dan Miron},
   Booktitle = {Festschrift Volume},
   Editor = {Hannan Hever},
   Year = {2005},
   Key = {fds42184}
}

@misc{fds42186,
   Author = {S. Ezrahi},
   Title = {America as the Theatre of Jewish Comedy: From Sholem
             Aleichem to Grace Paley},
   Volume = {XIII},
   Pages = {74-82},
   Booktitle = {Studia Judaica},
   Publisher = {Cluj, Romania},
   Editor = {Gyemant Ladislau},
   Year = {2005},
   Key = {fds42186}
}

@misc{fds42185,
   Author = {S. Ezrahi},
   Title = {"The Jewish Journey in the Late Fiction of Aharon Appelfeld:
             Return, Repair or Repetition?"},
   Journal = {The World of Aharon Appelfeld},
   Volume = {5},
   Series = {Special Bi-Lingual Edition of Mikan},
   Pages = {47-55},
   Editor = {Dana Ben-Zaken and Risa Domb and Yigal Schwartz},
   Year = {2005},
   Month = {January},
   Key = {fds42185}
}


%% Ginsburg, Shai   
@article{fds227614,
   Author = {Ginsburg, S},
   Title = {Hamlet—In search of Language},
   Journal = {Efes Shtayim},
   Number = {3},
   Pages = {153-157},
   Year = {1995},
   Key = {fds227614}
}

@article{fds227613,
   Author = {Ginsburg, S},
   Title = {Between Memory and History: Saul Friedlander as an
             Autobiographical Writer and as a Historian},
   Journal = {Theory and Criticism},
   Volume = {17},
   Pages = {217-222},
   Year = {2000},
   Key = {fds227613}
}

@article{fds227596,
   Author = {Ginsburg, S},
   Title = {Between Language and Land: Moshe Smilansky’s ‘Hawaja
             Nazar’},
   Journal = {Jerusalem Studies in Hebrew Literature},
   Volume = {20},
   Pages = {221-235},
   Year = {2006},
   Key = {fds227596}
}

@article{fds227597,
   Author = {Ginsburg, S},
   Title = {Between Myth and History: Moshe Shamir’s He Walked in the
             Fields},
   Pages = {110-127},
   Booktitle = {Literature and Nation in the Middle East},
   Publisher = {Edinburgh University Press},
   Editor = {Suleiman, Y and Muhawi, I},
   Year = {2006},
   Key = {fds227597}
}

@article{fds227594,
   Author = {Ginsburg, S},
   Title = {"The rock of our very existence": Anton Shammas's Arabesques
             and the rhetoric of Hebrew literature},
   Journal = {Comparative Literature},
   Volume = {58},
   Number = {3},
   Pages = {187-204},
   Publisher = {Duke University Press},
   Year = {2006},
   Month = {January},
   ISSN = {0010-4124},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/-58-3-187},
   Doi = {10.1215/-58-3-187},
   Key = {fds227594}
}

@article{fds227589,
   Author = {Ginsburg, S},
   Title = {Literature, Territory, Criticism: Brenner and the
             "Erets-Israeli" Genre},
   Journal = {Theory and Criticism},
   Number = {30},
   Pages = {39-62},
   Year = {2007},
   Key = {fds227589}
}

@article{fds227592,
   Author = {Ginsburg, S},
   Title = {Truth in the Land of Israel: On the Notion of Truth in the
             Work of Ahad Ha-‘Am},
   Pages = {260-275},
   Booktitle = {A Moment of Birth: Studies in Hebrew and Yiddish Literatures
             in Honor of Dan Miron},
   Publisher = {Jerusalem: Mosad Bialik},
   Editor = {Hever, H},
   Year = {2007},
   Key = {fds227592}
}

@article{fds303151,
   Author = {Ginsburg, S},
   Title = {Truth in the Land of Israel: On the Notion of Truth in the
             Work of Ahad Ha-‘Am},
   Pages = {260-275},
   Publisher = {Jerusalem: Mosad Bialik},
   Editor = {Hever, H},
   Year = {2007},
   Key = {fds303151}
}

@article{fds227581,
   Author = {Ginsburg},
   Title = {Politics and Letters: On the Rhetoric of the Nation in
             Pinsker and Ahad Ha-Am},
   Journal = {Prooftexts},
   Volume = {29},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {173-173},
   Publisher = {Indiana University Press},
   Year = {2009},
   ISSN = {0272-9601},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.2979/pft.2009.29.2.173},
   Abstract = {This essay seeks to amend a peculiar shortcoming in the
             current scholarship on Ahad Ha-Am: whereas his style and
             rhetoric are commonly celebrated, they are seldom examined
             or analyzed in any detail. Scholarship tends to conflate his
             literary with his political endeavors and to trace his
             political impact to his preeminence as an essayist and
             editor; yet this approach fails to account for his political
             ineffectuality even at the height of his literary success.
             This essay suggests, on the contrary, that his essays
             manifest a struggle to reconcile the demands of politics
             with those of rhetoric, that is, to reconcile the dialectic
             form of his argument, the vehicle of his political argument,
             with the figurative form his rhetoric aspires to achieve. In
             a reading of three of Ahad Ha-Am's major essays, "Emet
             me'erets yisra'el" (1891), "Te'udat Ha-Shilo'ah{dot below}"
             (1896), and "Mosheh" (1904), the essay probes how this
             struggle shapes his political vision, his literary vision,
             and his perception of the role of the historical leader
             (and, ostensibly, his own) in forming a national community.
             The essay traces Ahad Ha-Am's difficulties in reconciling
             rhetoric and politics to his tussle with the bequest of
             Hibbat Zion literature. Whereas Ahad Ha-Am's reliance on
             traditional Jewish genres, on the one hand, and on English
             and German philosophical literature, on the other hand, has
             been readily noted, his indebtedness, to the writings of
             Hovevei Zion in general, and to that of Leo Pinsker in
             particular, is yet to be recognized. It is in Pinsker, I
             shall contend, that one finds one of the most important
             precursors to Ahad Ha-Am, not only in politics, but in
             rhetoric as well. Last, this essay probes the prevalent
             (Marxist) model of reading the political character of Hebrew
             literature. Such a model fails to give account for the
             tension that structures the Ahad Ha-Am essay. Whereas this
             model presupposes that literary rhetoric can take part in
             the symbolic struggles that make up the political realm, the
             reading of the Ahad Ha-Am essay put forward in this essay
             questions the nature of the exchange between rhetoric and
             politics. It thus suggests that a different model of reading
             of rhetoric and politics is in need, a model that would
             account for the failure to reconcile the two. © 2009 by
             Prooftexts Ltd.},
   Doi = {10.2979/pft.2009.29.2.173},
   Key = {fds227581}
}

@article{fds227616,
   Author = {Ginsburg, S},
   Title = {The Social Function of Israeli Cinema},
   Journal = {Zeek},
   Pages = {73-79},
   Year = {2009},
   Month = {Fall},
   Key = {fds227616}
}

@article{fds227582,
   Author = {Ginsburg, S},
   Title = {Signs and wonders: Fetishism and hybridity in Homi Bhabha's
             the location of culture},
   Journal = {New Centennial Review},
   Volume = {9},
   Number = {3},
   Pages = {229-250},
   Publisher = {Johns Hopkins University Press},
   Year = {2009},
   Month = {December},
   ISSN = {1532-687X},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/ncr.0.0082},
   Doi = {10.1353/ncr.0.0082},
   Key = {fds227582}
}

@book{fds227569,
   Author = {Man, PD},
   Title = {The Resistance to Theory},
   Publisher = {Resling},
   Year = {2010},
   Key = {fds227569}
}

@article{fds227568,
   Author = {Ginsburg, S},
   Title = {Rhetoric and Criticism: The Work and Life of Paul de
             Man},
   Booktitle = {The Resistance to Theory, by Paul de Man (Hebrew
             Translation)},
   Year = {2010},
   Key = {fds227568}
}

@article{fds184656,
   Title = {Studying Violence: The Films of Avi Mograbi},
   Journal = {Zeek},
   Pages = {67-72},
   Year = {2010},
   Month = {Summer},
   Key = {fds184656}
}

@article{fds227561,
   Author = {Ginsburg, S},
   Title = {An American Reflection: Steven Spielberg, the Jewish
             Holocaust and the Israeli Palestinian Conflict},
   Journal = {American Studies},
   Volume = {34},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {45-76},
   Year = {2011},
   Key = {fds227561}
}

@article{fds227562,
   Author = {Ginsburg, S},
   Title = {Love in Search of Belief, Belief in Search of
             Love},
   Pages = {371-376},
   Booktitle = {The Modern Jewish Experience in World Cinema},
   Year = {2011},
   ISBN = {9781611682083},
   Key = {fds227562}
}

@article{fds227563,
   Author = {Ginsburg, S},
   Title = {Studying Violence: The Films of Avi Mograbi},
   Journal = {Takriv},
   Number = {2},
   Year = {2011},
   url = {http://www.takriv.net/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=35:2011-08-02-16-02-41&catid=10:2011-08-14-09-14-03&Itemid=15},
   Key = {fds227563}
}

@article{fds227564,
   Author = {Ginsburg, S},
   Title = {The Physics of Being Jewish, or On Cats and
             Jews},
   Journal = {AJS Review},
   Volume = {35},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {357-364},
   Publisher = {Project MUSE},
   Year = {2011},
   Month = {November},
   ISSN = {0364-0094},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0364009411000444},
   Abstract = {<jats:p>The opening scene of Joel and Ethan Coen's
             <jats:italic>A Serious Man</jats:italic> has baffled many.
             What does an unsettling tale of an encounter with what may
             or may not be a dybbuk, set in the mid-nineteenth century in
             a Polish shtetl, and played out entirely in Yiddish, have to
             do with the story of a Jewish professor of physics and his
             family in suburban Minnesota in the summer of 1967, related
             in English? Is the scene to be viewed as a warm-up of sorts
             before the main attraction, akin, if you will, to the
             short-subject films—newsreels, animated cartoons, and
             live-action comedies and documentaries—that movie houses
             of old used to play before the main feature? If so, what is
             the significance of presenting an odd Yiddish scene to an
             American audience notorious for turning a cold shoulder to
             non-English-speaking cinema? Or is the scene to be viewed as
             a prologue to the movie? If so, in what sense could it be
             said to impart to the audience either the “state of
             suspense of the plot produced by the previous history” or,
             alternatively, the argument of the drama?</jats:p>},
   Doi = {10.1017/s0364009411000444},
   Key = {fds227564}
}

@article{fds227560,
   Author = {Ginsburg, S},
   Title = {From Ziklag One Cannot See Khirbet Khizeh},
   Pages = {23-31},
   Booktitle = {The Palestinian Nakba in Cinema and Literature},
   Year = {2012},
   url = {http://zochrot.org/content/%D7%94%D7%A0%D7%9B%D7%91%D7%94-%D7%94%D7%A4%D7%9C%D7%A1%D7%98%D7%99%D7%A0%D7%99%D7%AA-%D7%91%D7%A7%D7%95%D7%9C%D7%A0%D7%95%D7%A2-%D7%95%D7%91%D7%A1%D7%A4%D7%A8%D7%95%D7%AA-%D7%91%D7%99%D7%A9%D7%A8%D7%90%D7%9C},
   Key = {fds227560}
}

@book{fds227551,
   Author = {S. Ginsburg and Ginsburg, S and Horowitz, B},
   Title = {Bounded Mind and Soul: Russia and Israel,
             1880–2010},
   Publisher = {Slavica Publishers},
   Address = {Bloomington, IN},
   Year = {2013},
   Key = {fds227551}
}

@article{fds227556,
   Author = {Ginsburg, S},
   Title = {War and Peace in Israel: Hebrew Literature and Russian
             Literature in Hebrew, 1942–60},
   Pages = {131-150},
   Booktitle = {Bounded Mind and Soul: Russia and Israel,
             1880–2010},
   Publisher = {Slavica Publishers},
   Address = {Bloomington, IN},
   Editor = {Horowitz, B and Ginsburg, S},
   Year = {2013},
   Key = {fds227556}
}

@article{fds227547,
   Author = {Ginsburg, S},
   Title = {Class and Historical Anxiety: The Rhetoric of Class in David
             Ben-Gurion’s and Meir Ya’ari’s Thought (in
             Hebrew)},
   Booktitle = {Literature and Inequality},
   Publisher = {The Van Leer Institute},
   Editor = {Banbaji, A and Hever, H},
   Year = {2014},
   Key = {fds227547}
}

@article{fds227555,
   Author = {Ginsburg, S},
   Title = {The Bookcase and the Language of Grace},
   Journal = {Mikan},
   Volume = {14},
   Pages = {239-263},
   Year = {2014},
   Key = {fds227555}
}

@book{fds227545,
   Author = {Ginsburg, SP},
   Title = {Rhetoric and nation: The formation of Hebrew national
             culture, 1880–1990},
   Pages = {1-476},
   Year = {2014},
   Month = {January},
   ISBN = {9780815633334},
   Abstract = {Recent and commonly accepted criticism holds that written
             and spoken Hebrew reveals a shared logic, a collective
             rhetoric that is identifiable and can be traced as an
             evolving phenomenon throughout the centuries. In Rhetoric
             and Nation, Ginsburg charts the emergence and formation of
             the Hebrew discourse of the nation from the late nineteenth
             century through the late twentieth century. In doing so, he
             challenges these notions of a common rhetoric by considering
             three areas of writing: literature, literary and cultural
             criticism, and ideological and political writings. Ginsburg
             argues that each text presents its own singular logic. Some
             writing is determined by social and historical context.
             Other writings are determined by the biographies of their
             authors, still others by genre. Through close readings of
             key canonical texts, Rhetoric and Nation demonstrates that
             the Hebrew discourse of the nation should not be conceived
             as coherent and cohesive but, rather, as an assemblage of
             singular, disparate moments.},
   Key = {fds227545}
}

@article{fds318003,
   Author = {Ginsburg, S},
   Title = {S. Yizhar’s Khirbet Khizeh and the rhetoric of
             conflict},
   Pages = {165-179},
   Booktitle = {Jewish Rhetorics: History, Theory, Practice},
   Year = {2014},
   Month = {January},
   ISBN = {9781611686395},
   Key = {fds318003}
}

@article{fds227546,
   Author = {Ginsburg, S},
   Title = {The City and the Body: Jerusalem in Uri Tsvi Greenberg’s
             Vision of One of the Legions},
   Booktitle = {Jerusalem Across the Disciplines},
   Editor = {Elman, M and Adelman, M},
   Year = {2014},
   Month = {April},
   Key = {fds227546}
}

@article{fds318001,
   Author = {Ginsburg, S},
   Title = {Poetry and Conflict: on Civility, Citizenship and
             Criticism},
   Pages = {152-174},
   Booktitle = {Toward a Critical Rhetoric on the Israel-Palestine
             Conflict},
   Publisher = {Parlor Press},
   Editor = {Matthew Abraham},
   Year = {2015},
   ISBN = {978-1602356931},
   Key = {fds318001}
}

@article{fds318002,
   Author = {Ginsburg, S},
   Title = {Rev. of Israeli Cinema: Identities in Motion, edited by Miri
             Talmon and Yaron Peleg},
   Journal = {IMAGES: A Journal of Jewish Art and Visual
             Culture},
   Number = {8},
   Pages = {129-132},
   Year = {2015},
   Key = {fds318002}
}

@article{fds227544,
   Author = {Ginsburg, SP},
   Title = {Alon Hilu and the Hebrew historical novel},
   Journal = {Shofar},
   Volume = {33},
   Number = {4},
   Pages = {134-157},
   Publisher = {Johns Hopkins University Press},
   Year = {2015},
   Month = {June},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/sho.2015.0029},
   Abstract = {In this paper, I discuss Alon Hilu’s two historical
             novels, Death of a Monk (2004) and The Dejani Estate (2008),
             as symptomatic of Israeli culture of the twenty-first
             century. I argue that the question of genre-historical
             fiction-is as central to the construction of the novels as
             it is to their reception. As the latter evinces, historical
             fiction is perceived as blurring the proper boundaries
             between the "objective" and the imaginary and thus feeds
             anxieties about the relationship of Jews to history,
             anxieties that have been haunting Zionist discourses from
             their inception. Hilu’s novels trace these anxieties to
             concerns about sexuality and desire and employ them to
             explore the relationship between two central foci of the
             Hebrew historical novel, namely, historical agency and
             historical writing. The novels construct numerous "scenes of
             writing," in which writing seeks to retrieve historical
             agency, embodied in the two novels by desire and sexual
             potency. Simultaneously, writing is revealed as a mere
             substitute for desire and sex. Both novels consequently
             suggest that writing attests to the failure to produce
             historical agency.},
   Doi = {10.1353/sho.2015.0029},
   Key = {fds227544}
}

@article{fds318000,
   Author = {Paul de Man},
   Title = {Autobiography as De-Facement},
   Journal = {Miakn},
   Number = {16},
   Pages = {244-255},
   Year = {2016},
   Key = {fds318000}
}

@article{fds317999,
   Author = {Ginsburg, S},
   Title = {Paul de Man’s Death Mask},
   Journal = {Mikan},
   Number = {16},
   Pages = {256-264},
   Year = {2016},
   Abstract = {This essay presents a close reading of Paul de Man’s
             seminal essay, Autobiography as Defacement. It seeks to
             uncover the unsettling effect de Man finds in autobiography
             by paying close attention to the images of the suffering
             human body and its death, which are central to his essay.
             The current article contends that for de Man, the
             autobiography manifests the human condition, which he sees
             as a radical dualism of mind and body. Indeed, the human
             condition is characterized by the inability of the mind to
             account for the suffering of the body, and beyond that, by
             an inability to articulate that suffering in
             language.},
   Key = {fds317999}
}

@article{fds339984,
   Author = {Ginsburg, S},
   Title = {Pessah Ginsburg: Two Letters (Christiania 1917; London
             1918)},
   Journal = {Jerusalem Studies in Hebrew Literature},
   Volume = {29},
   Pages = {307-321},
   Year = {2017},
   Key = {fds339984}
}

@article{fds355291,
   Author = {Ginsburg, S},
   Title = {Literature, Colonialism, and Empire. Rev. of To Inherit the
             Land, to Conquer the Space: The Beginning of Hebrew Poetry
             in Eretz-Israel by Hannan Hever},
   Journal = {Jerusalem Studies in Hebrew Literature},
   Number = {29},
   Pages = {325-333},
   Year = {2017},
   Key = {fds355291}
}

@article{fds339983,
   Author = {Ginsburg, S and Land, M and Boyarin, J},
   Title = {Jews, Theory, and Ends},
   Volume = {Jews and the Ends of Theory},
   Pages = {1-26},
   Booktitle = {Jews and the Ends of Theory},
   Publisher = {Fordham University Press},
   Editor = {Ginsburg, S and Land, M and Boyarin, J},
   Year = {2018},
   Key = {fds339983}
}

@book{fds339982,
   Author = {Ginsburg, S and Land, M and Boyarin, J},
   Title = {Jews and the ends of theory},
   Pages = {1-336},
   Year = {2018},
   Month = {December},
   ISBN = {9780823282005},
   Abstract = {Theory, as it's happened across the humanities, has often
             been coded as "Jewish." This collection of essays seeks to
             move past explanations for this understanding that rely on
             the self-evident (the historical centrality of Jews to the
             rise of Critical Theory with the Frankfurt School) or
             stereotypical (psychoanalysis as the "Jewish Science") in
             order to show how certain problematics of modern Jewishness
             enrich theory. In the range of violence and agency that
             attend the appellation "Jew," depending on how, where, and
             by whom it's uttered, we can see that Jewishness is a
             rhetorical as much as a sociological fact, and that its
             rhetorical and sociological aspects, while linked, are not
             identical. Attention to this disjuncture helps to elucidate
             the questions of power, subjectivity, identity, figuration,
             language, and relation that modern theory has grappled with.
             These questions in turn implicate geopolitical issues such
             as the relation of a people to a state and the violence done
             in the name of simplistic identitarian ideologies.
             Clarifying a situation where "the Jew" is not readily or
             unproblematically legible, the editors propose what they
             call "spectral reading," a way to understand Jewishness as a
             fluid and rhetorical presence. While not divorced from
             sociological facts, this spectral reading works in concert
             with contemporary theory to mediate pessimistic and utopian
             impulses, experiences, and realities.},
   Key = {fds339982}
}

@book{fds356395,
   Author = {Ginsburg, S and Land, M and Boyarin, J},
   Title = {Introduction: Jews, theory, and ends},
   Pages = {1-25},
   Year = {2018},
   Month = {December},
   ISBN = {9780823282005},
   Key = {fds356395}
}

@article{fds350275,
   Author = {Ginsburg, S},
   Title = {Belonging in Israel/Palestine: Theory and
             Literature},
   Journal = {Novel},
   Volume = {52},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {156-160},
   Publisher = {Duke University Press},
   Year = {2019},
   Month = {May},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/00295132-7330326},
   Doi = {10.1215/00295132-7330326},
   Key = {fds350275}
}

@article{fds350274,
   Author = {Ginsburg, S},
   Title = {Mothers, Fathers, and the Hebrew Literary
             Canon},
   Journal = {Novel},
   Volume = {52},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {318-322},
   Publisher = {Duke University Press},
   Year = {2019},
   Month = {August},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/00295132-7547020},
   Doi = {10.1215/00295132-7547020},
   Key = {fds350274}
}

@article{fds355289,
   Author = {Ginsburg, S and Banbaji, A},
   Title = {Introduction},
   Journal = {Mikan},
   Number = {20},
   Pages = {5-25},
   Year = {2020},
   Month = {April},
   Key = {fds355289}
}

@article{fds355290,
   Author = {Ginsburg, S and Barzilai, M},
   Title = {Rereading Hebrew Speech},
   Journal = {Mikan},
   Number = {20},
   Pages = {198-227},
   Year = {2020},
   Month = {April},
   Key = {fds355290}
}

@article{fds355287,
   Author = {Ginsburg, S},
   Title = {From Here to Elsewhere and Back in Israeli-Hebrew
             Children’s Literature},
   Booktitle = {Since 1948 Israeli Literature in the Making},
   Publisher = {SUNY Press},
   Year = {2020},
   Month = {October},
   ISBN = {9781438480503},
   Abstract = {As fresh creative voices and multiple languages vied for
             recognition, diversity replaced consensus. Genres once
             accorded lower status—such as the graphic novel and
             science fiction—gained readership and positive critical
             notice.},
   Key = {fds355287}
}

@article{fds355286,
   Author = {Ginsburg, S},
   Title = {Tangled Roots: The Emergence of Israeli Culture},
   Year = {2020},
   Month = {December},
   Key = {fds355286}
}

@article{fds375351,
   Author = {Ginsburg, S},
   Title = {IMAGE, WORD, LAND},
   Journal = {Hebrew Studies},
   Volume = {64},
   Pages = {255-268},
   Year = {2023},
   Month = {January},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/hbr.2023.a912661},
   Doi = {10.1353/hbr.2023.a912661},
   Key = {fds375351}
}


%% Göknar, Erdag   
@article{fds285148,
   Author = {Göknar, E},
   Title = {Ottoman past and Turkish future: Ambivalence in A.
             H.Tanpinar's those outside the scene},
   Journal = {South Atlantic Quarterly},
   Volume = {102},
   Number = {2-3},
   Pages = {647-661},
   Publisher = {Duke University Press},
   Year = {2003},
   Month = {January},
   ISSN = {0038-2876},
   url = {http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=WOS:000183499700021&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=47d3190e77e5a3a53558812f597b0b92},
   Doi = {10.1215/00382876-102-2-3-647},
   Key = {fds285148}
}

@article{fds285136,
   Author = {Goknar, E},
   Title = {"My Name is Re(a)d: Translating Authority, Authoring
             Translation"},
   Journal = {Translation Review},
   Editor = {Wade, S},
   Year = {2005},
   Month = {Spring},
   Key = {fds285136}
}

@article{fds285147,
   Author = {Goknar, E},
   Title = {"Orhan Pamuk and the ’Ottoman’ Theme"},
   Journal = {World Literature Today},
   Volume = {80},
   Number = {6},
   Year = {2006},
   Month = {November},
   Key = {fds285147}
}

@misc{fds285139,
   Author = {Goknar, E},
   Title = {"The Novel in Turkish: From Narrative Tradition to Nobel
             Prize"},
   Volume = {IV},
   Pages = {35-35},
   Booktitle = {Cambridge History of Turkey: Turkey in the Modern
             World},
   Publisher = {Cambridge University Press},
   Editor = {Kasaba, R},
   Year = {2008},
   Month = {Fall},
   url = {http://www.cambridge.org/catalogue/catalogue.asp?isbn=9780521620963},
   Abstract = {Turkey’s modern history has been shaped by its society and
             its institutions. In this fourth volume of The Cambridge
             History of Turkey a team of some of the most distinguished
             scholars of modern Turkey have come together to explore the
             interaction between these two aspects of Turkish
             modernization. The volume begins in the nineteenth century
             and traces the historical background through the reforms of
             the late Ottoman Empire, the period of the Young Turks, the
             War of Independence and the founding of the Ataturk’s
             Republic. Thereafter, the volume focuses on the Republican
             period to consider a range of themes including political
             ideology, economic development, the military, migration,
             Kurdish nationalism, the rise of Islamism, and women’s
             struggle for empowerment. The volume concludes with chapters
             on art and architecture, literature, and a brief history of
             Istanbul.},
   Key = {fds285139}
}

@misc{fds167076,
   Author = {Arzu Tascioglu},
   Title = {"Interview with Erdag Goknar"},
   Journal = {Turkish Book Review},
   Volume = {2},
   Year = {2008},
   Month = {Summer},
   Key = {fds167076}
}

@misc{fds349458,
   Author = {Cooke, M and Göknar, EM and Parker, GR},
   Title = {Mediterranean passages readings from Dido to
             Derrida},
   Pages = {399 pages},
   Publisher = {The University of North Carolina Press},
   Year = {2008},
   Month = {October},
   Abstract = {The Mediterranean is the meeting point of three
             continents-Asia, Africa, and Europe-as well as three major
             monotheistic religions-Islam, Judaism, and
             Christianity.},
   Key = {fds349458}
}

@misc{fds285140,
   Author = {Goknar, E},
   Title = {My Name Is Red},
   Pages = {483 pages},
   Publisher = {Everyman's Library},
   Year = {2010},
   ISBN = {9780307593924},
   Abstract = {Their task: to illuminate the work in the European
             style.},
   Key = {fds285140}
}

@article{fds285137,
   Author = {Goknar, E},
   Title = {"From Steppe to Sea: The Blue Anatolia Literary
             Movement"},
   Journal = {Turkish Studies Journal Special Issue Festschrift for Walter
             Andrews},
   Publisher = {Harvard University},
   Editor = {Kalpakli, M},
   Year = {2010},
   Month = {Winter},
   Key = {fds285137}
}

@misc{fds285141,
   Author = {Rahimi, A},
   Title = {Earth and Ashes},
   Pages = {96 pages},
   Publisher = {Other Press, LLC},
   Year = {2010},
   Month = {August},
   ISBN = {9781590513927},
   Abstract = {Atiq Rahimi, whose reputation for writing war stories of
             immense drama and intimacy began with this, his first novel,
             has managed to condense centuries of Afghan history into a
             short tale of three very different generations.},
   Key = {fds285141}
}

@article{fds199906,
   Title = {"The Turkish Novel: Modernity, Modernism, and
             Postmodernism"},
   Booktitle = {The Blackwell Encyclopedia of the Novel},
   Year = {2010},
   Month = {Fall},
   Key = {fds199906}
}

@misc{fds184944,
   Author = {Orhan Pamuk and E. Göknar (translator)},
   Title = {Revised reissue of My Name is Red},
   Pages = {500},
   Publisher = {Everyman's Library Contemporary Classics},
   Editor = {LuAnn Walther},
   Year = {2010},
   Month = {Fall},
   Abstract = {Revised reissue of Pamuk's historical novel. Published as
             part of the Everyman's Library Contemporary Classics
             series.},
   Key = {fds184944}
}

@article{fds285138,
   Author = {Goknar, E},
   Title = {"The White Castle" and the Ottoman Legacy},
   Journal = {Journal of Turkish Literature},
   Editor = {Halman, T},
   Year = {2011},
   Month = {January},
   Key = {fds285138}
}

@misc{fds199908,
   Title = {"Türkçe'de Roman: Anlatı Geleneğinden Nobel
             Ödülu'ne"},
   Booktitle = {Turkish Translation of Cambridge History of Turkey, Vol
             IV},
   Year = {2011},
   Month = {Spring},
   Key = {fds199908}
}

@misc{fds355757,
   Author = {Tanpinar, AH},
   Title = {A Mind at Peace},
   Pages = {447 pages},
   Publisher = {Archipelago},
   Year = {2011},
   Month = {March},
   ISBN = {9781935744191},
   Abstract = {A Mind at Peace, originally published in 1949 is a magnum
             opus, a Turkish Ulysses and a lyrical homage to
             Istanbul.},
   Key = {fds355757}
}

@misc{fds199921,
   Author = {Seda Pekçelen},
   Title = {"Interview with Erdag Göknar on Translation"},
   Journal = {Time Out Istanbul Magazine},
   Year = {2011},
   Month = {Winter},
   Key = {fds199921}
}

@article{fds285122,
   Author = {Göknar, E},
   Title = {"Occulted Texts: Pamuk’s Untranslated Novels"},
   Series = {Literatures & Cultures of the Islamic World},
   Booktitle = {Global Perspectives on Orhan Pamuk: Existentialism and
             Politics},
   Publisher = {Palgrave Macmillan},
   Editor = {Afridi, and Buyze},
   Year = {2012},
   url = {http://www.amazon.com/Global-Perspectives-Orhan-Pamuk-Existentialism/dp/0230114113/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1355540055&sr=1-1&keywords=global+perspectives+on+Orhan},
   Abstract = {Global Perspectives on Orhan Pamuk is an interdisciplinary
             collection of essays that explores Pamuk’s multifaceted
             approach to ordinary Turkish life. The contributors of this
             volume come from an array of international perspectives that
             place the reading of Pamuk into dynamic arenas of new
             interpretation and reflection. The themes of existentialism
             and politics are examined in illuminating essays through
             connections to nationalism, religion/secularity,
             traditional/modern, exile/home, and comparative readings of
             writers as Mohsin Hamid, Naguib Mahfouz, Italo Svevo, and
             Amitav Ghosh. This is an indispensable collection for
             understanding Pamuk, global literature, and crucial issues
             in today’s world.},
   Key = {fds285122}
}

@article{fds285145,
   Author = {Göknar, E},
   Title = {Secular blasphemies: Orhan Pamuk and the Turkish
             novel},
   Journal = {Novel},
   Volume = {45},
   Series = {The Contemporary Novel: Imagining the Twenty-First
             Century},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {301-326},
   Publisher = {Duke},
   Editor = {Nancy Armstrong},
   Year = {2012},
   Month = {June},
   ISSN = {0029-5132},
   url = {http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=WOS:000306887200009&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=47d3190e77e5a3a53558812f597b0b92},
   Abstract = {Turkish novelists have often contested the authoritarian
             tendencies of the republican state. Orhan Pamuk was charged
             with insulting Turkishness in 2005, emphasizing a
             long-standing opposition between author and state as well as
             between literature and secularism. Though Pamuk's trial gave
             him the status of dissident, it simultaneously ignored the
             formal innovations and political transgressions of his
             novels. This essay traces confrontations between Turkish
             literary modernity and secular modern state power in Pamuk's
             work and the Turkish novel. Such an analysis reveals that
             narratives of the nation-state (devlet), bound to the
             secularization thesis, have often been contested by Ottoman,
             Islamic, and Sufi contexts (signifying din). I argue that
             the unresolved opposition between the secular, material
             narratives of devlet and the sacred, redemptive narratives
             of din is productive of the modern Turkish novel and defines
             its literary modernity. Thus, Pamuk's dissidence also
             resides in modes of writing that contest the nation form and
             revise the secularization thesis through new representations
             of Turkish historiography, Istanbul cosmopolitanism, the
             Ottoman archive, political parody, and secular Sufism. Such
             literature that confronts representations of devlet with
             those of din constitutes the “secular blasphemies” that
             define the politics of the Turkish novel.},
   Doi = {10.1215/00295132-1573985},
   Key = {fds285145}
}

@article{fds285121,
   Author = {Goknar, E},
   Title = {"The Turkish Novel: Modernity, Modernism, and
             Postmodernism"},
   Booktitle = {Blackwell Encyclopedia of the Novel},
   Year = {2013},
   Key = {fds285121}
}

@misc{fds285143,
   Author = {Göknar, E},
   Title = {Orhan Pamuk, secularism and blasphemy: The politics of the
             Turkish novel},
   Pages = {1-314},
   Publisher = {Routledge},
   Year = {2013},
   Month = {January},
   ISBN = {9780203080108},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203080108},
   Abstract = {Orhan Pamuk, Secularism and Blasphemy is the first critical
             study of all of Pamuk’s novels, including the early
             untranslated work.},
   Doi = {10.4324/9780203080108},
   Key = {fds285143}
}

@article{fds285144,
   Author = {Göknar, E},
   Title = {Turkish-islamic feminism confronts national patriarchy:
             Halide Edib's divided self},
   Journal = {Journal of Middle East Women's Studies},
   Volume = {9},
   Series = {Special Literature Issue},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {32-57},
   Publisher = {Duke University Press},
   Editor = {Bonnie Schulman},
   Year = {2013},
   Month = {January},
   ISSN = {1552-5864},
   url = {http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=WOS:000319630800003&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=47d3190e77e5a3a53558812f597b0b92},
   Abstract = {This essay compares and contrasts Turkish author Halide
             Edib's novel The Shirt of Flame (Duffield & Company, 1921)
             to the second volume of her memoirs, The Turkish Ordeal (The
             Century Company, 1928). Both texts have female protagonists
             and parallel plots and take place during the Allied
             occupation of Istanbul (1918-23). Both texts are
             manifestations of an emerging Turkish national master
             narrative. By highlighting the tensions between the
             first-person narratives of the novel, the memoir, and the
             emplottment of the national master narrative, this essay
             offers an analysis of tensions between cosmopolitan Islamic
             feminism and secular nationalism. This essay describes how
             memoir (whether an actual memoir, such as The Turkish
             Ordeal, or a fictional memoir, such as The Shirt of Flame)
             constructs the object of its knowledge (the feminist self),
             and furthermore, how the feminist self can be read either as
             constitutive of national allegory (as in The Shirt of Flame)
             or as an allegorical critique of patriarchal nationalism (as
             in the English-language The Turkish Ordeal). The essay
             concludes by showing how Halide Edib's perspective allows
             for a gendered reading of the national master narrative and
             the Orientalist/nationalist binary upon which it is
             predicated.},
   Doi = {10.2979/jmiddeastwomstud.9.2.32},
   Key = {fds285144}
}

@misc{fds220630,
   Author = {E. Göknar},
   Title = {Orhan Pamuk, Secularism and Blasphemy: The Politics of the
             Turkish Novel},
   Publisher = {Routledge},
   Year = {2013},
   Month = {March},
   Abstract = {http://www.routledge.com/books/details/9780415505383/},
   Key = {fds220630}
}

@article{fds327161,
   Author = {Göknar, E},
   Title = {Reading Occupied Istanbul: Turkish Subject-Formation from
             Historical Trauma to Literary Trope},
   Journal = {Culture, Theory and Critique},
   Volume = {55},
   Number = {3},
   Pages = {321-341},
   Year = {2014},
   Month = {September},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14735784.2014.882792},
   Abstract = {Abstract: The Allied occupation of Istanbul is a
             little-known historical event outside of Turkey and the
             Middle East. European powers occupied Istanbul between 1918
             and 1923 to enforce the partition of the Ottoman Empire
             after WWI in the construction of the Modern Middle East.
             Almost 100 Turkish novels that address occupied Istanbul
             have appeared over the last ninety years, beginning even
             before Allied armies left Istanbul in 1923. Turkey's present
             Middle Eastern re-emergence and post-Kemalist reassessment
             of secular modernity has also led writers and intellectuals
             back to the occupation of Istanbul. To examine why Turkish
             authors return repeatedly to the trope of occupied Istanbul,
             this essay surveys the first canonised novels about occupied
             Istanbul written during the Kemalist monoparty period
             (1923–50): Shirt of Flame by the exiled feminist and
             nationalist Halide Edib (1884–1964), Sodom and Gomorrah by
             the Kemalist ideologue Yakup Kadri Karaosmanoğlu
             (1889–1974) and Outside the Scene by Turkey's first
             experimental, modernist author Ahmet Hamdi Tanpınar
             (1902–62). As bilingual Istanbul intellectuals, all three
             made occupied Istanbul a central drama in their fictions.
             However, each represented it differently as a formative
             event in the construction and critique of the nation-state
             and of modern Turkish subject-formation.},
   Doi = {10.1080/14735784.2014.882792},
   Key = {fds327161}
}

@misc{fds362592,
   Author = {Göknar, E},
   Title = {"A Nomad Between Worlds: Mohed Altrad's _Badawi_"},
   Journal = {Los Angeles Review of Books},
   Year = {2016},
   Month = {September},
   Key = {fds362592}
}

@article{fds355751,
   Author = {Göknar, E},
   Title = {"Mapping Pamuk onto the World Literature
             Syllabus"},
   Booktitle = {Approaches to Teaching the Works of Orhan
             Pamuk},
   Publisher = {MLA},
   Editor = {Türkkan, S and Damrosch, D},
   Year = {2017},
   Key = {fds355751}
}

@misc{fds355750,
   Author = {Göknar, E},
   Title = {Nomadologies},
   Pages = {90 pages},
   Year = {2017},
   Month = {April},
   ISBN = {9781933527871},
   Abstract = {Moments lived between Turkey and America come together in
             this debut collection by the award-winning translator of
             Orhan Pamuk.},
   Key = {fds355750}
}

@misc{fds355749,
   Author = {Göknar, E},
   Title = {"A Turkish Woman in the Oedipus Complex: Orhan Pamuk's 'The
             Red-Haired Woman'"},
   Year = {2017},
   Month = {August},
   Abstract = {The two dominant and competing myths come from ancient
             Greece and Persia (Greece and Iran today are Turkey’s
             Western and Eastern neighbors): the Oedipal myth from
             Sophocles’ Oedipus Rex, where son unknowingly kills
             father, and the legend of Rostam and Sohrab from
             Ferdowsi’s Shahnameh, where father unknowingly kills son.
             The myths can be read as generational allegories about
             tradition and modernity, the East/West conflict, Islam and
             secularism, and even socialism and capitalism.},
   Key = {fds355749}
}

@misc{fds355748,
   Author = {Göknar, E},
   Title = {"The Light of the Bosphorus: Photography in Orhan Pamuk's
             'Balkon'"},
   Journal = {Los Angeles Review of Books},
   Publisher = {Los Angeles Review of Books},
   Year = {2019},
   Month = {May},
   Abstract = {ORHAN PAMUK’S PHOTOGRAPHS emerge from a specific and
             recurring moment. As much as they capture subtle aspects of
             Istanbul geography in and around the iconic confluence of
             the Bosphorus and the Golden Horn, they also reveal the
             moments when the writer stops writing and is drawn away from
             his desk. Taken during a period of self-described
             dissatisfaction with his work — perhaps verging on
             writer’s block — these images are linked obliquely to
             novel-writing.},
   Key = {fds355748}
}

@article{fds349457,
   Author = {Goknar, E},
   Title = {Conspiracy Theory in Turkey: Politics and Protest in the Age
             of "Post-Truth"},
   Journal = {MIDDLE EAST JOURNAL},
   Volume = {73},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {336-337},
   Publisher = {MIDDLE EAST INST},
   Year = {2019},
   Month = {June},
   Key = {fds349457}
}

@article{fds167075,
   Title = {"The Turkish Novel: Modernity, Modernism, and
             Postmodernism"},
   Booktitle = {Blackwell Encyclopedia of the Novel},
   Year = {20010},
   Month = {Fall},
   Key = {fds167075}
}


%% Goldman, Shalom L.   
@article{fds298835,
   Author = {SL Goldman},
   Title = {Biblical Hebrew in Colonial America: The Case of
             Dartmouth},
   Journal = {American Jewish History},
   Volume = {79},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {173-180},
   Year = {1989},
   Key = {fds298835}
}

@article{fds298834,
   Author = {SL Goldman},
   Title = {Hebrew Orations at the American Colleges},
   Journal = {American Jewish Archives},
   Volume = {2},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {23-26},
   Year = {1990},
   Key = {fds298834}
}

@article{fds298833,
   Author = {SL Goldman},
   Title = {Reverend George Bush: Hebraist and the Proto
             Zionist},
   Journal = {American Jewish Archives},
   Volume = {43},
   Number = {7},
   Pages = {1-24},
   Year = {1991},
   Key = {fds298833}
}

@article{fds298836,
   Author = {SL Goldman},
   Title = {Isaac Nordheimer (1509 1842): An Israelite Truly in Whom
             There Was No Guile},
   Journal = {American Jewish History},
   Volume = {80},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {1-14},
   Year = {1991},
   Key = {fds298836}
}

@article{fds298837,
   Author = {SL Goldman},
   Title = {Two American Hebrew Orations, 1799 and 1800},
   Journal = {Hebrew Annual Review},
   Volume = {13},
   Year = {1991},
   Key = {fds298837}
}

@article{fds298838,
   Author = {SL Goldman},
   Title = {Christians, Jews, and the Hebrew Language in Rhode Island
             History},
   Journal = {Rhode Island Jewish Historical Notes},
   Volume = {11},
   Number = {3},
   Pages = {344-353},
   Year = {1993},
   Key = {fds298838}
}

@article{fds298840,
   Author = {SL Goldman},
   Title = {James/Joshua Seixas: Jewish Apostasy and Christian Hebraism
             in Early Nineteenth Century America},
   Journal = {Jewish History},
   Volume = {8},
   Pages = {65-88},
   Year = {1993},
   Key = {fds298840}
}

@article{fds298839,
   Author = {SL Goldman},
   Title = {Vehu Shaul: An Unknown American Hebrew Yiddish
             Polemic},
   Journal = {Jewish Book Annual},
   Volume = {51},
   Pages = {1-10},
   Year = {1994},
   Key = {fds298839}
}

@article{fds298841,
   Author = {SL Goldman},
   Title = {The Holy Land Appropriated: The Careers of Selah
             Merrill},
   Journal = {American Jewish History},
   Volume = {85},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {151-172},
   Year = {1997},
   Key = {fds298841}
}

@article{fds298842,
   Author = {SL Goldman},
   Title = {American Jewish Folklore},
   Journal = {Jewish Folklore and Ethnology Review},
   Volume = {19},
   Pages = {21-26},
   Year = {1997},
   Key = {fds298842}
}

@article{fds298843,
   Author = {SL Goldman},
   Title = {Spiritual Feminism and Christian Hebraism: Women and the
             Study of Hebrew in Seventeenth-Century Europe},
   Journal = {Hebrew Studies},
   Volume = {39},
   Pages = {153-168},
   Year = {1998},
   Key = {fds298843}
}

@article{fds298844,
   Author = {SL Goldman},
   Title = {Islamic Influences on Jewish Worship},
   Journal = {Medieval Encounters},
   Volume = {5},
   Number = {7},
   Pages = {153-168},
   Year = {1999},
   Key = {fds298844}
}

@article{fds298845,
   Author = {SL Goldman},
   Title = {Jewish Salamanca, Christian Learning, and Modern
             Irony},
   Journal = {Judaism},
   Volume = {49},
   Number = {3},
   Pages = {358-362},
   Year = {2000},
   Key = {fds298845}
}

@article{fds298846,
   Author = {SL Goldman and L Patton},
   Title = {Israelis, Orthodoxy, and Indian Culture},
   Journal = {Judaism},
   Volume = {50},
   Pages = {351-361},
   Year = {2001},
   Key = {fds298846}
}

@article{fds298847,
   Author = {SL Goldman},
   Title = {A Long Romance: Edmund Wilson, the Hebrew Language and the
             American Jewish Community},
   Journal = {Modern Judaism},
   Pages = {108-123},
   Year = {2001},
   Key = {fds298847}
}

@article{fds298848,
   Author = {SL Goldman},
   Title = {White Goddess, Hebrew Goddess: The Bible, The Jews, and
             Poetic Myth in the Work of Robert Graves},
   Journal = {Modern Judaism},
   Pages = {32-50},
   Year = {2002},
   Key = {fds298848}
}

@article{fds298849,
   Author = {SL Goldman},
   Title = {Nabokov's Minyan: A Study in Philosemitism},
   Journal = {Modern Judaism},
   Pages = {1-22},
   Year = {2005},
   Key = {fds298849}
}

@misc{fds298862,
   Author = {SL Goldman},
   Title = {Romney and the Two Holy Lands},
   Journal = {The Immanent Frame (SSRC)},
   Year = {2012},
   Month = {April},
   Key = {fds298862}
}

@misc{fds212364,
   Author = {S.L. Goldman},
   Title = {Kosher Nukes},
   Journal = {Religion Dipsatches},
   Year = {2012},
   Month = {August},
   url = {http://www.religiondispatches.org},
   Key = {fds212364}
}

@book{fds298850,
   Author = {SL Goldman},
   Title = {God’s New Israel: American Identification with Israel
             Ancient and Modern},
   Booktitle = {The Bible in the Public Square},
   Publisher = {Society for Biblical Literature Press},
   Year = {2014},
   Key = {fds298850}
}


%% Havlioglu, Didem Z   
@article{fds293913,
   Author = {Havlioğlu, D},
   Title = {On the margins and between the lines: Ottoman women poets
             from the fifteenth to the twentieth centuries},
   Journal = {Turkish Historical Review},
   Volume = {1},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {25-54},
   Publisher = {Brill},
   Year = {2010},
   Month = {May},
   ISSN = {1877-5454},
   url = {http://hdl.handle.net/10161/10628 Duke open
             access},
   Doi = {10.1163/187754610x494969},
   Key = {fds293913}
}

@article{fds337976,
   Author = {Havlioğlu, D},
   Title = {The Writing Subjects},
   Journal = {Journal of Middle East Women'S Studies},
   Volume = {12},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {291-295},
   Publisher = {Duke University Press},
   Year = {2016},
   Month = {July},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/15525864-3507771},
   Doi = {10.1215/15525864-3507771},
   Key = {fds337976}
}

@article{fds337975,
   Title = {Border Crossing with the Black Book: Overcoming the Spatial,
             Cultural and Linguistic Distances},
   Booktitle = {Approaches to Teaching the Works of Orhan
             Pamuk},
   Publisher = {Approaches to Teaching World L},
   Year = {2017},
   ISBN = {1603293191},
   Abstract = {Pamuk&#39;s nonfiction writings extend his themes of memory,
             loss, personal and political histories, and the craft of the
             novel.},
   Key = {fds337975}
}

@book{fds337974,
   Author = {Havlioglu, D},
   Title = {Mihrî Hatun Performance, Gender-Bending, and Subversion in
             Ottoman Intellectual History},
   Publisher = {Syracuse University Press},
   Year = {2017},
   Month = {November},
   ISBN = {0815654154},
   Abstract = {With this volume, Havlioglu not only gives readers access to
             this rare text but also investigates the factors that
             allowed Mihri to survive and thrive despite her clear
             departure from the cultural norms of the
             time.},
   Key = {fds337974}
}


%% He, Tianshu   
@misc{fds48491,
   Author = {T. He},
   Title = {Fiction, Prose, Poetry, and translated articles},
   Journal = {in Current Fiction Journal, Good Wishes Journal, Boston
             Chinese News, China Society Weekly, etc.},
   Year = {1991},
   Key = {fds48491}
}

@article{fds227622,
   Author = {He, T},
   Title = {A Penetration into Shandong's Matrimonial Customs Through
             the Book of Songs},
   Journal = {East Sichuan Journal},
   Volume = {3},
   Pages = {126-127},
   Year = {1995},
   Key = {fds227622}
}

@article{fds227623,
   Author = {He, T},
   Title = {On Heroism in Writing},
   Journal = {Theory and Criticism of Literature and Art},
   Volume = {6},
   Pages = {138-139},
   Year = {1995},
   Key = {fds227623}
}

@article{fds227624,
   Author = {He, T},
   Title = {Zhuang Zi and Poetry About Immortals},
   Journal = {Shandong University Journal (Philosophy and Social
             Science)},
   Volume = {Supplementary},
   Pages = {12-14},
   Year = {1998},
   Key = {fds227624}
}

@article{fds227625,
   Author = {He, T},
   Title = {Lu Xun's Attitude toward Death - About Grass and
             others},
   Journal = {Chinese Journal},
   Volume = {4},
   Pages = {3-5},
   Year = {1998},
   Key = {fds227625}
}

@article{fds227626,
   Author = {He, T},
   Title = {On the Narrative Technique of the Poems of Han
             Dynasty},
   Journal = {Journal of Literature, History and Philosophy},
   Volume = {Supplementary},
   Pages = {204-206},
   Year = {1998},
   Key = {fds227626}
}

@book{fds227620,
   Author = {He, T},
   Title = {Lin Yutang, A Culture Envoy},
   Pages = {134 pages},
   Publisher = {China Publishing House},
   Year = {1999},
   Key = {fds227620}
}

@article{fds227627,
   Author = {He, T},
   Title = {Peaceful Men, Emotive Works - Lin Yutang and Lao
             Zhuang},
   Journal = {Young Thinker Journal},
   Volume = {2},
   Pages = {22-25},
   Year = {1999},
   Key = {fds227627}
}

@article{fds227628,
   Author = {He, T},
   Title = {Belief-Ethics-Culture --On the Book of Poems},
   Journal = {Journal of Shandong University (Philosophy and Social
             Science)},
   Volume = {2},
   Pages = {43-45},
   Year = {1999},
   Key = {fds227628}
}

@article{fds227630,
   Author = {He, T},
   Title = {On Cao Zhi and His Poetry about Immortals},
   Journal = {Shandong Social Science Journal},
   Volume = {1},
   Pages = {79-80},
   Year = {1999},
   Key = {fds227630}
}

@article{fds227631,
   Author = {He, T},
   Title = {A Peak of Poetic Perfection in the Late Tang Dynasty-About
             Du Mu's Poetry},
   Journal = {Young Thinker Journal},
   Volume = {1},
   Pages = {69-72},
   Year = {1999},
   Key = {fds227631}
}

@book{fds47976,
   Author = {T. He},
   Title = {Lin Yutang, A Culture Envoy, Biography},
   Publisher = {Hong Kong: China Publishing House},
   Year = {1999},
   Key = {fds47976}
}

@misc{fds227617,
   Author = {He, T},
   Title = {Tianshu’s Poems},
   Pages = {359-361},
   Booktitle = {Enlightenment and Action},
   Publisher = {Shandong University Publishing House},
   Address = {Shandong, China},
   Year = {2006},
   Key = {fds227617}
}

@misc{fds227618,
   Author = {He, T},
   Title = {Time’s witness},
   Pages = {434-435},
   Booktitle = {Enlightenment and Action},
   Publisher = {Shandong University Publishing House},
   Address = {Shandong, China},
   Year = {2006},
   Key = {fds227618}
}

@article{fds227621,
   Author = {He, T},
   Title = {Apply Online Underground Songs in Teaching Advanced
             Chinese},
   Journal = {Journal of Theoretical Investigation},
   Volume = {Supplementary issue},
   Pages = {152-153},
   Address = {Heilongjiang, China},
   Year = {2009},
   Month = {June},
   Key = {fds227621}
}

@article{fds227619,
   Author = {He, T},
   Title = {A Probe into Instructional Design and Methods in Classical
             Chinese Teaching},
   Journal = {Canadian Teaching Chinese as the Second Language},
   Pages = {117-122},
   Year = {2010},
   Key = {fds227619}
}


%% Hong, Guo-Juin   
@article{fds293929,
   Author = {Hong, G},
   Title = {Strategies of Defiance: Towards a Thesis on Anti-Realist
             Documentary},
   Journal = {Film Appreciation Journal},
   Number = {111},
   Publisher = {National Film Archive, Taipei, Taiwian},
   Year = {2002},
   Month = {Spring},
   Key = {fds293929}
}

@misc{fds293916,
   Author = {Simmons, C},
   Title = {Salt Water},
   Publisher = {Locus Publishing Company, Taipei, Taiwan},
   Year = {2002},
   Month = {August},
   Key = {fds293916}
}

@article{fds293930,
   Author = {Hong, G},
   Title = {Toying with History: Toys and Film Consumption/Criticism/
             History},
   Journal = {Chungwai Wenxue (Chung Wai Literary Monthly)},
   Publisher = {Graduate Institute of Foreign Languages, National Taiwan
             University, Taipei, Taiwan},
   Year = {2002},
   Month = {September},
   Key = {fds293930}
}

@article{fds293918,
   Author = {Hong, G},
   Title = {Framing Time: _New Women_ and the Cinematic Representation
             of Colonial Modernity in 1930s Shanghai},
   Journal = {positions: east asia cultural critique},
   Year = {2005},
   Key = {fds293918}
}

@article{fds293927,
   Author = {Hong, G},
   Title = {Meet Me in Shanghai: Urban Cinema as Refugee Cinema in 1930s
             Shanghai},
   Journal = {Cinema Journal},
   Year = {2006},
   Key = {fds293927}
}

@article{fds293928,
   Author = {Hong, G},
   Title = {Memorandum on Happiness or the Limits of Visibility:
             Taiwan's Tongzhi Movement in Mickey Chen's
             Documentary},
   Journal = {postions: east asia cultural critique},
   Year = {2006},
   Key = {fds293928}
}

@misc{fds293914,
   Author = {Hong, G},
   Title = {Island of No Return: Cinematic Retrospection in Wang’s
             Taiwan Trilogy},
   Booktitle = {Techologies of Temporality in Chinese Cinema},
   Year = {2006},
   Key = {fds293914}
}

@article{fds138899,
   Author = {G. Hong},
   Title = {Framing Time: New Women and the Cinematic Representation of
             Colonial Modernity in 1930s Shanghai},
   Journal = {positions: east asia cultures critique},
   Volume = {15},
   Number = {3},
   Pages = {553-580},
   Publisher = {Duke University Press},
   Editor = {Tani Barlow},
   Year = {2007},
   ISSN = {1067-9847},
   Key = {fds138899}
}

@article{fds154453,
   Author = {G. Hong},
   Title = {Meet Me in Shanghai: Urban Melodrama as Refugee Cinema in
             1930s Shanghai},
   Journal = {Journal of Chinese Cinemas},
   Year = {2008},
   Key = {fds154453}
}

@article{fds293917,
   Author = {Hong, G-J},
   Title = {From the Masses to the Masses},
   Journal = {VIsual Anthropology},
   Volume = {22},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {75-76},
   Year = {2009},
   Key = {fds293917}
}

@article{fds293919,
   Author = {Hong, G-J},
   Title = {Limits of Visibility: Taiwan’s Tongzhi Movement in Mickey
             Chen’s Documentaries},
   Journal = {positions: east asia cultures critique},
   Year = {2009},
   Key = {fds293919}
}

@article{fds293926,
   Author = {Guo Juin Hong},
   Title = {Meet Me in Shanghai: Melodrama and the Cinematic Production
             of Space in 1930s Shanghai Leftist Films},
   Journal = {Journal of Chinese Cinemas},
   Volume = {3},
   Number = {3},
   Pages = {215-230},
   Year = {2009},
   Key = {fds293926}
}

@misc{fds305921,
   Author = {Hong, G-J},
   Title = {Island of No Return: Cinematic Narration as Retrospection in
             Wang Tong and New Taiwan Cinema},
   Pages = {57-72},
   Booktitle = {Futures of Chinese Cinema: Technologies and Temporalities in
             Chinese Screen Cultures},
   Publisher = {Intellect, the University of Chicago Press},
   Address = {Chicago},
   Editor = {Khoo, O and Metzger, S},
   Year = {2009},
   Key = {fds305921}
}

@article{fds293925,
   Author = {Hong, G},
   Title = {Historiography of Absence: Taiwan Cinema before New Cinema
             1982},
   Journal = {Journal of Chinese Cinemas},
   Volume = {4},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {5-14},
   Year = {2010},
   Key = {fds293925}
}

@misc{fds305918,
   Author = {G. Hong and Hong, G},
   Title = {The Chinese Film Theory},
   Publisher = {University of Amsterdam Press},
   Year = {2011},
   Key = {fds305918}
}

@misc{fds305919,
   Author = {Hong, G},
   Title = {Healthy Realism in Taiwan, 1964-1980: Film Styles, Cultural
             Policies, and Mandarin Cinema},
   Booktitle = {The Chinese Cinema Book},
   Publisher = {British Film Institute},
   Editor = {Lim, SH and Ward, J},
   Year = {2011},
   Key = {fds305919}
}

@misc{fds305920,
   Author = {Hong, G},
   Title = {Theatrics of Cruising: Bathhouses and Movie Houses in Tsai
             Ming-Liang’s Films},
   Booktitle = {Sinophone Queer Cinema},
   Year = {2011},
   Key = {fds305920}
}

@book{fds293924,
   Author = {Hong, GJ},
   Title = {Taiwan cinema: A contested nation on screen},
   Series = {paperback edition with expanded afterword},
   Pages = {1-229},
   Publisher = {Palgrave Macmillan US},
   Year = {2011},
   Month = {January},
   ISBN = {9780230111622},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230118324},
   Abstract = {A groundbreaking study of Taiwan cinema, Hong provides
             helpful insight into how it is taught and studied by taking
             into account not only the auteurs of New Taiwan Cinema, but
             also the history of popular genre films before the 1980s.
             The book is essential for students and scholars of Taiwan,
             film and visual studies, and East Asian cultural
             history.},
   Doi = {10.1057/9780230118324},
   Key = {fds293924}
}

@book{fds293923,
   Author = {Hong, G-J},
   Title = {Taiwan Cinema: A Contested Nation on Screen},
   Publisher = {Palgrave Macmillan},
   Year = {2011},
   Month = {March},
   Key = {fds293923}
}

@article{fds293920,
   Author = {Hong, G},
   Title = {Voice and Its Dis/Content in New Taiwan Documentary},
   Journal = {Frontiers of Literary Studies in China},
   Year = {2012},
   Key = {fds293920}
}

@article{fds293921,
   Author = {Hong, G},
   Title = {Limits of Visibility: Taiwan’s Tongzhi Movement in Mickey
             Chen’s Documentaries},
   Journal = {positions: east asia cultures critique},
   Year = {2012},
   Key = {fds293921}
}

@misc{fds305917,
   Author = {Hong, G},
   Title = {Theatrics of Cruising: Bathhouses and Movie Houses in Tsai
             Ming-Liang’s Films},
   Booktitle = {Sinophone Queer Reader},
   Year = {2012},
   Key = {fds305917}
}

@misc{fds305916,
   Author = {Hong, G},
   Title = {Theatrics of Cruising: Bath Houses and Movie Houses in Tsia
             Ming-Linag’s Films},
   Booktitle = {Queer Sinophone Cultures},
   Publisher = {Routledge},
   Editor = {Chiang, H and Heinrich, AL},
   Year = {2013},
   Key = {fds305916}
}

@article{fds293922,
   Author = {Hong, GJ},
   Title = {Voices and their discursive Dis/Content in Taiwan
             documentary},
   Journal = {Frontiers of Literary Studies in China},
   Volume = {7},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {183-193},
   Year = {2013},
   Month = {January},
   ISSN = {1673-7318},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.3868/s010-002-013-0010-8},
   Abstract = {Instead of attempting to provide a survey of Taiwan
             documentary, this article focuses on a few critical moments
             in its long and uneven history and proposes a potentially
             productive site for understanding its formal manifestations
             of representational politics. By honing in on the uses of
             sounds and words, I show that the principle of a unitary
             voice-voice understood both as the utterances of sound and
             the politico-cultural meaning of such utterances-organizes
             the earlier periods of the colonial and authoritarian rules
             and shapes later iterations of and formal reactions to them.
             Be it voice-over narration or captions and inter-titles,
             this article provides a historiographical lens through which
             the politics of representation in Taiwan documentary may be
             rethought. Furthermore, this article takes documentary not
             merely as a genre of non-fiction filmmaking. Rather, it
             insists on documentary as a mode, and indeed modes, of
             representation that do not belong exclusively to the
             non-fiction. Notions of "documentability" are considered
             together with the corollary tendency to "fictionalize" in
             cinema, fiction and non-fiction. Taiwan, with its complex
             histories in general and the specific context within which
             the polyglossiac practices of New Taiwan Documentary have
             blossomed in recent decades in particular, is a productive
             site to investigate the questions of "sound" in cinematic
             form and "voice" in representational politics. © 2013 by
             Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden.},
   Doi = {10.3868/s010-002-013-0010-8},
   Key = {fds293922}
}

@article{fds222425,
   Author = {G. Hong},
   Title = {Limits of Visibility: Taiwan's Tongzhi Movement in Mickey
             Chen's Documentaries},
   Journal = {positions: asia critique},
   Volume = {21},
   Number = {3},
   Pages = {683-701},
   Year = {2013},
   Month = {Summer},
   Key = {fds222425}
}

@misc{fds371564,
   Author = {Hong, GJ},
   Title = {Our neighbors (1963): Historiography of home and emerging
             realism in post-1949 Taiwan},
   Pages = {22-35},
   Booktitle = {Thirty-two New Takes on Taiwan Cinema},
   Year = {2022},
   Month = {December},
   ISBN = {9780472075461},
   Key = {fds371564}
}


%% Houssami, Maha   
@article{fds320248,
   Author = {Houssami, M and Orfali, B and Siblini, R},
   Title = {An Uprising in Teaching Arabic Language},
   Pages = {1-12},
   Publisher = {Arab-German Young Academy of Sciences and
             Humanities},
   Year = {2016},
   Month = {July},
   Abstract = {The working paper series “Academia in Transformation”
             aims to provide an insightful and illuminating view of the
             transformation of the academic landscape in the aftermaths
             of the uprisings in the MENA region. The events that started
             in 2010 in Tunisia have certainly reshaped the language of
             agents and scholars, contributed to a shift in study focus
             and sometimes challenged dominant theoretical approaches
             such as those on change and stability in the region. At the
             same time, many of the academic developments that have taken
             place in the context of the “Arab Spring” both reflect
             and accelerate global trends.},
   Key = {fds320248}
}

@article{fds370137,
   Author = {Houssami, M},
   Title = {To Miriam},
   Journal = {Journal of Middle East Women's Studies},
   Volume = {14},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {141-142},
   Year = {2018},
   Month = {March},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/15525864-4297213},
   Doi = {10.1215/15525864-4297213},
   Key = {fds370137}
}


%% Jiang, Linshan   
@article{fds365640,
   Author = {Jiang, L},
   Title = {Transforming Emotional Regime: Pai Hsien- yung’s Crystal
             Boys},
   Journal = {Queer Cats Journal of LGBTQ Studies},
   Volume = {3},
   Number = {1},
   Publisher = {California Digital Library (CDL)},
   Year = {2019},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.5070/q531045994},
   Doi = {10.5070/q531045994},
   Key = {fds365640}
}

@article{fds370129,
   Author = {Jiang, L},
   Title = {Queer Vocals and Stardom on Chinese TV: Case Studies of Wu
             Tsing-Fong and Zhou Shen},
   Pages = {145-160},
   Booktitle = {Queer TV China Televisual and Fannish Imaginaries of Gender,
             Sexuality, and Chineseness},
   Publisher = {Hong Kong University Press},
   Editor = {Zhao, JJ},
   Year = {2023},
   Month = {February},
   ISBN = {9789888805617},
   Abstract = {This chapter examines the life experiences and TV
             performances of two pop singers, Taiwanese Wu Tsing-Fong
             (吴青峰; born in 1982) and mainland Chinese Zhou Shen
             (周深; born in 1992), as well as how people react to their
             images on Chinese TV. Wu and Zhou are special in the
             Sinophone entertainment industry because they both possess
             “androgynous” voices as male singers. At first glance,
             their appearances and personalities echo the popular soft
             masculinity—a hybrid form of Chinese Confucian wen (文)
             masculinity, Japanese bishōnen (美少年; rendered as
             “beautiful youth”) masculinity, and global metrosexual
             masculinity—that scholars have identified in recent
             studies of stardom in East Asia (Jung 2010, 39; Louie 2014,
             24; Louie 2015, 122; Song 2010, 410; Song and Hird 2013, 1;
             see also Chapters 3 and 6 in this volume). While the
             so-called “soft masculinity” may in itself be considered
             “effeminate,” the voices of Wu and Zhou intensify this
             social stigma based on gender norms and are often denounced
             as unacceptable—indeed, queer. Their vocal queerness not
             only drew verbal abuse during the singers’ teenage years,
             but also generated media sensation and public attention
             following each of their performing debuts. I use vocal
             queerness in these two cases to denote both a form of gender
             nonnormativity and a signifier of homosexuality for some
             audiences (although neither singer has declared himself as
             such). Wu and Zhou continue to be targets of verbal abuse at
             present, despite their popularity. Nevertheless, I argue
             that their vocal queerness not only destabilizes the
             univocal male masculinity rooted in mainstream Chinese
             society, but also adds to the diverse representations of
             Chinese-speaking male gender personas in today’s music,
             TV, and celebrity industries.},
   Key = {fds370129}
}

@article{fds370128,
   Author = {Jiang, L},
   Title = {Sexuality and Trauma: Zhang Yixuan’s The Love that is
             Temporary and A Farewell Letter},
   Pages = {125-125},
   Booktitle = {Taiwan Literature in the 21st Century A Critical
             Reader},
   Publisher = {Springer},
   Editor = {Wu, C-R and Fan, M-J},
   Year = {2023},
   Month = {March},
   ISBN = {9789811983795},
   Abstract = {In this chapter, I will conduct a comparative reading of
             Zhang Yixuan’s (張亦絢) The Love that is Temporary and
             A Farewell Letter and discuss the female protagonists’
             traumatic memories caused by domestic violence and intimate
             partner violence. The two novels are written in the fashion
             of “traumatic realism,” a term proposed by Michael
             Rothberg (2000) in an attempt to “produce the traumatic
             event as an object of knowledge and to program and thus
             transform its readers so that they are forced to acknowledge
             their relationship to posttraumatic culture” (p. 103). As
             both protagonists are writers and the stories are narrated
             in the first-person perspective, they represent the
             traumatic realism “under the sign of trauma” through
             “self-reflexive metanarrative techniques” (Chen, 2020,
             p. 46). I argue that the self-reflections of the two female
             protagonists point to the issues of sex and sexuality, as a
             possible leeway in processing their traumatic
             memories.},
   Key = {fds370128}
}


%% Khaldi, Boutheina   
@article{fds41621,
   Author = {B. Khaldi},
   Title = {Rashid Boujedra},
   Booktitle = {20th Century Arab Writers of Fiction & Philosophy in the
             Dictionary of Literary Bibliography (DLB)},
   Publisher = {South Carolina: Bruccoli Clark Layman Inc.},
   Editor = {Majd al-Mallah and Coeli Fitzpatrick},
   Year = {2005},
   Key = {fds41621}
}

@article{fds41622,
   Author = {B. Khaldi},
   Title = {Assia Djebar},
   Booktitle = {20th Century Arab Writers of Fiction & Philosophy in the
             Dictionary of Literary Bibliography (DLB)},
   Publisher = {South Carolina: Bruccoli Clark Layman Inc.},
   Editor = {Majd al-Mallah and Coeli Fitzpatrick},
   Year = {2005},
   Key = {fds41622}
}


%% Khanna, Satendra   
@book{fds290744,
   Author = {Khanna, S},
   Title = {Indian Cinema and Indian Life},
   Booktitle = {CSSEAS},
   Publisher = {University of California, Berkeley},
   Year = {1980},
   Key = {fds290744}
}

@book{fds290755,
   Author = {Khanna, S},
   Title = {CSSEAS},
   Publisher = {University of California, Berkeley},
   Year = {1980},
   Key = {fds290755}
}

@misc{fds290745,
   Author = {Khanna, S},
   Title = {KPFA},
   Year = {1980},
   Key = {fds290745}
}

@article{fds290760,
   Author = {Satendra Khanna},
   Title = {The New Cinema:A Step Away from Bombay Make-Believe},
   Journal = {New Delhi},
   Pages = {2-15, 59-60},
   Year = {1980},
   Month = {February},
   Key = {fds290760}
}

@article{fds290761,
   Author = {Khanna, S},
   Title = {A Major Motion Picture Event from India},
   Journal = {ASIA},
   Pages = {8-13},
   Year = {1981},
   Month = {August},
   Key = {fds290761}
}

@article{fds290762,
   Author = {Khanna, S},
   Title = {Esthappan},
   Journal = {Film Quarterly},
   Pages = {53-56},
   Year = {1981},
   Month = {Fall},
   Key = {fds290762}
}

@misc{fds290746,
   Author = {Khanna, S},
   Title = {People of South Asia in the United States},
   Year = {1983},
   Key = {fds290746}
}

@book{fds290756,
   Author = {Khanna, S},
   Title = {The International Dictionary of Films and
             Filmmakers},
   Publisher = {Macmillan},
   Year = {1984},
   Key = {fds290756}
}

@misc{fds290747,
   Author = {Khanna, S},
   Title = {Indian folk tales},
   Year = {1985},
   Key = {fds290747}
}

@misc{fds290748,
   Author = {Khanna, S},
   Title = {Division of Hearts},
   Year = {1987},
   Key = {fds290748}
}

@misc{fds305923,
   Author = {Khanna, S},
   Title = {Sanyog},
   Publisher = {Duke University},
   Year = {1992},
   Month = {February},
   Key = {fds305923}
}

@article{fds290763,
   Author = {Satendra Khanna},
   Title = {Aravindan 1935-1991},
   Journal = {Framework},
   Volume = {38/39},
   Pages = {173-181},
   Publisher = {London},
   Year = {1992},
   Month = {Summer},
   Key = {fds290763}
}

@misc{fds290749,
   Author = {Khanna, S},
   Title = {Literary Postcard},
   Year = {1997},
   Month = {August},
   Key = {fds290749}
}

@book{fds290757,
   Author = {Khanna, S},
   Title = {The Servant’s Shirt},
   Publisher = {Penguin India},
   Year = {1999},
   Key = {fds290757}
}

@misc{fds290750,
   Author = {Khanna, S},
   Title = {Literary Postcard},
   Year = {1999},
   Month = {February},
   Key = {fds290750}
}

@book{fds290758,
   Author = {Khanna, S},
   Title = {His Daily Bread},
   Publisher = {Har-Anand Publications, New Delhi},
   Year = {2000},
   Key = {fds290758}
}

@misc{fds290751,
   Author = {Khanna, S},
   Title = {Ambient India},
   Year = {2000},
   Month = {December},
   Key = {fds290751}
}

@misc{fds290752,
   Author = {Khanna, S},
   Title = {Bismillah of Benares},
   Year = {2002},
   Month = {October},
   Key = {fds290752}
}

@article{fds290753,
   Author = {Khanna, S},
   Title = {The Consciousness of the Listener: An Exploration in
             Video},
   Journal = {Moving Worlds},
   Volume = {5},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {53-59},
   Publisher = {University of Leeds, UK},
   Editor = {Chew, S},
   Year = {2005},
   Month = {Spring},
   Keywords = {absorption, underforms of consciousness,
             alignment},
   Key = {fds290753}
}

@book{fds290759,
   Author = {Khanna, S},
   Title = {A Window Lived in a Wall},
   Publisher = {Academy of Arts and Letters, New Delhi, India},
   Year = {2005},
   Month = {January},
   Key = {fds290759}
}

@book{fds18073,
   Author = {S. Khanna and translator. Phanishwarnath Renu's Kalanka Mukti
             from the Hindi},
   Title = {Freed from Disgrace},
   Publisher = {Oxford University Press, Delhi, India},
   Year = {2005},
   Month = {Summer},
   Key = {fds18073}
}

@misc{fds51207,
   Author = {S. Khanna},
   Title = {Weight},
   Journal = {Moving Worlds},
   Volume = {5},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {88-90},
   Publisher = {University of Leeds UK},
   Editor = {Shirley Chew},
   Year = {2005},
   Month = {Fall},
   Keywords = {urban anxiety},
   Abstract = {Translation from the Hindi of Vinod Kumar Shukla's story
             "Bojh"},
   Key = {fds51207}
}

@article{fds290754,
   Author = {Khanna, S},
   Title = {College},
   Journal = {Indian Literature},
   Volume = {L},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {105-121},
   Publisher = {Sahitya Akademi, New Delhi},
   Editor = {Bhattacharjee, NK},
   Year = {2006},
   Month = {Summer},
   Abstract = {Translation from the Hindi of Vinod Kumar Shukla’s
             "Mahavidyalaya."},
   Key = {fds290754}
}

@book{fds305922,
   Author = {Renu, TSKP and Mukti, K},
   Title = {Freed from Disgrace},
   Publisher = {Oxford University Press, Delhi, India},
   Year = {2007},
   ISBN = {978-0-19-568599-2},
   Abstract = {Translation from Hindi of Phanishwarnath Renu’s Kalanka
             Mukti.},
   Key = {fds305922}
}

@misc{fds167132,
   Author = {Vinod Kumar Shukla and translator, S. Khanna},
   Title = {When It Comes to Flower},
   Publisher = {HarperCollins India},
   Address = {New Delhi},
   Year = {2014},
   Month = {Spring},
   Key = {fds167132}
}

@misc{fds167131,
   Author = {Suryakant Tripathi Nirala and translator, S.
             Khanna},
   Title = {Kulli Bhat},
   Year = {2014},
   Month = {Summer},
   Key = {fds167131}
}

@misc{fds214156,
   Author = {Mohan Rakesh and translator Satti Khanna},
   Title = {Out to the Farthest Rock (Akhiri Chattan
             Tak)},
   Year = {2014},
   Month = {Fall},
   Key = {fds214156}
}


%% Kim, Hae-Young   
@book{fds227650,
   Author = {Wolfe-Quintero, K and Inagaki, S and Kim, H-Y},
   Title = {Second language development: Measures of fluency, accuracy &
             complexity},
   Publisher = {Second Language Teaching and Curriculum Center, University
             of Hawaii Press},
   Year = {1998},
   Key = {fds227650}
}

@article{fds227638,
   Author = {Kim, H-Y},
   Title = {Strategies for improving accuracy in KSL writing:
             Developmental errors and an error-correction
             code},
   Journal = {Korean Language in America 5: Papers from the fifth national
             conference on Korean language education},
   Editor = {Sohn, SS},
   Year = {2000},
   Key = {fds227638}
}

@article{fds227640,
   Author = {Kim, H-Y},
   Title = {Heritage students’ perspectives on language
             classes},
   Journal = {Korean Language in America 8: Papers from the eighth annual
             conference and professional development workshop},
   Publisher = {The American Association of Teachers of Korean},
   Editor = {You, C},
   Year = {2003},
   Key = {fds227640}
}

@article{fds305924,
   Author = {Kim, H-Y},
   Title = {Korean Language in America 9: Papers from the ninth annual
             conference and professional development workshop},
   Publisher = {The American Association of Teachers of Korean},
   Editor = {Kim, H-Y},
   Year = {2004},
   Key = {fds305924}
}

@article{fds227641,
   Author = {Kim, H-Y},
   Title = {Construction of language and culture in a content-based
             language class},
   Journal = {The Korean Language in America: The 2005 AATK
             Proceedings},
   Volume = {10},
   Editor = {Wang, H-S},
   Year = {2005},
   url = {http://www.aatk.org/html/publications.html},
   Abstract = {This paper describes the classroom discourse of an advanced
             college Korean course with a view to examining language
             environments provided in a CBI (Content-Based Instruction)
             class. The research methodology was ethnography of
             communication, consisting of participation observation,
             semi-structured interviews with the instructor and the
             students, and analyses of the transcripts in terms of speech
             events, functions, and turn-taking systems. The data show
             that the content focus of CBI provided momentum for engaged
             and sustained talk on the topics of discussion, during which
             the students receive an ample amount of language input
             adjusted to their proficiency level and practice a range of
             speech functions, while being exposed to significant amount
             of information about Korean culture and society. The paper
             concludes with recommendation of CBI for heritage language
             students and upper-level non-heritage language
             students.},
   Key = {fds227641}
}

@article{fds227642,
   Author = {Kim, H-Y and Lee, E},
   Title = {The development of tense and aspect morphology in L2
             Korean},
   Booktitle = {Frontiers of Korean language Acquisition},
   Publisher = {London: Saffron Books},
   Editor = {Song, JJ},
   Year = {2007},
   Abstract = {This study investigates whether L2 Korean acquisition data
             upholds the Aspect Hypothesis, which claims that the
             development of grammatical tense and aspect marking is
             determined by lexical aspect. Cross-sectional data were
             collected from 60 learners of Korean enrolled in U.S.
             universities by using focused written elicitation tasks: a
             cloze test and a picture description task. The results
             support the Aspect Hypothesis: The Korean learners spread
             past tense marker –ess- from telic verbs to activities to
             states, and they use the progressive marker -ko iss- for
             action-in-progress meaning most frequently with activities
             and accomplishments, but its result state meaning is
             acquired very slowly. So far, little attention has been paid
             to the variations in sequence of development among various
             languages, since research on the acquisition of tense and
             aspect morphology has focused on finding the universal
             pattern of the spread of each tense and aspect marker. Our
             study reveals the sequence of development from the past
             –ess- to the progressive -ko iss-, unlike the
             developmental order shown in L1 and L2 English
             data.},
   Key = {fds227642}
}

@article{fds227643,
   Author = {Lee, E and Kim, H-Y},
   Title = {Reference to past and past perfect in L2
             Korean},
   Journal = {The Korean Language in America},
   Volume = {12},
   Pages = {67-84},
   Publisher = {The American Association of Teachers of Korean},
   Editor = {Wang, H-S},
   Year = {2007},
   url = {http://www.jstor.org/stable/42922171},
   Abstract = {The goal of this paper is to understand KSL learners’ use
             of past tense markers in narratives and to develop
             instructional treatment for more appropriate uses of these
             markers. We focus on the use of -essess required to encode
             the marked flashback sequencing of events in narratives.
             Based on an analysis of past marking in journal entries
             written by intermediate KSL learners, we propose a set of
             instructional materials to raise learners’ awareness of
             the contrast between -ess and -essess in narrative
             description.},
   Key = {fds227643}
}

@article{fds227644,
   Author = {Kim, H-Y},
   Title = {Re-focusing of instruction on relative clauses [In Korean]
             (관형절 교수법의 재조명)},
   Pages = {219-230},
   Year = {2007},
   url = {http://www.duke.edu/},
   Abstract = {This paper proposes a shift of focus in the teaching of
             relative clauses in Korean from a morphological approach to
             a processing- and function-based approach. Published
             instructional materials and studies of learner errors (e.g.
             Sung, 2002) are primarily concerned with the accuracy of the
             tense of adnominal markers. The first part of the paper
             addresses the issue of processing difficulty as a result of
             complex syntactic construction of relative clauses, by
             introducing research studies on L2 Korean guided by the
             Keenan and Comrie’s (1977) Noun Phrase Accessibility
             Hierarchy (NPAH). The studies show that a subject gap
             relative clause is easier to process than an object gap,
             which is easier in turn than an oblique gap. The second part
             concerns discourse/pragmatic functions of the relative
             clause and presents an analysis of the discourse/pragmatic
             functions of relatives clauses in a corpus of readers for
             intermediate level learners. The analysis demonstrates that
             a range of discourse functions are performed by the relative
             clause construction such as identifying of (i.e.
             restrictive) and elaborating on the referent (i.e.
             appositive) as well as establishing temporal or causal
             relationships between events revolving around the referent
             (i.e. continuative). The paper concludes with a proposal of
             an instructional model that addresses the processing
             difficulty and that raises the learner’s awareness of
             discourse and textual functions of the relative
             clause.},
   Key = {fds227644}
}

@article{fds227655,
   Author = {Lee, E and Kim, H-Y},
   Title = {On cross-linguistic variations in imperfective aspect: the
             case of L2 Korean},
   Journal = {Language Learning},
   Volume = {57},
   Number = {4},
   Pages = {651-685},
   Publisher = {WILEY},
   Year = {2007},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9922.2007.00431.x},
   Abstract = {This paper examines the acquisition of Korean imperfective
             markers, the progressive -ko iss- and the resultative -a
             iss-, with a view to understanding how tense/aspect
             morphology expands beyond prototype associations with
             inherent aspects of the verbs. We hypothesized that -a iss-
             will develop later than -ko iss-, but that the development
             of -a iss- will precede or coincide with the expansion of
             -ko iss- marking for result state meaning. Cross-sectional
             data were collected from 120 L1 English learners of L2
             Korean using a sentence interpretation task and a guided
             picture description task. The results support our
             hypothesized acquisition route of imperfective markers,
             establishing dynamic durativity as the prototypical meaning
             of the Korean imperfective -ko iss- and suggesting
             individual variance in expanding the prototype.},
   Doi = {10.1111/j.1467-9922.2007.00431.x},
   Key = {fds227655}
}

@article{fds227635,
   Author = {Jeon, KS and Kim, HY},
   Title = {Development of relativization in Korean as a foreign
             language: The noun phrase accessibility hierarchy in
             head-internal and head-external relative
             clauses},
   Journal = {Studies in Second Language Acquisition},
   Volume = {29},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {253-276},
   Publisher = {Cambridge University Press (CUP)},
   Editor = {Yasuhiro Shirai (Guest},
   Year = {2007},
   Month = {June},
   ISSN = {0272-2631},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0272263107070131},
   Abstract = {This study examines how Keenan and Comrie's (1977) noun
             phrase accessibility hierarchy (NPAH) intersects with the
             typological characteristics of Korean in the acquisition of
             relative clauses (RCs). Korean has two types of RC
             constructions: head-external and head-internal. The
             head-external relative has its head to the right of the RC,
             whereas the head-internal relative has its lexical head in
             the RC and is marked by the complementizer kes. In first
             language development, it has been observed the head-internal
             type emerges earlier than the head-external type. The
             current study investigates how the use of the two types of
             RCs interacts with the NPAH, with a focus on subject (SU)
             and direct object (DO) RCs in Korean second language
             development. Oral production data were collected from 40
             learners of Korean as a foreign language. The results showed
             that there was an advantage for SU over DO in the
             head-external RC and that the head-external construction was
             preceded by headless and head-internal constructions. The
             results suggest that a head-external RC in Korean involves
             the syntactic mechanism of linking the head and the gap
             relation, whereas this might not be the case for a
             head-internal RC. © 2007 Cambridge University
             Press.},
   Doi = {10.1017/S0272263107070131},
   Key = {fds227635}
}

@article{fds227633,
   Author = {Kim, H},
   Title = {Commentary},
   Journal = {Heritage Language Journal},
   Volume = {6},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {94-104},
   Publisher = {Center for World Languages of UCLA, UC Consortium for
             Language Learning and Teaching},
   Editor = {Lee, JS and Shin., SJ},
   Year = {2008},
   ISSN = {1550-7076},
   url = {http://www.heritagelanguages.org/},
   Key = {fds227633}
}

@article{fds305264,
   Author = {Lee, JS and Kim, H-Y},
   Title = {Heritage language learners’ attitudes, motivations and
             instructional needs: The case of post-secondary Korean
             language learners},
   Pages = {159-185},
   Booktitle = {Teaching Chinese, Japanese and Korean Heritage Students:
             Curriculum Needs, Materials and Assessment},
   Publisher = {Mahwah, NJ:Lawrence Erlbaum Associates},
   Editor = {Kondo-Brown, K and Brown, JD},
   Year = {2008},
   Abstract = {This study examines college-level Korean language
             learners’ language attitudes, motivational orientations,
             and self-efficacy as heritage language learners. Through
             surveys and interviews with 111 students, we found that 1)
             learners’ attitudes toward the status or utility of Korean
             in the wider sociopolitical context of the US was not
             favorable; however, in light of their personal contexts,
             they saw the learning of Korean to be a main signifier of
             their ethnic identity; (2) motivations to learn Korean were
             closely tied with affirmation of their ethnic identity and
             need to keep connected with their family and ethnic
             community, which remained constant across proficiency
             levels; (3) learners desired more formalized and innovative
             approaches to increase conversational fluency and cultural
             literacy; and (4) their motivation was significantly
             affected by low self-efficacy due to the sociopsychological
             burden the learners felt to have to acquire native-like
             proficiency in the language because it is the language that
             represents their identity to others. We conclude that the
             curricula for heritage learners need to expand sociocultural
             components to address students’ integrative orientation,
             and provide more specific and concrete learning goals to
             augment students’ self-efficacy.},
   Key = {fds305264}
}

@article{fds227645,
   Author = {Kim, H-Y},
   Title = {Factors in the choice of referential forms in Korean
             discourse: Salience, speaker perspective and thematic
             importance},
   Journal = {The Korean Language in America},
   Volume = {14},
   Pages = {1-24},
   Year = {2009},
   url = {http://www.jstor.org/stable/42922275},
   Abstract = {This paper identifies factors that influence the choice of
             the third person reference, from the spectrum of zero to
             explicit forms, in Korean spoken discourse. Tokens of third
             person references were collected from retellings of a silent
             film (‘Modern Times’) and analyzed in terms of their
             position in the interlocutors’ discursive space, i.e.
             cognitive status, as defined by the ‘Givenness
             Hierarchy’ (Gundel, Hedberg & Zacharski, 1993). It is
             shown that Korean zero pronouns function identically to
             lexical pronouns of subject-prominent languages like English
             or Spanish. On the other hand, Korean indefinite determiners
             (e.g. etten) signal persistence of the referent while
             definite determiners (e.g. i, ku, ce) encode thematic
             importance and speaker perspective.},
   Key = {fds227645}
}

@article{fds347726,
   Author = {Kim, HY},
   Title = {Korean in the USA},
   Pages = {164-178},
   Booktitle = {Language Diversity in the USA},
   Year = {2010},
   Month = {January},
   ISBN = {9780521768528},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511779855.011},
   Abstract = {Introduction Koreans are the fifth largest group of Asians
             in the USA, after Chinese, Filipino, Indian (South Asian),
             and Vietnamese (US Census Bureau 2000a). As shown in Table
             1.1, the number of Korean speakers in the USA grew by 43
             percent from 1990 to 2000, and by another 19 percent from
             2000 to 2007, mainly due to new immigration from Korea. With
             the enactment of the Immigration and Nationality Act of
             1965, which abolished discrimination based on national
             origin, particularly Asian exclusion, Asian immigration to
             the USA dramatically increased, and today Korea is one of
             the major Asian source countries of immigrants (Min 2006).
             The flow of immigrants reached a peak in the 1970s and 1980s
             due to political turmoil and rapid industrialization under
             military rule in South Korea. Similarly to other immigrants
             to the USA, many Koreans sought better economic
             opportunities, social and political stability, and
             accessible college education for their children (Yoon 1997;
             Min 2006). Located on a peninsula between China and Japan,
             contemporary Korea has been divided into the communist North
             and the capitalist South since the end of World War II which
             ended the decades-long Japanese colonial rule. North Korea
             and South Korea, however, share the same language,
             traditions, and history of successive dynasties over two
             thousand years. There are 23 million people living in the
             North, and 49 million living in the South (US Census Bureau
             2007b).},
   Doi = {10.1017/CBO9780511779855.011},
   Key = {fds347726}
}

@article{fds227654,
   Author = {Kim, H-Y},
   Title = {Content-Based Language Teaching: A model for bridging with
             Korean Studies [In Korean] (한국학과의 접목을 위한
             내용 중심 한국어 교육)},
   Pages = {97-104},
   Year = {2011},
   Key = {fds227654}
}

@article{fds227647,
   Author = {Kim, H},
   Title = {Development of NP forms and discourse reference in L2
             Korean},
   Journal = {Korean Language in America (special issue): Innovations in
             Teaching Korean},
   Pages = {211-235},
   Publisher = {The American Association of Teachers of Korean},
   Editor = {Sohn, H-M},
   Year = {2012},
   url = {http://www.jstor.org/stable/42922366},
   Key = {fds227647}
}

@article{fds227648,
   Author = {Kim, H-Y},
   Title = {The status of the art of research on Korean heritage
             speakers in North America [In Korean] (영어권 한국어
             계승어 학습자 연구 현황과 과제)},
   Pages = {11-22},
   Year = {2013},
   url = {http://hdl.handle.net/10161/10433 Duke open
             access},
   Key = {fds227648}
}

@article{fds227649,
   Author = {Kim, H},
   Title = {Teaching of reference and address terms in discourse context
             [In Korean] (담화 문맥에서 지칭어와 호칭어의
             사용)},
   Pages = {29-39},
   Year = {2013},
   url = {http://hdl.handle.net/10161/10432 Duke open
             access},
   Key = {fds227649}
}

@article{fds227634,
   Author = {Kim, H-Y},
   Title = {“Connections” for developing cultural content in Korean
             language curriculum 한국어 교육과 문화 교수의
             연계},
   Journal = {The proceedings of the 25th International Conference on
             Korean Language Education},
   Pages = {463-476},
   Publisher = {International Association of Korean Language
             Education},
   Year = {2015},
   url = {http://hdl.handle.net/10161/10431 Duke open
             access},
   Key = {fds227634}
}

@article{fds347725,
   Author = {Kim, H-Y},
   Title = {A proposal for an integrative approach to teaching address
             and reference terms [In Korean]},
   Year = {2015},
   Key = {fds347725}
}

@article{fds312613,
   Title = {CURRICULUM/CURRICULAR FRAMEWORK},
   Journal = {The Korean Language in America},
   Volume = {19},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {178-380},
   Publisher = {The Pennsylvania State University Press},
   Year = {2015},
   Month = {July},
   ISSN = {2332-0346},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.5325/korelangamer.19.2.0178},
   Abstract = {<jats:p>Reformulating and utilizing five Cs standards and
             progress indicators included in Standards for Learning
             Korean (2012), the Standards-Based College Curriculum for
             Korean Language Education presents a full-fledged curriculum
             that begins with level 1 and level 2 or heritage Level,
             proceeds to level 3 and level 4, and culminates at level 5
             and level 6. The successive levels, from 1 to 6, correspond
             to the development trajectory of proficiency from novice to
             advanced high. While the overall curriculum is based on a
             spiral model, it is designed in modular forms for ease and
             flexibility of use in meeting various needs and interests of
             students and accommodating divergent instructional settings
             and conditions. Each level is organized around a series of
             themes, composed of communication functions and settings in
             level 1 and level 2, content topics in level 3 and level 4,
             and subject areas in level 5 and level 6. Each macro-level
             theme comprises two to four subtopics that serve as the unit
             of curricular specifications. Each unit is in the form of a
             comprehensive template of guidelines and lists of resources
             for developing teaching materials, instructional activities,
             classroom tasks, and student projects. More specifically, it
             includes (a) explicit learning objectives with respect to
             the five Cs (i.e., Communication, Cultures, Connections,
             Comparisons, and Communities); (b) key words and content
             topics to be explored; (c) suggested tasks and activities;
             and (d) lists of useful texts and audiovisual materials in
             published textbooks or from other authentic sources. The
             curriculum aims to be a blueprint for development of
             innovative and imaginative Korean courses and materials that
             realize the vision of Standards for Learning Korean. It is
             intended to be a practical template for revising and
             expanding an existing curriculum as well as for designing of
             new courses or curriculum.</jats:p>},
   Doi = {10.5325/korelangamer.19.2.0178},
   Key = {fds312613}
}

@article{fds312614,
   Author = {Cho, Y-MY and Kang, S and Kim, H-S and Lee, HS and Wang, H-S and Kim, H-Y and Kim, H-S and Suh, J},
   Title = {OVERVIEW},
   Journal = {The Korean Language in America},
   Volume = {19},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {153-177},
   Publisher = {The Pennsylvania State University Press},
   Year = {2015},
   Month = {July},
   ISSN = {2332-0346},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.5325/korelangamer.19.2.0153},
   Abstract = {<jats:p>The overview lays out a map of learning objectives
             for Standards-Based College Curriculum for Korean Language
             Education, which are defined in terms of the five Cs
             learning objectives and divided by proficiency level. It
             describes a set of goals which base the level-specific
             curriculums in this volume and that can function as a
             reference and guideline for future curriculum design and
             development of assessment tools. Levels roughly coincide
             with years of instruction in the university setting, but
             more accurately apply to targeted learner profiles as
             determined by ACTFL proficiency guidelines, from novice to
             advanced high. Six consecutive levels and a heritage level
             that straddles the first and the second level are posited.
             The five Cs learning objectives are an expansion and
             elaboration of objectives presented in Standards for
             Learning Korean (2012), while modifying and adapting them to
             fit the interests and needs of postsecondary students.
             Objectives are presented in the order of communication (C1),
             cultures (C2), connections (C3), comparisons (C4), and
             communities (C5), with subcategories in accordance with the
             framework of the standards. In each category, they are
             bracketed into levels 1–6 and heritage level for
             describing level-appropriate goals as well as showing
             progression and difference at the junctures of successive
             levels.</jats:p>},
   Doi = {10.5325/korelangamer.19.2.0153},
   Key = {fds312614}
}

@article{fds322283,
   Author = {Kim, H and Choi, Y},
   Title = {Development of Aspect Morphology in Korean},
   Journal = {Journall of Language Science},
   Volume = {23},
   Number = {4},
   Pages = {203-225},
   Publisher = {The Korean Association of Language Science},
   Year = {2016},
   Abstract = {The present study examined the development of aspect marking
             in Korean with a focus on -ko iss- and –a iss-
             imperfective markers, compared with progressive and
             perfective markers. First, we examined the comprehension
             accuracy of 3-4-year-old Korean-learning children, while
             observing their online interpretation patterns via their
             eye-fixation. Second, 3-4-year-olds’ production of aspect
             markers was elicited, using pictures/videos that portrayed
             various aspects of events. Both groups of children
             comprehended progressive meanings better than the
             perfective/resultative meanings. Accuracy between the
             imperfective markers didn’t differ but 4-year-olds were
             more accurate than 3-year-olds. In production, 4-year-olds
             were more accurate in producing -ko iss- than -a iss-, while
             3-year-olds were less accurate in using both markers.
             Eye-gaze patterns showed that children were faster in
             identifying the resultative -ko iss- than -a iss- event.
             Taken together, these results suggest that Korean children
             may begin extending the progressive -ko iss- form into the
             result state before they fully acquire a new resultative
             form, indicating polysemous extension of the existing form
             as the acquisition mechanism of aspect morphology.},
   Key = {fds322283}
}

@article{fds312612,
   Author = {Kim, H},
   Title = {Socially engaged writing in the KFL class: a post-product,
             post-process approach},
   Journal = {Language Facts and Perspectives},
   Volume = {37},
   Pages = {119-148},
   Year = {2016},
   url = {http://hdl.handle.net/10161/11771 Duke open
             access},
   Key = {fds312612}
}

@article{fds347724,
   Author = {Kim, H-Y and Seo, J},
   Title = {학술적 글쓰기 교육: 저자 입지의 탐색과
             표명 (Academic literacy: Marking of authorial stance in
             advanced KHL writing practice).},
   Year = {2017},
   Abstract = {학술적 글쓰기 교육에 대한 접근 방식은 크게
             두 가지로 대별될 수 있다. 하나는 텍스트
             중심 접근(Text approaches)으로서 학습자가 학술
             담론의 장르적 특성을 익히고 그에 부합하는
             텍스트를 생산하는 것을 목표로 한다. 즉
             텍스트의 짜임새, 단락의 구성, 적절한
             어휘와 맞춤법, 인용법과 각주 등 학술
             텍스트의 구성 요소의 형식과 기능을
             익히도록 하여 그 결과물에 초점을 두는
             방식이다. 다른 하나는 사회적 실천으로서의
             접근(Writing as social practice)으로, 학습자가
             학술 담화 공동체의 일원으로서 담화 맥락에
             대한 이해를 바탕으로 자신의 견해나 주장을
             보다 효과적으로 펼치도록 하는 글쓰기의
             방식에 집중하는 것이다 (이선옥 2008). 본
             연구는 텍스트 형식과 글쓰기 맥락/실천을
             통합하는 개념으로 저자 입지 (authorial
             stance)를 채택하여 학술적 글쓰기의 발전을
             이해하고 추적하는 분석 도구로 사용하고자
             한다. 저자 입지란 글쓰기 과정에서 제재에
             대한 저자의 의견, 태도, 입장, 판단을
             전개하고 조율해 나가는 동인으로, 텍스트
             구성과 문법-어휘의 선택에서 표출된다.
             학술적 글쓰기가 학술적 담화 공동체의
             성원으로서 ‘사회문화적 맥락, 독자 환경,
             담화 공동체의 특성’(이선옥, 2008)을
             인지하고 지적 담론을 생산하는 것이라고
             한다면, 저자가 내용 주제에 대해서뿐만
             아니라 독자와 담화 공동체를 상대로 자신의
             주장과 관점을 얼마나 설득력 있게
             피력하는가가 중요하다. 이때 저자 입지는
             실천적 글쓰기를 텍스트의 구조적-형태적
             특성에 긴밀하게 연관시켜 준다는 점에서
             유용한 개념이다 (Martin & White, 2005; Hyland 2012;
             Aull and Lancaster 2014). 본 연구에서는 미국
             대학에서 한국 유학생 대상 한국어 수업 을
             수강하는 학부 학생들의 학술적 글쓰기가
             어떻게 변화하고 발전하는지 저자 입지의
             표현을 추적함으로써 살펴 보고자 한다.
             1900년대부터 1960년대까지의 한국 문학사 및
             문화사를 근대사회와 국민국가를 주제로
             구성한 내용 중심의 이 수업에서 학생들은
             매주 2-3편 소논문 읽기와 짧은 요약/평가
             쓰기, 그리고 비평문, 논증문, 논문 쓰기
             과제를 수행한다. 이 때 읽기의 과정은
             단순히 주제에 관련된 정보의 습득이라는
             차원에서가 아니라 저자의 담론을 해석하고
             독자 자신의 견해와 관점을 확보하기 위한
             ‘해석’의 과정이며 동시에 학술적 담화
             공동체 안에서 ‘관계’를 수립하는 담론적
             실천의 과정으로서 이해, 활용된다. 이
             연구의 가설은 학술 담화 공동체 경험을
             재현하고자 하는 이러한 수업 환경에서 내용
             지식의 확장과 탐구의 일환으로써
             이루어지는 읽기와 쓰기 행위들이 학술적
             글쓰기에 요구되는 저자 입지의 탐색과
             표현에 기여할 것이라고 설정한다. 그리고
             저자 입지의 언명의 정도가 학술적
             글쓰기이자 사회적 실천으로서의 비판적
             글쓰기의 수준과 완성도에 조응함을 보여줄
             것으로 전망한다. 연구 방법은 7명의 수강
             학생들이 매주 제출하는 짧은 비평문들과
             중간 페이퍼와 기말페이퍼를 수집한 자료를
             통시적으로 비교하는 것이다. 분석의 초점은
             저자 입지를 드러내거나 함의하는 타저자
             지칭 (source author reference), 인용 (quotation), 회피
             장치 (hedges) , 인식 표현 (epistemic markers), 부연
             설명 (reformulation) 또는 대조 (contrast)와 같은
             텍스트 구성 표지 등이다. 이러한 표지들의
             사용 빈도와 분포는 학습자가 학술적
             글쓰기에서 저자 입지를 어떻게 설정하고
             있는지 보여 줄 것이다.},
   Key = {fds347724}
}

@article{fds348131,
   Author = {Kim, H-Y},
   Title = {Second Language Acquisition and its implications for
             teaching Korean},
   Pages = {3-23},
   Booktitle = {Teaching Korean as a Foreign Language Pedagogy: Theories and
             Practices},
   Editor = {Cho, Y-MY},
   Year = {2020},
   Month = {September},
   ISBN = {9780367199616},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429244384-2},
   Abstract = {Decades of SLA research has shed light on complex processes
             and mechanisms of L2 learning, and influenced the
             discussions and directions of L2 teaching. This chapter
             starts with discussion of how L2 development departs from L1
             acquisition, and introduces main interests of SLA research
             as well as divergent theoretical perspectives and approaches
             with respect to the nature of knowledge of language and the
             mechanism by which it develops. Core findings of SLA
             research in general and research studies of L2 Korean, which
             have foregrounded developmental sequences and L1 influence,
             are presented to establish grounds on which to base informed
             discussion and development of L2 Korean education. In this
             vein, debates on implicit and explicit instruction in the
             SLA literature are brought up to foster approaches to L2
             Korean instruction that build on solid and comprehensive
             understanding of L2 development.},
   Doi = {10.4324/9780429244384-2},
   Key = {fds348131}
}


%% Kim, Hwansoo   
@article{fds254841,
   Author = {Kim, H},
   Title = {The Adventures of a Japanese Monk in Colonial Korea Soma
             Shoei's Zen Training with Korean Masters},
   Journal = {Japanese Journal of Religious Studies},
   Volume = {36},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {125-165},
   Year = {2009},
   ISSN = {0304-1042},
   url = {http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=WOS:000270757100007&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=47d3190e77e5a3a53558812f597b0b92},
   Key = {fds254841}
}

@article{fds254852,
   Author = {Kim, H},
   Title = {"The Future of Korean Buddhism Lies in My Hands" Takeda
             Hanshi as a Soto Missionary},
   Journal = {Japanese Journal of Religious Studies},
   Volume = {37},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {99-135},
   Year = {2010},
   ISSN = {0304-1042},
   url = {http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=WOS:000280732000006&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=47d3190e77e5a3a53558812f597b0b92},
   Abstract = {Was the work of Japanese Buddhist missionaries “evil,”
             as many historians have indicated? To problematize this
             view, this article revisits the most vilified of Japanese
             Buddhist missionaries of the pre-colonial and colonial
             period (1877– 1945). Takeda Hanshi (1863–1911) was both
             a staunch imperialist and a Soto Buddhist priest. His infamy
             in politics derives from his participation in the
             assassination of the queen of Korea and enabling Japan’s
             annexation of Korea. For Buddhists, he is the mastermind
             behind the Soto sect’s attempt to control Korean Buddhism
             through an alliance with its first modern institution, the
             Wonjong. Scholars have focused on these three events, thus
             reinforcing the view that Takeda was the epitome of Japanese
             imperial aggression. However, a close examination of
             Takeda’s writings from 1907 to 1911 sheds new light on his
             missionary work. I argue that despite his imperial ideology,
             Takeda made strenuous efforts, until 1910, to promote the
             Wonjong and defend its autonomy. Based on overlooked primary
             sources, this article presents a case study that furthers
             recent scholarly calls to move beyond the imperialist/victim
             or hero/traitor framing of colonial Korean Buddhist
             history.},
   Key = {fds254852}
}

@article{fds254853,
   Author = {Kim, H},
   Title = {A Buddhist Colonization?: A New Perspective on the Attempted
             Alliance of 1910 Between the Japanese Sotoshu and the Korean
             Wonjong (Pulgyo jŏk sigminjihwa?: 1910nyŏn ŭi
             Chodongjong/Wŏnjong yŏnhap)},
   Journal = {Religion Compass},
   Volume = {4},
   Number = {5},
   Pages = {287-299},
   Year = {2010},
   Abstract = {One of the most infamous events in modern Japanese and
             Korean Buddhist history was the alliance attempted between
             the Japanese Sotoshu (Soto Sect) and the Korean
             W&#x006f;?njong (Complete Sect) in late 1910, 46 days after
             Japan annexed Korea. The Japanese Buddhist priests involved
             have been characterized as colonialists and imperialists
             trying to conquer Korean Buddhism on behalf of their
             imperial government while the Korean monks orchestrating the
             initiative have been cast as traitors, collaborators, and
             sellers of Korean Buddhism. All the key figures—Takeda
             (1863–1911), Yi Hoegwang (1862–1933), clergy from the
             W&#x006f;?njong and Sotoshu, and colonial government
             officials—are portrayed in historiographies as villains.
             But the politicized narrative of the alliance has neglected
             two crucial points among others. First, behind Yi and Takeda
             was a bilingual Korean monk named Kim Y&#x006f;?nggi
             (1878–?) who played a key role in this movement. Second,
             the Sotoshu was not enthusiastic about the alliance, which
             reveals that Takeda’s vision for the alliance was at odds
             with that of the heads of his sect. This article draws upon
             these two findings in overlooked primary sources—about the
             influential players, the Japanese and Korean sects’
             conflicted motives, and the governments’ responses—to
             draw out the complex power relationships and discourses
             surrounding the attempted alliance.},
   Key = {fds254853}
}

@article{fds254842,
   Author = {Kim, H},
   Title = {Korean Buddhism during the Colonial Period (1810-1945) and
             Han Yongun’s Reforms [review of the book Trial and Error
             in Modernist Reforms: Korean Buddhism under Colonial Rule,
             Pori Park]},
   Journal = {H-Buddhism},
   Year = {2010},
   Month = {November},
   Key = {fds254842}
}

@article{fds182778,
   Author = {Park, Pori},
   Title = {'Korean Buddhism during the Colonial Period (1810-1945) and
             Han Yongun's Reforms},
   Journal = {H-Buddhism},
   Year = {2010},
   Month = {November},
   Key = {fds182778}
}

@article{fds254843,
   Author = {Kim, H},
   Title = {Review: Vermeersch, Sem. The Power of the Buddhas: The
             Politics of Buddhism during the Koryŏ Dynasty (918-1392).
             Cambridge: Harvard University Asia Center,
             2008.},
   Journal = {Journal of Korean Religion},
   Year = {2011},
   Month = {March},
   Key = {fds254843}
}

@article{fds189422,
   Author = {Vermeersch, Sem},
   Title = {The Power of the Buddhas: the Politics of Buddhism during
             the Koryŏ Dynasty (918-1392).},
   Journal = {Journal of Korean Religion},
   Year = {2011},
   Month = {March},
   Key = {fds189422}
}

@article{fds254851,
   Author = {Kim, H},
   Title = {A Buddhist Christmas: The Buddha’s Birthday Festival in
             Colonial Korea (1928–1945)},
   Journal = {Journal of Korean Religions},
   Volume = {2},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {47-82},
   Year = {2011},
   Month = {October},
   Key = {fds254851}
}

@article{fds254848,
   Author = {Kim, H},
   Title = {Review: Kendall, Laurel. Shamans, Nostalgias, and the IMF:
             South Korean Popular Religion in Motion. Honolulu:
             University of Hawai’i University, 2009.},
   Journal = {Journal of Religion},
   Volume = {91},
   Number = {4},
   Pages = {585-587},
   Publisher = {The University of Chicago},
   Year = {2011},
   Month = {October},
   ISSN = {0022-4189},
   url = {http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=000296100700029&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=47d3190e77e5a3a53558812f597b0b92},
   Abstract = {Kendall, Laurel. Shamans, Nostalgias, and the IMF: South
             Korean Popular Religion in Motion. Honolulu: University of
             Hawai’i University, 2009.},
   Doi = {10.1086/662410},
   Key = {fds254848}
}

@article{fds254844,
   Author = {Kim, H},
   Title = {A Buddhist Colonization?: The Sotoshu/Wonjong Alliance of
             1910 (Pulgyo jok sigminjihwa?: 1910nyon ui
             Chodongjong/Wonjong yonhap)},
   Journal = {Pulgyo hakpo},
   Volume = {36},
   Pages = {9-33},
   Publisher = {Dongguk University},
   Year = {2012},
   Abstract = {One of the most infamous events in modern Japanese and
             Korean Buddhist history was the alliance attempted between
             the Japanese Sotoshu(Soto Sect) and the Korean
             Wonjong(Complete Sect) in late 1910, forty six days after
             Japan annexed Korea. The Japanese Buddhist priests involved
             have been characterized as colonialists and imperialists
             trying to conquer Korean Buddhism on behalf of their
             imperial government while the Korean monks orchestrating the
             initiative have been cast as traitors, collaborators, and
             sellers of Korean Buddhism. All the key figures-Takeda
             Hanshi(1863-1911), Yi Hoegwang(1862-1933), clergy from the
             Wonjong and Sotoshu, and colonial government officials-are
             portrayed in historiographies as villains. But the
             politicized narrative of the alliance has neglected two
             crucial points among others. First, behind Yi and Takeda was
             a bilingual Korean monk named Kim Yonggi(1878-?) who played
             a key role in this movement. Second, the Sotoshu was not
             enthusiastic about the alliance, which, thirdly, reveals
             that Takeda’s vision for the alliance was at odds with
             that of the heads of his sect. This article draws upon these
             two findings in overlooked primary sources-about the
             influential players, the Japanese and Korean sects’
             conflicted motives, and the governments’ responses-to draw
             out the complex power relationships and discourses
             surrounding the attempted alliance.},
   Key = {fds254844}
}

@article{fds214242,
   Author = {H.I. Kim},
   Title = {Pulgyo jŏk sigminjihwa?: 1910nyŏn ŭi Chodongjong/Wŏnjong
             yŏnhap (A Buddhist Colonization?: The Sōtōshū/Wŏnjong
             Alliance of 1910)},
   Journal = {Pulgyo hakpo},
   Volume = {36},
   Number = {9-33},
   Publisher = {Dongguk University, Seoul Korea},
   Year = {2012},
   Abstract = {One of the most infamous events in modern Japanese and
             Korean Buddhist history was the alliance attempted between
             the Japanese Sōtōshū(Sōtō Sect) and the Korean
             Wŏnjong(Complete Sect) in late 1910, forty six days after
             Japan annexed Korea. The Japanese Buddhist priests involved
             have been characterized as colonialists and imperialists
             trying to conquer Korean Buddhism on behalf of their
             imperial government while the Korean monks orchestrating the
             initiative have been cast as traitors, collaborators, and
             sellers of Korean Buddhism. All the key figures-Takeda
             Hanshi(1863-1911), Yi Hoegwang(1862-1933), clergy from the
             Wŏnjong and Sōtōshū, and colonial government
             officials-are portrayed in historiographies as villains. But
             the politicized narrative of the alliance has neglected two
             crucial points among others. First, behind Yi and Takeda was
             a bilingual Korean monk named Kim Yŏnggi(1878-?) who played
             a key role in this movement. Second, the Sōtōshū was not
             enthusiastic about the alliance, which, thirdly, reveals
             that Takeda’s vision for the alliance was at odds with
             that of the heads of his sect. This article draws upon these
             two findings in overlooked primary sources-about the
             influential players, the Japanese and Korean sects’
             conflicted motives, and the governments’ responses-to draw
             out the complex power relationships and discourses
             surrounding the attempted alliance.},
   Key = {fds214242}
}

@article{fds254850,
   Author = {Kim, H},
   Title = {Review: Ama Michihiro. Immigrants to the Pure Land: The
             Modernization, Acculturation, and Globalization of Shin
             Buddhism, 1898-1941. Honolulu: University of Hawai’i
             Press, 2011.},
   Journal = {Pacific Affairs: an international review of Asia and the
             Pacific},
   Volume = {85},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {381-383},
   Year = {2012},
   Month = {June},
   ISSN = {1715-3379},
   url = {http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=000304793200011&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=47d3190e77e5a3a53558812f597b0b92},
   Key = {fds254850}
}

@article{fds214243,
   Author = {Ama Michihiro},
   Title = {. Immigrants to the Pure Land: The Modernization,
             Acculturation, and Globalization of Shin Buddhism,
             1898-1941},
   Journal = {Pacific Affairs},
   Volume = {85/2},
   Year = {2012},
   Month = {June},
   Key = {fds214243}
}

@article{fds254849,
   Author = {Kim, H},
   Title = {Review: Cho Eun-su. Korean Buddhist Nuns and Laywomen:
             Hidden Histories, Enduring Vitality. Albany: State
             University of New York Press, 2011.},
   Journal = {Journal of Asian Studies},
   Volume = {71},
   Number = {3},
   Pages = {811-813},
   Publisher = {Cambridge University Press (CUP)},
   Year = {2012},
   Month = {August},
   ISSN = {1752-0401},
   url = {http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=000307182300035&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=47d3190e77e5a3a53558812f597b0b92},
   Doi = {10.1017/S0021911812000939},
   Key = {fds254849}
}

@article{fds214244,
   Author = {Eun-su Cho},
   Title = {Korean Buddhist Nuns and Laywomen: Hidden Histories,
             Enduring Vitality},
   Journal = {Journal of Asian Studies},
   Volume = {71/3},
   Year = {2012},
   Month = {August},
   Key = {fds214244}
}

@book{fds254847,
   Author = {Kim, H},
   Title = {Empire of The Dharma: Korean and Japanese Buddhism,
             1877–1912},
   Volume = {344},
   Pages = {444 pages},
   Publisher = {Harvard University Asia Center},
   Year = {2013},
   Month = {February},
   ISBN = {0674065751},
   Abstract = {Empire of the Dharma explores the dynamic relationship
             between Korean and Japanese Buddhists in the years leading
             up to the Japanese annexation of Korea. Conventional
             narratives cast this relationship in politicized terms, with
             Korean Buddhists portrayed as complicit in the “religious
             annexation” of the peninsula. However, this view fails to
             account for the diverse visions, interests, and strategies
             that drove both sides. Hwansoo Ilmee Kim complicates this
             politicized account of religious interchange by reexamining
             the “alliance” forged in 1910 between the Japanese Soto
             sect and the Korean Wonjong order. The author argues that
             their ties involved not so much political ideology as mutual
             benefit. Both wished to strengthen Buddhism’s precarious
             position within Korean society and curb Christianity’s
             growing influence. Korean Buddhist monastics sought to
             leverage Japanese resources as a way of advancing themselves
             and their temples, and missionaries of Japanese Buddhist
             sects competed with one another to dominate Buddhism on the
             peninsula. This strategic alliance pushed both sides to
             confront new ideas about the place of religion in modern
             society and framed the way that many Korean and Japanese
             Buddhists came to think about the future of their shared
             religion.},
   Key = {fds254847}
}

@book{fds182776,
   Author = {H. Kim},
   Title = {Empire of The Dharma: Korean and Japanese Buddhism,
             1877–1912},
   Publisher = {Harvard Asia Center},
   Year = {2013},
   Month = {March},
   Key = {fds182776}
}

@article{fds309895,
   Author = {Haedong, Y},
   Title = {[Review of the book Shokuminchi Chosen to shukyo: Teikoku
             shi, kokka shinto, koyu shinko (Colonial Korea and religion:
             imperial history, state Shinto, and indigenous beliefs), by
             Isomae Jun'ichi, reviewed by Yun Haedong, translated by
             Hwansoo Kim]},
   Journal = {Journal of Korean Religions},
   Volume = {4},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {203-4},
   Year = {2013},
   Month = {October},
   Key = {fds309895}
}

@article{fds254840,
   Author = {Kim, H},
   Title = {Seeking the colonizer's favors for a Buddhist vision: The
             Korean Buddhist nationalist Paek Yongsǒng's (1864-1940)
             Imje Sǒn movement and his relationship with the Japanese
             Colonizer Abe Mitsuie (1862-1936)},
   Journal = {Sungkyun Journal of East Asian Studies},
   Volume = {14},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {171-193},
   Year = {2014},
   Month = {January},
   ISSN = {1598-2661},
   Keywords = {colonialism, Zen Buddhism, Paek Yongso ̆ ng, Abe Mitsuie,
             Buddhist modernity},
   Abstract = {© 2014 Academy of East Asian Studies. In this article, I
             will challenge the widely accepted, yet one-dimensional,
             image of Paek as a staunch nationalist and argue that he
             prioritized his modern Buddhist vision over the
             allencompassing, nationalist goal, and thus was willing to
             curry favor with the politically and religiously powerful
             Abe Mitsuie. In a desperate effort to unify Korean Buddhism
             under the Imje Zen lineage, Paek deemed Abe an ally and
             approached him to seek influence on the colonial government
             in favor of Paek's version of institutional reform. The fact
             that Paek sought political favors from Abe not only
             contradicts the immaculate nationalist status devoutly
             attributed to him by some scholars of modern Korean
             Buddhism, but also attests to the complex colonial realities
             that prompted Koreans and Japanese alike to employ multiple
             visions and identities, including religious, around which
             they could build personal and group networks. Equally
             importantly, their collaboration also reflects a larger
             religious landscape of colonial Korea in which Zen Buddhism
             emerged as a modern, alternative religion for Japan and
             Korea.},
   Key = {fds254840}
}

@article{fds254846,
   Author = {Kim, H},
   Title = {Social stigmas of buddhist monastics and the lack of lay
             buddhist leadership in colonial Korea (1910-1945)},
   Journal = {Korea Journal},
   Volume = {54},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {105-132},
   Year = {2014},
   Month = {January},
   ISSN = {0023-3900},
   Abstract = {One of the key characteristics of Buddhism from the late
             nineteenth century through the first half of the twentieth
             century was the rise of lay leadership. East Asian Buddhism
             was no exception, but the ways, degree, and timing in which
             this modern phenomenon manifested itself varied, especially
             in the case of Korean Buddhism, which saw a delayed arrival
             of lay leadership. This article addresses the question of
             why lay Buddhism struggled to emerge as a strong force in
             colonial Korea. A key factor that has been underestimated in
             scholarship is that Korean monks were socially stigmatized
             during the Joseon period (1392-1910). The rhetoric of
             stigmatism was so ubi-quitous in journals and newspapers in
             colonial Korea that it begs a closer analysis of the
             correlation between the societal perception of monks and its
             influence on the development of lay Buddhism. This article
             first examines three interrelated aspects of Korean
             monastics: (1) the stigmatization imposed on monastics
             during the Neo-Confucian Joseon dynasty, (2) the persistence
             of these stigmas in the minds of Koreans, and (3) their
             internalization among Korean monastics themselves. The
             article then draws out the impact of these three aspects on
             the late and limited emergence of lay leadership. © Korean
             National Commission for UNESCO, 2014.},
   Key = {fds254846}
}

@article{fds254845,
   Author = {Kim, H},
   Title = {’The Mystery of the Century’: Lay Buddhist Monk Villages
             (Chaegasungch’on) Near Korea’s Northernmost Border,
             1600s–1960s},
   Journal = {Seoul Journal of Korean Studies},
   Pages = {269-305},
   Year = {2014},
   Month = {February},
   Abstract = {This article examines the history of the villages of lay
             monks (chaegasung) near North Korea’s northernmost border.
             These communities had been ignored for centuries until they
             suddenly became the object of scholarly and public attention
             when Korea fell under Japanese colonial rule (1910–1945).
             The men of the villages were called “lay monks.” They
             shaved their heads, had wives and children, and had more
             than one ethnic identity. Despite the sizable number of lay
             monk villages in this region, their long history and, more
             importantly, their monastic identity and Buddhist lifestyle,
             narratives about these communities are almost absent in the
             historiography of Korean Buddhism. The absence of a written
             history is ascribed to that historiography’s privileged
             focus on the influential figures, doctrines, texts, and
             schools that contributed to the protection of the state.
             Colonial experiences and national divisions have reinforced
             these elite- and nation-centered narratives about Korean
             Buddhism to the exclusion of its more pluralistic, local
             dimensions on the periphery. If the history of these lay
             monk communities is understood within the context of Choson
             Buddhism (1392–1910) placed under the Neo-Confucian
             hegemony of the Choson dynasty, then clearly the existence
             of these communities is not an anomaly developed
             independently, but instead is an integral part of Korean
             Buddhism.},
   Key = {fds254845}
}

@article{fds225246,
   Author = {Kim Iryop (trans. by Jin Park)},
   Title = {Reflections of a Zen Buddhist Nun: Essays by Zen Master Kim
             Iryop},
   Journal = {H-Buddhism},
   Year = {2014},
   Month = {July},
   Key = {fds225246}
}

@article{fds220092,
   Author = {H.I. Kim},
   Title = {Social Stigmas of Buddhist Monastics and the Lack of Lay
             Buddhist Leadership in Colonial Korea (1910–1945)},
   Journal = {Korea Journal},
   Volume = {26},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {269-305},
   Year = {2014},
   Month = {December},
   Abstract = {One of the key characteristics of Buddhism during the late
             nineteenth century through the first half of the twentieth
             century was the rise of lay leadership in all aspects of
             Buddhist tradition. East Asian Buddhism was no exception to
             this trend, but the ways, degree, and timing in which this
             modern phenomenon manifested itself varied, especially in
             the case of Korean Buddhism, which saw a late arrival of lay
             leadership. This article addresses the question of why lay
             Buddhism struggled to emerge as a strong force in Korea
             compared to China and Japan. Without a doubt, colonialism
             was a key factor. Japanese rule disrupted the development of
             the Korean Buddhist sangha. However, another key factor that
             has been underestimated in the historiography of Korean
             Buddhism is that Korean monks were socially stigmatized
             during the colonial period (1910–1945). The rhetoric of
             stigmatism was so ubiquitous in the personal writings of
             monks and lay people, as well as in journals and newspapers
             in colonial Korea, that it begs a closer analysis to
             determine a correlation between the perception of monks in
             society at this time and its influence on the development of
             lay Buddhism in Korea. Thus, I would like to provide a
             preliminary explanation of this correlation by highlighting
             three interrelated aspects of Korean monastics in colonial
             Korea: (1) the stigmatization imposed on Korean monastics
             during the Neo-Confucian Joseon dynasty; (2) the persistence
             of these stigmas in the minds of Koreans; and (3) their
             internalization among Korean monastics themselves.},
   Key = {fds220092}
}

@article{fds220093,
   Author = {H.I. Kim},
   Title = {'The Mystery of the Century’: Lay Buddhist Monk Villages
             (Chaegasŭngch’on) Near Korea’s Northernmost Border,
             1600s–1960s},
   Journal = {Seoul Journal of Korean Studies},
   Volume = {26},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {269-305},
   Year = {2014},
   Month = {December},
   Abstract = {This article examines the history of the villages of lay
             monks (chaegasŭng) near North Korea’s northernmost
             border. These communities had been ignored for centuries
             until they suddenly became the object of scholarly and
             public attention when Korea fell under Japanese colonial
             rule (1910–1945). The men of the villages were called
             “lay monks.” They shaved their heads, had wives and
             children, and had more than one ethnic identity. Despite the
             sizable number of lay monk villages in this region, their
             long history and, more importantly, their monastic identity
             and Buddhist lifestyle, narratives about these communities
             are almost absent in the historiography of Korean Buddhism.
             The absence of a written history is ascribed to that
             historiography’s privileged focus on the influential
             figures, doctrines, texts, and schools that contributed to
             the protection of the state. Colonial experiences and
             national divisions have reinforced these elite- and
             nation-centered narratives about Korean Buddhism to the
             exclusion of its more pluralistic, local dimensions on the
             periphery. If the history of these lay monk communities is
             understood within the context of Chosŏn Buddhism
             (1392–1910) placed under the Neo-Confucian hegemony of the
             Chosŏn dynasty, then clearly the existence of these
             communities is not an anomaly developed independently, but
             instead is an integral part of Korean Buddhism.},
   Key = {fds220093}
}

@article{fds226428,
   Author = {Nakanishi Naoki},
   Title = {Colonial Korea and Japanese Buddhism (Chōsen Shokuminichi
             to Nihon Bukkyō)},
   Journal = {Japanese Religions Journal},
   Year = {2015},
   Month = {May},
   Key = {fds226428}
}

@article{fds329473,
   Author = {Kim, H},
   Title = {Buddhism during the Chosŏn Dynasty (1392–1910): A
             Collective Trauma?},
   Volume = {22},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {101-142},
   Year = {2017},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/jks.2017.0004},
   Abstract = {An increasing number of recent scholars have challenged the
             narrative of Korean Buddhism as persecuted, isolated, and
             debased under the Neo-Confucian orthodoxy of the Chosǒn
             dynasty (1392-1910). These scholars have revealed the
             continued support from both the state and Confucian
             aristocrats afforded to Buddhism; the friendship between
             yangbans and monastics; and the recognition of monastics'
             role in Chosǒn society. While these insights provide a
             welcome nuance to a consideration of the period, it should
             be also recognized that the anti-Buddhist paradigm was a
             pervasive norm at the state and local levels throughout the
             Chosǒn era. The perception that Buddhism was heretical and
             that monastics were socially inferior was so deeply
             ingrained in the minds of aristocrats and the populace for
             so long that monastics developed a sense of collective
             trauma. This article revisits the vicissitudes of Chosǒn
             Buddhism by considering an incident that took place in the
             1930s in colonial Korea. This case will help scholars of
             Korean history and Buddhism understand how colonial-period
             monastics acted from the trauma of the anti-Buddhist
             paradigm of the Chosǒn dynasty.},
   Doi = {10.1353/jks.2017.0004},
   Key = {fds329473}
}

@article{fds328640,
   Author = {Kim, H},
   Title = {Seeking the colonizer’s favours for a buddhist vision: The
             korean buddhist nationalist paek yongsŏng’s (1864-1940)
             imje sŏn movement},
   Pages = {66-88},
   Booktitle = {Buddhist Modernities: Re-Inventing Tradition in the
             Globalizing Modern World},
   Year = {2017},
   Month = {January},
   ISBN = {9781134884759},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315542140},
   Doi = {10.4324/9781315542140},
   Key = {fds328640}
}


%% Kim, Susie Jie Young   
@book{fds26657,
   Author = {S. Kim},
   Title = {Manoa: The Wounded Season},
   Publisher = {University of Hawai'i Press},
   Year = {1999},
   Key = {fds26657}
}

@article{fds26656,
   Title = {Brian Myers: Han Sorya and North Korean Literature: the
             Failure of},
   Journal = {Chosen gakuho 174 (Journal of the Academic Association of
             Koreanology in Japan},
   Year = {2000},
   Key = {fds26656}
}

@misc{fds26655,
   Author = {S. Kim},
   Title = {Entering the Pale of Literary Translation},
   Booktitle = {Poem Behind the Poem: Translating Asian Poetry},
   Publisher = {(Port Townsend, Washington: Copper Canyon
             Press},
   Editor = {Edited by Frank Stewart},
   Year = {2004},
   Key = {fds26655}
}

@misc{fds26654,
   Author = {S. Kim},
   Title = {Sinsosol and the Emergence of 'New Literature': The
             Discourse of the New in the Great Han Empire},
   Booktitle = {Reform Projects and Modernization during the Great Han
             Empire Period.},
   Editor = {Edited by John Duncan and Kim Dohyung},
   Year = {2005},
   Key = {fds26654}
}


%% Knapczyk, Kusum   
@book{fds348651,
   Author = {Knapczyk, K and Knapczyk, P},
   Title = {Reading Hindi: Novice to Intermediate},
   Pages = {254 pages},
   Publisher = {Routledge},
   Year = {2020},
   Month = {February},
   ISBN = {978-0367222574},
   Abstract = {Reading Hindi: Novice to Intermediate is an innovative
             collection of graded readings that are both accessible in
             language and engaging in content, specifically designed for
             adult learners of Hindi. Ideal for those just starting out
             in Hindi, the texts provide culturally rich content written
             in simple, level-appropriate language, with a range of
             activities to reinforce learning. The graded readings
             support the learner as they build their confidence with the
             language, gradually encountering a wider range of grammar
             constructions and vocabulary as the book progresses. Reading
             Hindi can be used alongside a main textbook and is ideal for
             both class-use and independent study.},
   Key = {fds348651}
}

@article{fds365333,
   Author = {Knapczyk, K},
   Title = {Listening to many voices: Social Justice Themes and
             Technology in Developing Hindi Listening
             Proficiency},
   Journal = {National Council of Less Commonly Taught
             Languages},
   Volume = {30},
   Number = {Vol. 30 pp. 183 – 216},
   Pages = {183-216},
   Publisher = {JNCOLCTL},
   Year = {2021},
   Month = {April},
   Abstract = {This paper examines the use of authentic materials related
             to social justice topics through two technology platforms—
             VoiceThread and PlayPosit—in developing listening
             proficiency for Hindi in flipped/asynchronous and
             traditional classes. Examples of different types of
             activities and assessments will be demonstrated for each
             platform. These examples will be considered in light of
             current research in effective strategies for listening
             activities and assessment. This paper will also consider how
             to select relevant content and tasks based on ILR/ACTFL
             proficiency-based standards. Suggestions and examples will
             be offered for various levels and their use in a standard
             university Hindi curriculum. These considerations will be
             drawn from the author’s experience as a team member in a
             project to develop Hindi proficiency guidelines for a
             listening assessment tool that is being developed as a
             companion to the OPI assessment.},
   Key = {fds365333}
}

@article{fds365286,
   Title = {Using Technology to Design Self-Guided Listening Tasks and
             Assessment for Hindi in Flipped and Traditional Classroom
             Settings},
   Booktitle = {Hindi As a Second and Foreign Language},
   Publisher = {Cambridge Scholars Publishing},
   Year = {2021},
   Month = {November},
   ISBN = {9781527574182},
   Abstract = {This book will be helpful to teachers and learners of Hindi
             who want to understand better ways of teaching and learning
             Hindi as a foreign language.},
   Key = {fds365286}
}

@article{fds365285,
   Author = {Knapczyk, K},
   Title = {अमेरिकी विश्वविद्यालयों
             में हिंदी अध्ययन
             सामग्री का विश्लेषण Hindi
             study material analysis in American Universities},
   Journal = {Pravasi Jagat},
   Volume = {April-June 2022},
   Pages = {94-104},
   Publisher = {Kendriya Hindi Sansthan},
   Year = {2022},
   Month = {April},
   Key = {fds365285}
}


%% Kurokawa, Naoko   
@article{fds227666,
   Author = {Kurokawa, N},
   Title = {Classroom Activities for Beginning-Level
             Japanese},
   Journal = {The Voice of WAFLT},
   Year = {2001},
   Key = {fds227666}
}

@article{fds227665,
   Author = {Kurokawa, N and Endo, H},
   Title = {Facilitating Kanji Acquisition and Retention by Using
             Web-based Practice},
   Journal = {proceedings of the 19th SEATJ},
   Year = {2004},
   url = {http://www.dukejapanese.org/},
   Key = {fds227665}
}

@article{fds227656,
   Author = {K Aoki and MI and Kurokawa, N and Miura, K},
   Title = {Videos for Japanese Language Education},
   Publisher = {Japan Foundation, Los Angeles},
   Year = {2005},
   Key = {fds227656}
}

@misc{fds51572,
   Author = {K.Aoki, M.Isoyama and N. Kurokawa and K.Miura},
   Title = {Videos for Japanese Language Education},
   Publisher = {The Japan Foundation, Los Angeles},
   Year = {2005},
   Key = {fds51572}
}

@misc{fds51592,
   Author = {K.Aoki, M.Isoyama and N.Kurokawa and K.Miura},
   Title = {Videos for Japanese Language Education},
   Publisher = {Japan Foundation, Los Angeles},
   Year = {2005},
   Key = {fds51592}
}

@article{fds227657,
   Author = {K Aoki and MI and Kurokawa, N},
   Title = {Looking at Commercials: Windows into Culture and
             Language},
   Journal = {proceedings of the 18th CATJ Annual Conference},
   Year = {2006},
   Key = {fds227657}
}

@article{fds227658,
   Author = {Kurokawa, N},
   Title = {Learning beyond the Classrooms with iPods},
   Journal = {proceedings of the 4th International Conference on Computer
             Assisted Systems For Teaching & Learning
             Japanese},
   Year = {2007},
   Key = {fds227658}
}

@article{fds227667,
   Author = {Kurokawa, N},
   Title = {Repetition in Japanese Conversational Discourse},
   Journal = {ICU Studies in Japanese Language Education},
   Volume = {3},
   Year = {2007},
   Key = {fds227667}
}

@article{fds227659,
   Author = {Kurokawa, N},
   Title = {Pedagogical Use of the Fixed-form Verses in the JFL
             Instruction},
   Journal = {proceedings of the 23rd SEATJ conference},
   Year = {2008},
   Key = {fds227659}
}

@article{fds227660,
   Author = {Kurokawa, N},
   Title = {Examining the Effect of Peer Feedback and Internet-Mediated
             Communication in JFL writing},
   Journal = {Proceedings of the International Conference of the Japanese
             Language & Literature Association of Taiwan},
   Year = {2009},
   Key = {fds227660}
}

@article{fds227664,
   Author = {Kurokawa, N},
   Title = {Enhancing Intrinsic Motivation: Analysis of JFL Learners’
             Motives and the Potential of Digital Comic
             Making},
   Journal = {Proceedings of the Practical Study Forum for Japanese
             Education, the Society for Teaching Japanese as a Foreign
             Language},
   Year = {2009},
   Key = {fds227664}
}

@article{fds227663,
   Author = {Kurokawa, N},
   Title = {Acquisition of the Explanatory modal n(no)da through the
             corpus-driven language pedagogy},
   Journal = {Proceedings of the Practice Study Forum for Japanese
             Education, the Society for Teaching Japanese as a Foreign
             Language (Nihongo Kyoiku Gakkai)},
   Year = {2011},
   Month = {Summer},
   Key = {fds227663}
}

@article{fds227661,
   Author = {Kurokawa, N},
   Title = {Promoting Cultural Literacy & Advanced Level Language
             Proficiency through the Internet-mediated Communication
             between American & Japanese Students},
   Journal = {proceeding of 2012 PC conference, CIEC},
   Year = {2012},
   Key = {fds227661}
}

@article{fds227662,
   Author = {Kurokawa, N and Shinozaki, F and Ueda, A and Yoshida,
             H},
   Title = {Using SNS to Enhance Cross-Cultural Communication:
             Perspectives from EFL Teacher-Training & JFL
             Instruction},
   Journal = {Proceedings of the CIEC PC Conference 2013},
   Year = {2013},
   Month = {July},
   Key = {fds227662}
}

@article{fds333838,
   Author = {Mori, M and Kurokawa, N and Worley, G},
   Title = {Speculation on the naming of Moyamoya disease.},
   Journal = {J Neuroradiol},
   Volume = {45},
   Number = {4},
   Pages = {261-262},
   Year = {2018},
   Month = {July},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neurad.2018.03.004},
   Doi = {10.1016/j.neurad.2018.03.004},
   Key = {fds333838}
}


%% Kwon, Nayoung A.   
@article{fds292042,
   Author = {Kwon, N},
   Title = {Roundtable on the ‘Future of Colonial Korean Culture’:
             Assimilating Korea and the Censorship of Conflicting
             Desires},
   Booktitle = {Re-reading of the Colonial Period in Korea},
   Year = {2007},
   Key = {fds292042}
}

@article{fds376349,
   Author = {Kwon, N},
   Title = {Roundtable on the ‘Future of Colonial Korean Culture’:
             Assimilating Korea and the Censorship of Conflicting
             Desires},
   Booktitle = {Re-reading of the Colonial Period in Korea},
   Year = {2007},
   Key = {fds376349}
}

@article{fds292053,
   Author = {Kwon, NA},
   Title = {Ambivalence of the ‘Colonized I-Novel’: Kim Saryang and
             the Japanese Literary Establishment.},
   Journal = {Journal of Korean Literature (Hanguk munhak
             yôngu)},
   Year = {2009},
   Month = {Winter},
   Key = {fds292053}
}

@article{fds292040,
   Author = {Kwon, NA and translator},
   Title = {Foreign Husband},
   Booktitle = {Into the Light: Anthology of Resident Korean
             Literature},
   Publisher = {University of Hawaii Press},
   Editor = {Wender, M},
   Year = {2010},
   Key = {fds292040}
}

@article{fds292045,
   Author = {Kwon, NA},
   Title = {“제국, 민족, 그리고 소수자 작가: 식민지
             사소설과 식민지인 재현의 난제” [Empire,
             Nation, Minor Writer]},
   Booktitle = {전쟁하는 신민,식민지의 국민문화: 식민지말
             조선의 담론과 표상 [Imperial Subjects at War:
             Imperial Culture in the Colony]},
   Publisher = {Somyong Ch’ulp’an},
   Year = {2010},
   Key = {fds292045}
}

@article{fds292052,
   Author = {Kwon, NA},
   Title = {Colonial Modernity and the Conundrum of Representation:
             Korean Literature 
in the Japanese Empire},
   Journal = {Postcolonial Studies},
   Volume = {13},
   Number = {4},
   Pages = {421-439},
   Year = {2010},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13688790.2010.524883},
   Doi = {10.1080/13688790.2010.524883},
   Key = {fds292052}
}

@article{fds352731,
   Author = {Kwon, NA},
   Title = {“제국, 민족, 그리고 소수자 작가: 식민지
             사소설과 식민지인 재현의 난제” [Empire,
             Nation, Minor Writer]},
   Booktitle = {전쟁하는 신민,식민지의 국민문화: 식민지말
             조선의 담론과 표상 [Imperial Subjects at War:
             Imperial Culture in the Colony]},
   Publisher = {Somyong Ch’ulp’an},
   Year = {2010},
   Key = {fds352731}
}

@article{fds376348,
   Author = {Kwon, NA and translator},
   Title = {Foreign Husband},
   Publisher = {University of Hawaii Press},
   Year = {2010},
   Key = {fds376348}
}

@article{fds292049,
   Author = {Kwon, NA},
   Title = {From Wonso Pond},
   Journal = {JOURNAL OF ASIAN STUDIES},
   Volume = {70},
   Number = {4},
   Pages = {1174-1175},
   Year = {2011},
   Month = {November},
   ISSN = {0021-9118},
   url = {http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=000298925400054&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=47d3190e77e5a3a53558812f597b0b92},
   Doi = {10.1017/S0021911811002051},
   Key = {fds292049}
}

@article{fds305925,
   Author = {N.A. Kwon and Kwon, N and Kwon, NA},
   Title = {Transcolonial Film Co-productions in the Japanese Empire:
             Antinomies in the Colonial Archive},
   Journal = {Cross Currents},
   Year = {2012},
   url = {https://cross-currents.berkeley.edu/e-journal/issue-5},
   Key = {fds305925}
}

@article{fds292050,
   Author = {Kwon, NA},
   Title = {PRIMITIVE SELVES: Koreana in the Japanese Colonial Gaze,
             1910-1945, vol 5},
   Journal = {PACIFIC AFFAIRS},
   Volume = {85},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {211-214},
   Year = {2012},
   Month = {March},
   ISSN = {0030-851X},
   url = {http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=000300868200030&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=47d3190e77e5a3a53558812f597b0b92},
   Key = {fds292050}
}

@article{fds201194,
   Author = {Nayoung Aimee Kwon},
   Title = {Primitive Selves: Koreana in the Japanese Colonial Gaze
             1910-1945},
   Journal = {Pacific Affairs},
   Year = {2012},
   Month = {March},
   Key = {fds201194}
}

@article{fds292046,
   Author = {Kwon, NA},
   Title = {“Collaboration, Coproduction, Code-Switching.”},
   Journal = {Cross Currents: East Asian History and Culture
             Review},
   Year = {2012},
   Month = {December},
   Key = {fds292046}
}

@article{fds292041,
   Author = {Kwon, NA},
   Title = {Images of Korea in Japanese Literature},
   Pages = {64-87},
   Booktitle = {Imperatives of Culture: Selected Essays on Korean History,
             Culture, and Society from the Japanese Colonial
             Era},
   Publisher = {University of Hawaii Press},
   Year = {2013},
   ISBN = {9780824838218},
   Key = {fds292041}
}

@article{fds376512,
   Author = {Kwon, NA},
   Title = {Images of Korea in Japanese literature},
   Pages = {64-87},
   Year = {2013},
   Month = {January},
   ISBN = {9780824838218},
   Key = {fds376512}
}

@article{fds292047,
   Author = {N.A. Kwon and Kwon, N and Kwon, NA},
   Title = {What/Where is Decolonial Asia?},
   Journal = {Social Text},
   Year = {2013},
   Month = {July},
   Key = {fds292047}
}

@article{fds292048,
   Author = {Kwon, NA},
   Title = {Conflicting nostalgia: Performing the tale of ch'unhyang
             (æ̃¥é™å) in the japanese empire},
   Journal = {Journal of Asian Studies},
   Volume = {73},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {113-141},
   Publisher = {Cambridge University Press (CUP)},
   Year = {2014},
   Month = {January},
   ISSN = {0021-9118},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S002191181300168X},
   Abstract = {In the Japanese empire in 1938, an imperial-language
             theatrical adaptation of a folktale from colonial Korea, The
             Tale of Spring Fragrance (Ch'unhyang chǒn) opened to rave
             reviews in major metropolitan cities throughout Japan. The
             performance's popularity ignited an encore run later the
             same year throughout colonial Korea. The play was
             commissioned by Murayama Tomoyoshi and his Shinkyō Theater
             Troupe in Japan. The script was penned in Japanese by Chang
             HyÇ'kchu, a bilingual writer from the colony. This article
             examines a forgotten moment of colonial collaboration
             between Korea and Japan when the two countries' literary
             histories converged in a widely publicized performance
             across the empire. By reading the tensions between parallel
             yet unbridgeable nostalgic desires between Japan and Korea,
             and measuring the gap between the consumption of the tale as
             trendy colonial kitsch and timeless national tradition, the
             performance can be read not as the embodiment of harmonious
             imperial assimilation as touted at the time, but as
             performing its anxieties and breakdown. This article further
             considers the significance of the failed collaboration and
             translation across colonial divides for postcolonial
             relations. © 2014 The Association for Asian Studies,
             Inc.},
   Doi = {10.1017/S002191181300168X},
   Key = {fds292048}
}

@book{fds292039,
   Author = {Kwon, NA},
   Title = {Intimate Empire Collaboration and Colonial Modernity in
             Korea and Japan},
   Pages = {296 pages},
   Year = {2015},
   Month = {June},
   ISBN = {9780822359258},
   Abstract = {Nayoung Aimee Kwon examines the Japanese language literature
             written by Koreans during late Japanese colonialism.},
   Key = {fds292039}
}

@article{fds326746,
   Author = {Kwon, NA},
   Title = {The Proletarian Wave: Literature and Leftist Culture in
             Colonial Korea 1910–1945 by Sunyoung Park},
   Journal = {Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies},
   Volume = {76},
   Number = {1-2},
   Pages = {266-269},
   Publisher = {Project MUSE},
   Year = {2016},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/jas.2016.0017},
   Doi = {10.1353/jas.2016.0017},
   Key = {fds326746}
}

@article{fds326745,
   Author = {Kwon, NA},
   Title = {Disavowal and Intimacy},
   Journal = {Sanghŏ Hakpo},
   Volume = {Vol 49},
   Number = {1},
   Year = {2017},
   Key = {fds326745}
}

@article{fds338093,
   Author = {Kwon, NA},
   Title = {It's Madness: The Politics of Mental Health in Colonial
             Korea. By Theodore Jun Yoo . Oakland: University of
             California Press, 2016. 248 pp. ISBN: 9780520289307
             (cloth).},
   Journal = {The Journal of Asian Studies},
   Volume = {76},
   Number = {3},
   Pages = {819-821},
   Publisher = {Duke University Press},
   Year = {2017},
   Month = {August},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0021911817000699},
   Doi = {10.1017/s0021911817000699},
   Key = {fds338093}
}

@article{fds339334,
   Title = {Zainichi Literature: Japanese Writings by Ethnic
             Koreans},
   Publisher = {University of California Berkeley Institute of East Asian
             Studies},
   Year = {2018},
   Key = {fds339334}
}

@article{fds338390,
   Author = {Kwon, NA},
   Title = {Japanophone Literature? A Transpacific Query on
             Absence},
   Journal = {MFS: Modern Fiction Studies},
   Volume = {64},
   Number = {3},
   Pages = {537-558},
   Publisher = {Johns Hopkins University Press},
   Year = {2018},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/mfs.2018.0041},
   Abstract = {This essay inquires into the significance of the absent
             category of Japanophone literature in light of the recent
             rise of a global discourse on Sinophone literature and other
             postcolonial critical genealogies. This discussion of
             broader postcolonial taxonomies sets the stage for an
             investigation into the position of Japan as a minor empire
             in relation to its European counterparts. The precarious
             location among divided literary fields of colonial Korean
             writers, such as Kim Saryang, provides a segue into linking
             contested postcolonial and cold war legacies in the
             Asia-Pacific.},
   Doi = {10.1353/mfs.2018.0041},
   Key = {fds338390}
}

@article{fds354191,
   Author = {Kwon, NA},
   Title = {Transcolonial Mis en Abyme},
   Booktitle = {Rediscovering Korean Cinema},
   Publisher = {Michigan University Press},
   Year = {2019},
   Key = {fds354191}
}

@article{fds361325,
   Author = {Kwon, NA},
   Title = {Spring in the Korean Peninsula (1941): Transcolonial Mise en
             Abyme},
   Pages = {80-94},
   Booktitle = {Rediscovering Korean Cinema},
   Year = {2019},
   Month = {December},
   ISBN = {9780472074297},
   Key = {fds361325}
}

@book{fds349465,
   Author = {Kwon, NA},
   Title = {Ch'inmilhan Cheguk},
   Publisher = {Somyong Press},
   Year = {2020},
   ISBN = {9791159054938},
   Key = {fds349465}
}

@article{fds356970,
   Author = {Kwon, NA},
   Title = {The figure of the translator: Kim Saryang between Korean and
             Japanese literatures},
   Pages = {215-224},
   Booktitle = {Routledge Handbook of Modern Korean Literature},
   Year = {2020},
   Month = {January},
   ISBN = {9781138655041},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315622811-20},
   Abstract = {Kim Saryang was a Korean author who wrote in between the
             colonial periphery of Korea and the metropolitan center of
             Japan and who served as a war correspondent during the
             subsequent onset of the Cold War during the Korean War.
             Although he was an instrumental figure during the post-1945
             transition from the colonial era to its postcolonial Cold
             War aftermath in Northeast Asia, he has been marginalized in
             the region’s variously divided national literary fields
             until recently. This chapter examines the ubiquitous but
             failed figure of the translator who appears in both the life
             and the works of Kim as an entrance into examining
             long-standing historical and historiographical
             divides.},
   Doi = {10.4324/9781315622811-20},
   Key = {fds356970}
}

@article{fds352730,
   Author = {Kwon, NA},
   Title = {The Figure of the Translator},
   Booktitle = {Routledge Handbook of Modern Korean Literature},
   Publisher = {Routledge},
   Year = {2020},
   Month = {March},
   ISBN = {9781317224136},
   Abstract = {The Routledge Handbook of Modern Korean Literature provides
             a comprehensive overview of a Korean literary tradition,
             which is understood as a multifaceted nexus of practices,
             both homegrown and transnational.},
   Key = {fds352730}
}

@book{fds352729,
   Author = {Kwon, NA},
   Title = {Theorizing Colonial Cinema: Reframing Production,
             Circulation, and Consumption of Film in Asia},
   Publisher = {Indiana University Press},
   Editor = {Kwon, N},
   Year = {2021},
   Key = {fds352729}
}

@article{fds367799,
   Author = {Kwon, NA},
   Title = {A MINOR MODERNIST’S CONUNDRUM OF REPRESENTATION: Kim
             Saryang and the Colonized I-Novel},
   Pages = {245-256},
   Booktitle = {The Routledge Companion to Korean Literature},
   Year = {2022},
   Month = {January},
   ISBN = {9780367348496},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429328411-25},
   Abstract = {This chapter explores what I call the conundrum of
             representation widely manifest in artistic expressions of
             minor modernism. The negotiations of colonial modern writer
             Kim Saryang from Korea with the metropolitan literary
             establishment of imperial Japan offer insights into broader
             global struggles of modernist authors and artists attempting
             to express their creative sovereignty in the face of
             structural inequality and devaluation of their artistic
             contributions. The chapter theorizes the concept of a
             “colonized I-novel” as a manifestation of
             ethnoracialized impasses and injunctions encountered in
             minor modernist expressions of the self as
             other.},
   Doi = {10.4324/9780429328411-25},
   Key = {fds367799}
}


%% Lee, Jung-Min Mina   
@misc{fds364996,
   Author = {Lee, J-M},
   Title = {Liner notes: Last Carnival, Accoustic Café},
   Year = {2015},
   Month = {September},
   Key = {fds364996}
}

@article{fds365476,
   Author = {Lee, J-MM},
   Title = {Singing its Way to Prosperity: Shaping the Public Mind
             through “Healthy Popular Music” in South
             Korea},
   Journal = {Music and Politics},
   Volume = {14},
   Number = {1},
   Publisher = {University of Michigan Library},
   Year = {2020},
   Month = {June},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.3998/mp.9460447.0014.105},
   Doi = {10.3998/mp.9460447.0014.105},
   Key = {fds365476}
}

@article{fds364995,
   Author = {Lee, J-M},
   Title = {Artificial Intelligence and Composition: From Algorithm
             Composition to Composition Using Deep Learning [In
             Korean]},
   Booktitle = {디지털 혁명과 음악 [Digital Revolution and
             Music]},
   Publisher = {Monopoly},
   Editor = {Oh, H-S},
   Year = {2021},
   Key = {fds364995}
}

@misc{fds364994,
   Author = {Lee, J-MM},
   Title = {Program notes: Younghi Pagh-Paan Portrait Concert, by
             Ludovico Ensemble},
   Year = {2021},
   Month = {October},
   Key = {fds364994}
}

@article{fds364993,
   Author = {Lee, J-MM},
   Title = {Foreword to You Call That Music?!: Korean Popular Music
             Through the Generations, by Young-mee Lee.},
   Publisher = {Taylor & Francis},
   Year = {2022},
   Key = {fds364993}
}

@misc{fds365008,
   Author = {Lee, J-MM},
   Title = {Program notes for Season Signature Series Concerts, The
             Chamber Orchestra of the Triangle, 2017~present},
   Year = {2022},
   Key = {fds365008}
}

@article{fds364992,
   Author = {Lee, J-MM},
   Title = {Hegemonic Mimicry: Korean Popular Culture of the
             Twenty-First Century. By KYUNG HYUN KIM. Durham: Duke
             University Press, 2021. xviii, 303 pp. ISBN: 9781478014492
             (paper).},
   Journal = {The Journal of Asian Studies},
   Volume = {82},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {260-262},
   Publisher = {Cambridge University Press},
   Year = {2023},
   Key = {fds364992}
}

@article{fds372324,
   Author = {Lee, J-MM},
   Title = {Finding the K in K-pop Musically: A Stylistic
             History},
   Pages = {51-72},
   Booktitle = {Cambridge Companion to K-pop},
   Publisher = {Cambridge University Press},
   Editor = {Kim, S-Y},
   Year = {2023},
   Key = {fds372324}
}

@article{fds372325,
   Author = {Lee, J-MM},
   Title = {Minjung Kayo: Imagining Democracy through Song in South
             Korea.},
   Journal = {Twentieth Century Music},
   Volume = {20},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {49-69},
   Publisher = {Cambridge University Press},
   Editor = {Adlington, R and Contreras Zubillaga and I},
   Year = {2023},
   Key = {fds372325}
}


%% Lee, Kun Shan C.   
@misc{fds24158,
   Title = {The Proceedings of the Southeast Conference on Chinese
             Lanaguage Teaching},
   Editor = {Wendan Li and Carolyn Lee},
   Year = {2002},
   Month = {September},
   Key = {fds24158}
}

@book{fds24159,
   Author = {K. Lee},
   Title = {Supplementary Materials for Elementary Chinese},
   Publisher = {Duke University},
   Year = {2002},
   Month = {Fall},
   Key = {fds24159}
}

@article{fds227668,
   Author = {Lee, KS},
   Title = {The dance of quality and quantity in a study abroad program:
             the Chinese case},
   Journal = {in Institute of International Education (IIE)
             Networker},
   Pages = {29-31},
   Year = {2004},
   Key = {fds227668}
}

@article{fds227671,
   Author = {Lee, K},
   Title = {Morphological instruction and Chinese character acquisition
             in CSL},
   Year = {2005},
   Abstract = {The nation-wide increasing popularity of learning Chinese as
             a foreign/second language in college has not only
             accelerated the enrollment in Chinese language courses, but
             also has inspired more and more research on Chinese as a
             Second Language Acquisition. Conventionally and
             stereotypically, the pronunciation and writing system in
             Chinese are considered a barricade to western learners who
             hesitate to learn the language or who start but are too
             frustrated to continue. The writing system, in particular,
             seems irregular and unpredictable to phonetic language
             speakers. Drawing upon psycholinguistic research on Chinese
             literacy, cognitive psychology and foreign language
             pedagogy, this paper will focus on Chinese character
             instruction in a college curriculum. Starting with a report
             on a survey done in the first two weeks of a course in
             Elementary Chinese (for true beginners) in a college, I will
             talk about how learners of Chinese who do not have previous
             exposure to Mandarin and who have not yet formally received
             character instruction interpreted Chinese characters. Unlike
             Chinese native speakers, the beginning CSL students are not
             aware of the internal structure of Chinese characters and
             thus are not able to encode and/or decode characters in
             terms of chunks representing major character components.
             Since more than 90% of modern day Chinese characters are
             comprised of semantic-phonetic compounds, it is essential
             for students of Chinese to learn about the most commonly
             used radicals (‘bushou’) as well as the phonetic
             elements which are characters themselves. Based on these
             linguistic phenomena, the author believes that character
             instruction should make use of this feature and
             systematically introduce the morphological structure of the
             characters used in the textbook. By constantly noticing
             those characters in the textbook which are ‘xingsheng’
             or semantic phonetic compound characters and systematically
             learning the morphological structure of those characters,
             the learners, hopefully, will gradually develop
             morphological awareness and the pronunciation-guessing
             ability. Backed up by research on morphological instruction
             in first language learning, I will discuss character
             instruction with regard to curriculum design and teaching
             materials that are created for Integrated Chinese Level I,
             Part I (Yao et al., 1997). Examples of those characters and
             the exercises designed for character instruction will be
             introduced. This paper will conclude with a post-survey on
             the result of morphological instruction as well as
             suggesting other strategies to improve character
             instruction.},
   Key = {fds227671}
}

@proceedings{fds227689,
   Author = {Lee, K},
   Title = {Evaluating the Role of On-line Multimedia Teaching Materials
             for Upper-level Chinese Courses},
   Pages = {pp304-309},
   Booktitle = {Proceedings of Operational Strategies and Pedagogy for
             Chinese Language Programs in the 21st Century: An
             International Symposium},
   Editor = {Teng, S-H and Hsin, S-C and Domizio, H-HL},
   Year = {2005},
   Abstract = {While the lack of the target cultural environment is one of
             the most challenging situations for the professionals who
             teach Chinese as a second language in the U.S., many of us
             have tackled the situation by employing technology and
             multimedia teaching materials in curriculum development and
             classroom instruction. In order to create a meaningful
             social-cultural context for learners of Chinese, the author
             will assess the potential of web-based teaching materials by
             evaluating a series of on-line video modules which were
             created for upper-level Chinese language courses in 2000
             (http://www.duke.edu/ kslee). Based on evaluations and notes
             from interviews of colleagues and students who have used
             these online video modules, I will examine the role of these
             multimedia materials in teaching the Chinese language and
             culture. The pros and cons of creating teaching materials of
             this kind will also be discussed. Initially created to
             enhance listening and speaking skills of advanced Chinese
             language learners by introducing major social phenomena and
             changes in modern Chinese society, the design of these
             online teaching/learning materials has also raised other
             issues in foreign language education. By incorporating the
             China-related subjects taught by faculty from other
             departments into the topics of the video modules, the
             process of making these teaching materials created a
             connection between the language program and the faculty who
             usually teach content courses on campus. The learners are
             able to apply knowledge gained from learning the materials
             in the language class to the China-related courses they take
             in other departments, and vise versa. The incorporation of
             the inter-disciplinary approach has, in turn, made the
             learning experience of Chinese language in a non-target
             cultural environment less marginalized or isolated.
             Appealing to the social-constructivist theory, the author
             will examine such an approach in terms of the teacher’s
             practice, the learners’ perspective on the online
             multimedia teaching/learning materials and the result of
             learning with regard to aspects of linguistic and cultural
             acquisition in CSL.},
   Key = {fds227689}
}

@article{fds227702,
   Author = {Li, J and Lee, K-S},
   Title = {The radicals’ importance for Chinese characters’
             cognition},
   Journal = {Journal of Chinese Teaching in the World},
   Volume = {vol 4},
   Year = {2005},
   Month = {Winter},
   Abstract = {The language curriculum is divided into two tracks in
             Elementary Chinese at the Chinese Program in Duke
             University, United States. A survey on how these two groups
             of students apply the strategies of radical recognition and
             the strategies of decoding the function of Chinese radicals
             are investigated in this paper. By examining the process of
             distinguishing the radicals that are approximate in form,
             the influence of homophone characters, the consciousness on
             semantic extension of Chinese radicals, degree of
             understanding of derivation and so on, the authors found
             that there are the similarities and differences between the
             two type of learners. Finally, we discuss the importance of
             Chinese radicals in the cognitive procedure of Chinese
             characters from different aspects e.g. writing, aggregating
             characters and clue to the meanings.},
   Key = {fds227702}
}

@article{fds227690,
   Author = {Li, J and Lee, K-S},
   Title = {The Graphic Factor in the Teaching and Learning of Chinese
             Characters},
   Journal = {The Journal of the Chinese Language Teachers Association
             (JCLTA)},
   Volume = {Volume: 41},
   Number = {No: 1},
   Pages = {79-92},
   Editor = {Ling, V},
   Year = {2006},
   Abstract = {Chinese characters often leave people with a strong image
             due to the fact that meanings are conveyed through the
             graphic shapes of the characters. Most learners who are
             literate in Chinese and Japanese are able to recognize
             characters by identifying and matching them with lexical
             items in their languages. However, for learners who are
             European and American, or whose first language is phonemic
             and who have little previous exposure to Chinese characters,
             the meaning of a character is created based on their own
             interpretation of the graphic shapes of the characters
             encountered. Unlike learners of Chinese and Japanese, whose
             decoding strategies for characters are rule-governed, the
             American and European learners treat a character as a whole
             graphic unit and, regardless of a lack of knowledge of the
             formal rules of dismantling a character, which Chinese and
             Japanese learners use, take the characters apart and
             attribute meanings to the strokes and parts according to
             their imagination and likeness to the shape of the
             characters. Although the decoding process is also based on
             their previous learning experiences and the cognitive
             processing of graphics, their manners of decoding characters
             are spontaneous and imaginative. Nevertheless, both types of
             learners demonstrate that the visual stimulation induced by
             the graphic shapes of the characters is an indispensable
             source for recognizing characters even for those whose first
             languages may be quite different. Experimental research
             about the cognitive processing of Chinese characters proves
             that the shape of the characters is always the first element
             to be visually stimulated, i.e. the first step in the whole
             cognitive process of recognizing the characters. Although
             the process starts with characterizing the shapes of the
             characters, the characterization is not to any degree
             enhanced by or interfered with the frequency of the
             characters. In this study, the authors confirm the critical
             role of the graphic shapes of the characters in the
             cognitive process of recognizing the characters and in the
             pedagogy of Chinese as a second language. We discuss why and
             how the knowledge of the graphic shapes of the characters is
             essential to the understanding of both sounds and meanings
             of the characters. An analysis is made of the types of
             errors in character recognition made by learners of Chinese
             as a second language and how those errors interfere with the
             cognitive process of recognizing the characters. With regard
             to the pedagogy of Chinese as a second language, the authors
             believe that it is important to systematically and
             selectively introduce the etymologies of certain characters
             so as to overcome the difficulties and confusions raised by
             the polysemous graphemes, homophonic characters, phonetic
             loan-characters, mutilated characters and the characters
             that were simplified. Since many characters have been
             transformed and thus have lost the etymological connections
             with their original forms, it is reasonable to adopt modern
             interpretations that may not be based on the true etymology,
             but have become accepted in the interpretation of the
             graphic shapes of the characters.},
   Key = {fds227690}
}

@misc{fds227672,
   Author = {Lee, K},
   Title = {Using Technology to Enhance the Teaching of Content-Based
             Business Chinese”},
   Year = {2006},
   Abstract = {Studies indicate that the application of technologies in
             foreign language instruction can improve the classroom
             dynamics and make the learning process less arduous and
             time-intensive. One of the most common practices for foreign
             language teachers is to use authentic material such as a
             news article, criticism, literature work, or a video or
             audio clip from a broadcasting internet service to
             supplement the main texts taught in class. Such an
             application is especially useful with upper level language
             courses because the potential of the learners to benefit
             from authentic materials is greater. Nevertheless, adapting
             such materials for business Chinese and the assessment on
             the effectiveness of such application in CFL instruction has
             yet to be investigated. Drawing on research from cognitive
             load theory and task-based communicative theory, the author
             will explore the following questions in this paper: 1)
             whether the learners’ performance on transfer problems is
             increased, 2) whether a level of true understanding that
             enables students to solve a wider range of problems is
             generated, 3) whether the disparate levels in students’
             proficiency and learning ability in a CFL classroom can be
             alleviated, through a technology-based instructional module
             employed in an Advanced CFL course “Chinese Economics and
             Society” at a four-year undergraduate CFL curriculum in
             the U.S. This course is equivalent with Business Chinese
             offered in some Chinese programs in colleges. Specifically
             aiming at facilitating listening comprehension and fostering
             the understanding of the target culture and society through
             an online multimedia instructional module, this paper will
             assess the role of technology and the effects of
             implementing an interdisciplinary approach in a language
             specific upper-level CFL course. Through a comparison of the
             results of a pre-test and post-test with several groups of
             students who have been introduced to this instructional
             design, the author will look at how such instruction
             combining conventional and online multimedia instructional
             materials change and affect the learners’ success at
             learning Chinese as a foreign language.},
   Key = {fds227672}
}

@article{fds167811,
   Author = {Carolyn K-S Lee},
   Title = {Using Technology to Enhance the Teaching of Content-Based
             Business Chinese},
   Year = {2006},
   Key = {fds167811}
}

@misc{fds52475,
   Author = {K. Lee},
   Title = {Using Technology to Enhance the Teaching of Content-Based
             Business Chinese”},
   Year = {2006},
   Abstract = {Studies indicate that the application of technologies in
             foreign language instruction can improve the classroom
             dynamics and make the learning process less arduous and
             time-intensive. One of the most common practices for foreign
             language teachers is to use authentic material such as a
             news article, criticism, literature work, or a video or
             audio clip from a broadcasting internet service to
             supplement the main texts taught in class. Such an
             application is especially useful with upper level language
             courses because the potential of the learners to benefit
             from authentic materials is greater. Nevertheless, adapting
             such materials for business Chinese and the assessment on
             the effectiveness of such application in CFL instruction has
             yet to be investigated. Drawing on research from cognitive
             load theory and task-based communicative theory, the author
             will explore the following questions in this paper: 1)
             whether the learners’ performance on transfer problems is
             increased, 2) whether a level of true understanding that
             enables students to solve a wider range of problems is
             generated, 3) whether the disparate levels in students’
             proficiency and learning ability in a CFL classroom can be
             alleviated, through a technology-based instructional module
             employed in an Advanced CFL course “Chinese Economics and
             Society” at a four-year undergraduate CFL curriculum in
             the U.S. This course is equivalent with Business Chinese
             offered in some Chinese programs in colleges. Specifically
             aiming at facilitating listening comprehension and fostering
             the understanding of the target culture and society through
             an online multimedia instructional module, this paper will
             assess the role of technology and the effects of
             implementing an interdisciplinary approach in a language
             specific upper-level CFL course. Through a comparison of the
             results of a pre-test and post-test with several groups of
             students who have been introduced to this instructional
             design, the author will look at how such instruction
             combining conventional and online multimedia instructional
             materials change and affect the learners’ success at
             learning Chinese as a foreign language.},
   Key = {fds52475}
}

@article{fds227687,
   Author = {Lee, KS},
   Title = {Evaluating the Effectiveness of Scaffolding in One-on-one
             Sessions of a Study-Abroad Program},
   Booktitle = {Chinese as a Second/Foreign Language in the Study-abroad
             Context},
   Publisher = {Beijing University Press},
   Editor = {Lee, K-S},
   Year = {2008},
   Month = {Spring},
   Abstract = {Abstract: For students in an immersion study abroad program,
             the curricu-lar setting is the target cultural environment:
             It is desirable to take advan-tage of the environment by
             implementing a language partner program and one-on-one
             sessions. This paper investigates the value of the
             one-on-one sessions in the language partner component and in
             the conventional cur-riculum of a U.S.-based study-abroad
             program in China. A case study with two “successful
             language learners” illuminates the interaction and
             discourse between the learners and teachers in one-on-one
             sessions and the learners’ meetings with their language
             partners. The author interpreted video-tapes of those
             meetings within the framework of Vygotsky’s theory of zone
             of proximal development (ZPD) to examine the effectiveness
             of different in-structional strategies and the
             characteristics of interaction between the learners and
             teachers or peers. The accuracy of the observations and
             analy-sis of the discourse from video-tapes were validated
             by a questionnaire and by interviewing both learners upon
             their return from the SA program. Pro-ficiency tests were
             used to gauge the learners’ progress.},
   Key = {fds227687}
}

@article{fds167813,
   Author = {Carolyn Lee and Clare Tufts and Ingeborg Walther (In alphabetic
             order by last name)},
   Title = {“Evaluation of the Foreign Language Requirement at Duke
             University”},
   Year = {2008},
   Key = {fds167813}
}

@article{fds167796,
   Author = {Carolyn Lee and Liliana Paredes and Clare Tufts and Ingeborg
             Walther (In alphabetic order by last name)},
   Title = {“Evaluating the Foreign Language Requirement at Duke
             University”},
   Year = {2008},
   Key = {fds167796}
}

@manual{fds140700,
   Title = {Chinese as a Second/Foreign Language in the Study-Abroad
             Context},
   Publisher = {Beijing University Press},
   Editor = {Carolyn K-S Lee (Chief eidtor) et al.},
   Year = {2008},
   Month = {Spring},
   Keywords = {Chinese as second language study-abroad cross-cultural
             communication},
   Abstract = {"Chinese as a Second/Foreign Language in the Study-abroad
             Context" consists of twenty-four articles written by
             experienced educators and scholars from the field of
             Teaching Chinese as a Second/Foreign Language. With a mix of
             articles written in English and Chinese, this volume covers
             a wide range of topics including curriculum
             development,learners' motivations, learning outcomes,
             cross-cultural communication, teacher development, K-12
             study-abroad education, etc. Every article includes both
             Chinese and English abstracts.},
   Key = {fds140700}
}

@article{fds227697,
   Author = {Lee, K-S},
   Title = {Chinese Society in the New Millennium},
   Year = {2009},
   url = {http://www.duke.edu/web/chinesesoc/},
   Abstract = {This multimedia website, which consists of a series of video
             modules, is designed for advanced learners of Chinese as a
             second language. This project attempts to facilitate
             learning opportunities in a non-target cultural environment
             and expose the learners to select major issues and changes
             in contemporary Chinese society culturally and
             linguistically.},
   Key = {fds227697}
}

@article{fds227698,
   Author = {Lee, K-S and Li, J},
   Title = {Chinese Character Practice Website},
   Year = {2009},
   url = {http://www.duke.edu/web/chinesesoc/character/index.html},
   Abstract = {This website is designed for beginners of Chinese as a
             second language. Based on the Chinese characters that appear
             in the textbook Integrated Chinese Level 1, Part I by
             Tao-chung Yao et al., this website contains supplementary
             material designed to provide reference and to enhance the
             students understanding of the importance of the semantic and
             phonetic components in Chinese characters.},
   Key = {fds227698}
}

@misc{fds227674,
   Author = {Lee, K},
   Title = {Scaffolding Culture through online multimedia materials to
             advanced learners of Chinese as a Second
             Language},
   Year = {2010},
   Abstract = {This paper examined the effectiveness of a multimedia
             website specifically designed for advanced learners of
             Chinese as a second language (CSL) in terms of its design,
             development, and implementation of the materials from the
             website into a traditional foreign language classroom
             instruction. Drawing research from Socio-Cultural theory in
             Second Language Acquisition, this paper discussed the
             rationale behind the design of the teaching materials which
             aim at enhancing critical listening skills and cultural
             literacy.},
   Key = {fds227674}
}

@misc{fds227675,
   Author = {Lee, CK-S},
   Title = {“Integrative approaches to enhance Chinese as a second
             language listening”},
   Year = {2010},
   Key = {fds227675}
}

@book{fds227700,
   Author = {Lee, CK and Liang, HH and Jiao, LW and Wheatley, J},
   Title = {Crossing cultural boundary: A multimedia advanced-Chinese
             course},
   Publisher = {Routledge Publication},
   Year = {2010},
   Month = {January},
   ISSN = {0415774071},
   url = {http://www.routledge.com/books/The-Routledge-Advanced-Chinese-Multimedia-Course-isbn9780415774079},
   Abstract = {Crossing Cultural Boundaries (文化纵横观)is a
             structured presentation of text and online supporting
             materials dealing with contemporary China, designed for
             students who have completed the foundation levels of Chinese
             language and are embarking on more specialized work, at a
             level that can be roughly characterized as ‘advanced’.
             The book covers four thematic units: popular culture, social
             change, cultural traditions and politics and history. The
             four units contain a total of twelve lessons, including
             lively and detailed discussions of grammatical points and
             sentence patterns, a variety of tasked-based activities,
             exercises for developing grammatical concepts and insight
             into the character writing system, systematic review of
             earlier material, and extensive cultural and historical
             notes to provide background to the subjects presented. The
             online teachers’ manual consists of sections on teaching
             tips, a key for exercises, references and suggested
             resources, and additional supplementary materials and
             classroom activities. The online materials include a link to
             a multimedia website with video modules that form the basis
             of listening activities geared to the topics presented in
             the book. Crossing Cultural Boundaries offers advanced
             learners of Chinese a chance to consolidate their foundation
             in the language and improve language skills and cultural
             literacy, and begin a transition to authentic Chinese
             literary texts.},
   Key = {fds227700}
}

@book{fds350851,
   Author = {Lee, K and Ling, V and Kubler, C and Liang, H-H},
   Title = {Chinese as a Second/Foreign Language in the Study-Abroad
             Context. Reprint},
   Publisher = {Beijing University Press},
   Year = {2010},
   Month = {October},
   Key = {fds350851}
}

@misc{fds227676,
   Author = {Lee, K},
   Title = {“A Theme-based Multimedia Course for Advanced Learners of
             Chinese as a Second Language”},
   Year = {2011},
   Key = {fds227676}
}

@misc{fds227677,
   Author = {Lee, K},
   Title = {Blending Task-based Approach in Multimedia Content for
             Advanced Chinese},
   Year = {2011},
   Key = {fds227677}
}

@misc{fds227678,
   Author = {Lee, K},
   Title = {“Scaffolding Culture through Online Multimedia Materials
             to Advanced Learners of Chinese as a Second
             Language”},
   Year = {2011},
   Month = {January},
   Key = {fds227678}
}

@misc{fds227679,
   Author = {Lee, CK-S},
   Title = {“Articulating K-16 CFL/CSL Curriculum through Task-Based
             Instruction”},
   Year = {2012},
   Key = {fds227679}
}

@misc{fds227680,
   Author = {Lee, CK-S},
   Title = {“The suitability of task type in different social-cultural
             context”},
   Year = {2012},
   Key = {fds227680}
}

@article{fds227699,
   Author = {Lee, K-S},
   Title = {The Effect of a Content-Oriented, Task-based Approach for
             Advanced CFL Curriculum: Fostering Form and
             More},
   Journal = {proceedings of the International Conference on Chinese for
             Specific Purposes and Teaching Chinese Culture},
   Year = {2012},
   Month = {June},
   Keywords = {Chinese as a second langauge second language
             acquisition},
   Abstract = {As Chinese as foreign or second (CFL/CSL) language learners
             continue their study into advanced levels, their motivation
             in the pursuit of advanced linguistic development in Chinese
             is usually entwined with their desire to pursue a deeper and
             broader understanding of the target culture and the
             development of their professional profiles. Curriculum
             design and pedagogy for an advanced CFL course must be
             tailored to learning needs and strive for an intellectual
             connection with Chinese area studies as the majority of the
             learners in advanced CFL course have a background in
             China-related subjects. Based on a needs analysis and
             feedback collected from learners, this paper investigates
             the effect of a content-oriented, task-based approach
             implemented in a curriculum model designed for an advanced
             Chinese course in an American university. The goals and
             objectives of the curriculum are determined by referring to
             the Proficiency Guidelines established by the ACTFL
             (American Council for the Teaching of Foreign Languages) and
             the Standards for Foreign Language Learning (i.e.
             Communication, Cultures, Connections, Comparisons, and
             Communities). Drawing research from content-based
             instruction (CBI) and task-based approach in Second Language
             Acquisition and language teaching, the paper will evaluate
             the curriculum by looking at the syllabus and the materials
             designed to facilitate CFL/CSL teaching and learning in a
             social and cultural context. Using stimulating content in
             subject matter as a vehicle to engage learners in
             appropriate language-focused follow-up activities supports
             contextualized learning rather than learning language as
             isolated fragments. The method of integrating CBI and a
             task-based approach will be demonstrated through lesson
             plans and a series of instructional activities that
             incorporate online multimedia resources into reading
             materials in different theme-based units such as Cultural
             Traditions, History and Politics. Students can develop a
             wider understanding of the subject matter through CBI as
             they evaluate information taken from different sources. The
             online multimedia learning resources and task-based
             activities are delivered through a scaffolding process so as
             to cultivate students’ listening competencies through both
             top-down and bottom-up strategies while exploring the depth
             of the subject matter. The course is concluded with a final
             project that aims at synergizing students holistic academic
             skills and helping them develop advanced reading and writing
             competencies in Chinese for academic purposes. The
             learners’ responses to the content-oriented, task-based
             approach for the advance Chinese curriculum will be
             evaluated through rubrics, surveys and interviews. The
             content-oriented and task-based instruction can optimize
             teaching and learning advanced Chinese as foreign and second
             language.},
   Key = {fds227699}
}

@misc{fds227681,
   Author = {Lee, K-SC},
   Title = {Best practices for a college Chinese Language
             program},
   Publisher = {2013 Southeast Chinese Language Conference, Confucius
             Institute at NC State, Raleigh, NC},
   Year = {2013},
   Month = {September},
   Key = {fds227681}
}

@misc{fds227682,
   Author = {Lee, K-SC},
   Title = {Teaching cross-cultural communication in the CFL
             context},
   Publisher = {China and the World Conference: Diversity of Civilization
             and Cross-cultural Communication, National Humanities
             Center, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina},
   Year = {2013},
   Month = {October},
   Key = {fds227682}
}

@article{fds227683,
   Author = {Lee, K-SC},
   Title = {Evaluating the placement assessment in a CFL curricula at
             the University level},
   Year = {2014},
   Abstract = {“Placement,” in the context of teaching Chinese as a
             foreign language (TCFL), in college level often cannot be
             simply resolved by a single test on foreign language skills:
             It is a process involving a pre-entry proficiency test,
             post-entry orientation and continuous adjustment from both
             the learners and the teachers in and outside of classroom
             instruction. The placement process, however, has yet to be
             examined carefully in terms of its implications for learning
             needs and motivation as well as the challenges that the CFL
             learner, who had previous exposure in Chinese language
             education before coming to college, is deemed to take due to
             the different academic expectations and instructional goals
             between a pre-college CFL curriculum and a college CFL
             curriculum. This paper intends to investigate and answer the
             following research questions: 1) What are the learning needs
             and motivation in CFL learners who had previous exposure to
             the Chinese language compared to students who learn Chinese
             from scratch in college? 2) What should a college CFL
             program do to prepare learners with previous exposure to
             Chinese to ensure adequate readiness to enter a CFL
             classroom in college, specifically during the placement
             process? Drawing research from second language acquisition
             and instructional methods, this study will conduct a pilot
             project with a Chinese language program at an American
             university and a high school CFL program through a survey,
             the placement test results, and class observations.},
   Key = {fds227683}
}

@book{fds227701,
   Author = {Lee, K-SC and Liang, HH and Jiao, LW and Wheatley,
             J},
   Title = {The Routledge Advanced Chinese Multimedia Course: Crossing
             Cultural Boundaries, 2nd Edition.},
   Publisher = {Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group},
   Address = {London and New York},
   Year = {2014},
   Month = {March},
   Abstract = {The book is divided into four thematic units covering
             popular culture, social change, cultural traditions, and
             politics and history, with each unit presenting three
             individual lessons. The volume provides students with a
             structured course which efficiently supports the transition
             from an intermediate to an advanced level. The many
             different texts featured throughout the lessons present
             interesting and accurate information about contemporary
             China and introduce students to useful vocabulary, speech
             patterns, and idiosyncratic language usage.},
   Key = {fds227701}
}

@article{fds227684,
   Author = {Lee, K-SC and al, E},
   Title = {Instructor’s Resource Manual for The Routledge Advanced
             Chinese Multimedia Course: Crossing Cultural
             Boundaries},
   Publisher = {Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group},
   Year = {2014},
   Month = {March},
   Key = {fds227684}
}

@article{fds350850,
   Author = {Thompson, RJ and Walther, I and Tufts, C and Lee, KC and Paredes, L and Fellin, L and Andrews, E and Serra, M and Hill, JL and Tate, EB and Schlosberg, L},
   Title = {Development and Assessment of the Effectiveness of an
             Undergraduate General Education Foreign Language
             Requirement},
   Journal = {Foreign Language Annals},
   Volume = {47},
   Number = {4},
   Pages = {653-668},
   Year = {2014},
   Month = {December},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/flan.12112},
   Abstract = {This article describes a faculty-led, multiyear process of
             formulating learning objectives and assessing the
             effectiveness of a foreign language requirement for all
             College of Arts and Sciences undergraduates at a research
             university. Three interrelated research questions were
             addressed: (1) What were the levels and patterns of language
             courses completed under the language requirement compared to
             those under the previous curriculum? (2) To what extent was
             the oral proficiency learning objective being attained? and
             (3) How did oral proficiency vary by course level and the
             patterns of courses completed to satisfy the language
             requirement? The oral proficiency of 614 students was
             assessed with the Simulated Oral Proficiency Interview and
             categorized in terms of ACTFL ratings. Study findings
             indicated that 76% of students met or exceeded the objective
             of the Intermediate Mid level of oral proficiency and that
             oral proficiency differed by course level and the pattern of
             courses completed to satisfy the language requirement. In
             particular, the impact of completing an advanced-level
             course was clear, which in turn had implications for
             curricular policies and academic advising. It is argued that
             faculty-led evaluation of program effectiveness, in which
             assessment approaches are both summative and formative and
             findings are routinely used to improve educational practices
             as well as document student learning, is the necessary
             context for developing an evidence-based approach to
             undergraduate language education.},
   Doi = {10.1111/flan.12112},
   Key = {fds350850}
}

@book{fds350849,
   Author = {Tang, Y and Lee, KC and Yu, P and Xu, L and Zhang, J},
   Title = {Acting Chinese An Intermediate-advanced Course in Discourse
             and Behavioral Culture},
   Pages = {336 pages},
   Publisher = {Routledge},
   Year = {2020},
   Month = {April},
   ISBN = {9781138064577},
   Abstract = {Acting Chinese is a year-long course that, together with the
             companion website, integrates language learning with the
             acquisition of cultural knowledge, and treats culture as an
             integral part of human behavior and communication.},
   Key = {fds350849}
}


%% Liu, Kang   
@book{fds293941,
   Author = {Kang, L and Xiguang, L},
   Title = {Media Bombing: Reflections on Media and Kosovo},
   Publisher = {Nanjing: Jiangsu People’s Press},
   Year = {1999},
   Key = {fds293941}
}

@book{fds293942,
   Author = {Kang, L},
   Title = {Aesthetics and Marxism: Chinese Aesthetic Marxists and Their
             Western Contemporaries},
   Publisher = {Duke University Press},
   Year = {2000},
   Key = {fds293942}
}

@article{fds293965,
   Author = {Liu Kang},
   Title = {“Globalization and Contemporary Chinese Cultural Trends,
             Interview with Liu Kang (by Anbin Shi)”},
   Journal = {Cultural Studies: China and the West},
   Volume = {1},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {92-110},
   Year = {2000},
   Key = {fds293965}
}

@article{fds293963,
   Author = {Liu Kang},
   Title = {“Rethinking the Aesthetic Debate in the 1950s and
             1960s”},
   Journal = {Literature Review},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {34-59},
   Year = {2000},
   Month = {March},
   Key = {fds293963}
}

@article{fds293964,
   Author = {Liu Kang},
   Title = {“Agenda Setting in Reports about China in International
             Communication---Reporting Falun Gong in American
             Media”},
   Journal = {The Journal of International Communication},
   Number = {6},
   Pages = {11-14},
   Publisher = {Beijing: Chinese Academy of Social Sciences
             Press},
   Year = {2000},
   Month = {November},
   Key = {fds293964}
}

@book{fds293943,
   Author = {Kang, L},
   Title = {Globalization and Nationalism},
   Publisher = {Tianjin: Tianjin People’s Press},
   Year = {2002},
   Key = {fds293943}
}

@article{fds293932,
   Author = {Kang, L},
   Title = {"Internet in China—Emergent Cultural Formations and
             Contradictions"},
   Booktitle = {Globalization and the Humanities},
   Publisher = {Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press},
   Editor = {Li, D},
   Year = {2002},
   Key = {fds293932}
}

@article{fds293966,
   Author = {Liu Kang},
   Title = {“Globalization, Media, and Ideology: U.S. Media
             Representation of China”},
   Journal = {International Communication and Cultural
             Studies},
   Volume = {14},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {323-350},
   Publisher = {Beijing: Remin University of China Press},
   Year = {2002},
   Month = {July},
   Key = {fds293966}
}

@book{fds293944,
   Author = {Kang, L},
   Title = {Globalization and Cultural Trends in China},
   Publisher = {Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press},
   Year = {2003},
   Key = {fds293944}
}

@article{fds293933,
   Author = {Kang, L},
   Title = {“Emergent Globalism and Ideological Change in
             Post-revolutionary China”},
   Booktitle = {Rethinking Globalism},
   Publisher = {Lanham MD: Rowman and Littlefield},
   Editor = {Steger, MB},
   Year = {2003},
   Key = {fds293933}
}

@article{fds293968,
   Author = {Liu Kang},
   Title = {“Reinventing the‘Red Classics’in Contemporary
             China”},
   Journal = {Comparative Literature in China},
   Volume = {26},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {13-30},
   Publisher = {Shanghai International Studies University
             Press},
   Year = {2003},
   Month = {February},
   Key = {fds293968}
}

@article{fds293967,
   Author = {Liu Kang},
   Title = {“The Short-Lived Avant-Garde: The Transformation of Yu
             Hua”},
   Journal = {Modern Language Quarterly.},
   Volume = {63},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {89-118},
   Year = {2003},
   Month = {March},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/00267929-63-1-89},
   Doi = {10.1215/00267929-63-1-89},
   Key = {fds293967}
}

@book{fds293931,
   Author = {Liu, K},
   Title = {Globalization and Cultural Trends in China},
   Pages = {208 pages},
   Publisher = {University of Hawaii Press},
   Year = {2004},
   ISBN = {9780824827595},
   Abstract = {In this timely and provocative work, Liu Kang argues that
             globalization is not simply a new conceptual framework
             through which cultural change in China can be understood; it
             is a historical condition in which the country&#39;s gaige
             kaifang ...},
   Key = {fds293931}
}

@book{fds18428,
   Author = {Liu Kang},
   Title = {Globalization and Cultural Trends in China},
   Publisher = {Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press},
   Year = {2004},
   Key = {fds18428}
}

@book{fds18442,
   Author = {Liu Kang},
   Title = {Globalization and Cultural Trends in China},
   Publisher = {Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press},
   Year = {2004},
   Key = {fds18442}
}

@article{fds293958,
   Author = {Liu, K},
   Title = {“Speaking Truth to Power----Edward Said and Public
             Intellectual on the Left”},
   Journal = {Frontier (Tianya)},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {17-26},
   Year = {2004},
   Month = {January},
   Key = {fds293958}
}

@article{fds293962,
   Author = {Liu Kang},
   Title = {“Comments on Area Studies, China Studies, and Cultural
             Studies”},
   Journal = {Shanghai Journal of Social Sciences},
   Volume = {9},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {4-19},
   Year = {2005},
   Month = {Summer},
   Key = {fds293962}
}

@article{fds293959,
   Author = {Liu Kang},
   Title = {“Prefix of Post- and Neo- in American Culture
             Today”},
   Journal = {Culture Review},
   Number = {8},
   Pages = {9-17},
   Publisher = {Shanghai},
   Year = {2005},
   Month = {August},
   Key = {fds293959}
}

@article{fds293961,
   Author = {Liu Kang},
   Title = {“The Neo- and the Post- in Contemporary Western Social
             Thoughts”},
   Journal = {Wenjing (Cultural Perspectives)},
   Volume = {8 (2005)},
   Pages = {18-33},
   Publisher = {Shanghai},
   Year = {2005},
   Month = {August},
   Key = {fds293961}
}

@article{fds293960,
   Author = {Liu Kang},
   Title = {“Western Studies of Chinese Muslim: A Critical
             Review”},
   Journal = {Journal of Muslim Studies},
   Volume = {15},
   Number = {4},
   Pages = {4-16},
   Publisher = {Beijing},
   Year = {2005},
   Month = {Fall},
   Key = {fds293960}
}

@article{fds293937,
   Author = {Kang, L},
   Title = {Cultural and Media Globalization},
   Pages = {281-281},
   Booktitle = {book},
   Publisher = {Nanjing University Press},
   Year = {2006},
   Key = {fds293937}
}

@article{fds293957,
   Author = {K. Liu and Lawrence Grossberg},
   Title = {“Articulation, Context, and Conjuncture----Dialogue on
             Cultural Studies”},
   Journal = {Journal of Nanjing University},
   Volume = {2007},
   Number = {3},
   Pages = {75-83},
   Publisher = {Nanjing University Press},
   Year = {2007},
   Month = {March},
   ISSN = {1007-7278},
   Key = {fds293957}
}

@article{fds293956,
   Author = {K. Liu and Lawrence Grossberg},
   Title = {“Cultural Studies: A Dialogue with Lawrence
             Grossberg,”},
   Journal = {China Book Review},
   Volume = {2007},
   Number = {4},
   Pages = {104-109},
   Year = {2007},
   Month = {April},
   url = {http://www.cbr.org.cn/},
   Key = {fds293956}
}

@article{fds293938,
   Author = {Liu, K},
   Title = {“From Area Studies to Cultural Studies: The Paradigmatic
             Changes in Humanities and Social Sciences”},
   Journal = {Literature and Arts Studies},
   Volume = {2007},
   Number = {6},
   Pages = {12-21},
   Publisher = {Literature and Arts Studies Publishers},
   Editor = {Arts, CAO},
   Year = {2007},
   Month = {June},
   ISSN = {ISSN 0257-5876},
   Key = {fds293938}
}

@article{fds293934,
   Author = {Liu, K},
   Title = {“Crisis in Western Intellectual Left”},
   Volume = {2007},
   Number = {12},
   Publisher = {Academic Monthly Publishers},
   Address = {xuesyka@public3.sta.net.cn},
   Editor = {Association, SSS},
   Year = {2007},
   Month = {December},
   ISSN = {0439-8041},
   Key = {fds293934}
}

@article{fds293935,
   Author = {Liu, K},
   Title = {"Postcolonialism and Cultural Studies"},
   Booktitle = {Introduction to Cultural Studies},
   Publisher = {Fudan University Press},
   Editor = {Yang, L},
   Year = {2008},
   ISBN = {978-7-309-05835-2/G.727},
   Key = {fds293935}
}

@article{fds293936,
   Author = {Liu, K},
   Title = {"Cultural Studies: Methods,Theories, and Chinese
             Issues"},
   Booktitle = {Introduction to Cultural Studies},
   Publisher = {Fudan University Press},
   Editor = {Yang, L},
   Year = {2008},
   Key = {fds293936}
}

@article{fds142604,
   Author = {K. Liu},
   Title = {"Cultural Studies: Mehtods,Theories, and Chinese
             Issues"},
   Booktitle = {Introduction to Cultural Studies},
   Publisher = {Fudan University Press},
   Editor = {Lu Yang},
   Year = {2008},
   ISBN = {978-7-309-05835-2/G.727},
   Key = {fds142604}
}

@book{fds293946,
   Author = {Kang, L and Xian, Z},
   Title = {Contemporary Chinese Media Culture},
   Publisher = {Peking University Press},
   Year = {2010},
   Key = {fds293946}
}

@book{fds305927,
   Author = {Liu, K},
   Title = {China’s Global Image and Political Communication},
   Publisher = {Shanghai Jiaotong University Press},
   Year = {2010},
   Key = {fds305927}
}

@article{fds293939,
   Author = {Liu, K},
   Title = {“China’s New Cultural Identity”},
   Journal = {Studies in Literature and Arts (wenyi yanjiu)},
   Volume = {7},
   Pages = {1-18},
   Year = {2010},
   Key = {fds293939}
}

@article{fds293953,
   Author = {Liu, K},
   Title = {The Moderators of International Communication and Western
             "China Hands"},
   Journal = {Modern Communication},
   Year = {2010},
   ISSN = {1002-7149},
   Key = {fds293953}
}

@book{fds186791,
   Author = {K. Liu},
   Title = {China's Gobal Image and Political Communication},
   Publisher = {Shanghai Jiaotong University Press},
   Year = {2010},
   Key = {fds186791}
}

@article{fds293952,
   Author = {Liu, K},
   Title = {Western Image and Discourse on Tibet},
   Journal = {China Tibetology},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {1-23},
   Year = {2010},
   Month = {January},
   ISSN = {1002-9060},
   Key = {fds293952}
}

@article{fds293954,
   Author = {Liu, K},
   Title = {Reinventing the “Red Classics” in the age of
             globalization},
   Journal = {Neohelicon},
   Volume = {37},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {329-347},
   Publisher = {Springer},
   Year = {2010},
   Month = {Spring},
   ISSN = {0324-4652},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11059-009-0031-3},
   Abstract = {Abstract The resurgence of revolutionary literature or Red
             Classics at the turn of the century is indicative of the
             cultural logic of the revolutionary hegemony during Mao and
             post-Mao China. Revolutionary hegemony served quite
             effectively to legitimate Mao Zedong’s, and much of Deng
             Xiaoping’s reign, but it has become increasingly difficult
             to sustain its viability and efficacy. From the beginning of
             the new century, both the state and consumer popular culture
             sectors have pushed for a Red Classic resurgence. While the
             ideological content and styles of the Red Classics are
             apparently incommensurable to China’s social reality
             today, their current popularity suggests a success in
             capturing or eliciting emotional responses from the audience
             primarily derived from their lived and felt experience
             during the Mao era. For the state, the Red Classics and the
             entire revolutionary legacy can now exist only as mummies of
             history, serving as a nationalist, “patriotic” narrative
             of the recent past. Meanwhile, the Red Classics is
             reinvented as nostalgia, a commodity in China’s cultural
             market. The paper examines the genealogy and current
             reinvention of the Red Classics, in order to shed some light
             on China’s post-revolutionary cultural politics.
             http://www.springerlink.com/content/2661414324308725/},
   Doi = {10.1007/s11059-009-0031-3},
   Key = {fds293954}
}

@article{fds293951,
   Author = {Liu, K},
   Title = {China's Soft Power and Media Culture},
   Journal = {Literature and Arts Studies},
   Year = {2010},
   Month = {July},
   Key = {fds293951}
}

@article{fds293950,
   Author = {Liu, K},
   Title = {Searching for a New Cultural Identity: China's Softpower and
             Media Culture Today},
   Journal = {Journal of Contmporary China},
   Volume = {21},
   Number = {78},
   Pages = {915–931},
   Publisher = {Routledge},
   Year = {2011},
   Month = {July},
   ISSN = {1067-0564},
   Key = {fds293950}
}

@article{fds293955,
   Author = {Liu Kang},
   Title = {Poeticizing Revolution: Zizek's Misreading of Mao and
             China},
   Journal = {Positions: East Asian Cultural Critique},
   Volume = {19},
   Number = {3},
   Pages = {627-651},
   Publisher = {Duke University Press},
   Year = {2011},
   Month = {October},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/10679847-1369244},
   Abstract = {Slavoj Žižek has recently written quite extensively on Mao
             and China. This article is a commentary on his writings.
             Tracing the genealogy of Western Marxism from Gramsci,
             Athusser, and Badiou to Žižek, I argue that Žižek's
             misreading of the Chinese Revolution, especially Mao's
             theory and practice, as well as his comments on contemporary
             China reveal his Eurocentric biases and a habit of
             aestheticizing or poeticizing revolutionary practice.
             Žižek's misreading of Mao and China is largely based on
             abstract theorization, divorced from concrete specificity
             and historicity. His ultimate pessimism, camouflaged by
             radical hubris and theatricality, can neither help us
             further our understanding of China's struggles to modernity,
             particularly Mao's endeavors for alternatives, nor inspire
             us for the renewed searches for social change. Žižek's
             poeticized version of the Chinese Revolution is thus a
             theatrical parody-travesty of the true revolution, an
             imaginary rhapsody of 'revolution without a revolution.'
             Žižek's biases further reflect a proclivity among the
             Western Left to substitute historical and political critique
             with aesthetic theories and discourse.},
   Doi = {10.1215/10679847-1369244},
   Key = {fds293955}
}

@article{fds293949,
   Author = {Liu, K},
   Title = {Frankfurt School and China: Questions of Culture, Aesthetics
             and Alternative Modernity in Western Marxism and Chinese
             Marxism},
   Journal = {Journal of Chinese Philosophy},
   Year = {2011},
   Month = {Winter},
   Key = {fds293949}
}

@book{fds293947,
   Author = {Liu, K},
   Title = {, Bakhtin’s Dialogism and Cultural Theory},
   Series = {New Edition},
   Publisher = {Peking University Press},
   Year = {2012},
   Key = {fds293947}
}

@book{fds293948,
   Author = {Liu, K},
   Title = {Aesthetics and Marxism (Chinese translation)},
   Publisher = {Peking University Press},
   Year = {2012},
   Key = {fds293948}
}

@article{fds293940,
   Author = {Kang, L},
   Title = {"Dinner Party of Discourse Owners"},
   Number = {79},
   Pages = {113-136},
   Publisher = {Duke University Press},
   Year = {2012},
   Key = {fds293940}
}

@article{fds305926,
   Author = {Kang, L},
   Title = {"Introduction", Special Issue (editor), “China and the
             World: Literary Construction,”},
   Journal = {Comparative Literature Studies},
   Volume = {49},
   Number = {4},
   Pages = {497-504},
   Publisher = {Pennsylvania State University Press},
   Year = {2012},
   Key = {fds305926}
}

@article{fds361892,
   Author = {Kang, L and Chu, Y-H},
   Title = {China's Rise through World Public Opinion: Editorial
             Introduction},
   Journal = {Journal of Contemporary China},
   Volume = {24},
   Number = {92},
   Pages = {197-202},
   Publisher = {Informa UK Limited},
   Year = {2015},
   Month = {March},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10670564.2014.932146},
   Doi = {10.1080/10670564.2014.932146},
   Key = {fds361892}
}

@article{fds361891,
   Author = {Kang, L},
   Title = {Interests, Values, and Geopolitics: The Global Public
             Opinion on China},
   Journal = {European Review},
   Volume = {23},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {242-260},
   Publisher = {Cambridge University Press (CUP)},
   Year = {2015},
   Month = {May},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1062798714000714},
   Abstract = {<jats:p>The essay discusses the public opinion surveys on
             the rise of China in the United States, Asia and Latin
             America since 2010, conducted by Shanghai Jiao Tong
             University and Duke University’s collaborative research
             team headed by the author. It examines the world public
             recognition of China’s growing influence, their attitudes
             toward China’s influence, and reactions to the ‘China
             Model’ and impressions of China’s political, economic,
             social, and cultural development. These assessments of
             China’s domestic issues or internal behavior show not only
             the amount of information and knowledge that the people in
             various countries know about China, but the intrinsic value
             judgments and ideological biases that influence their
             perceptions of China. The essay argues that the rise of
             China is a complicated phenomenon with a multifarious
             nature, including material dimensions, such as military
             power, economic development, and technological innovation,
             as well as ideational dimensions, such as perception,
             understanding, or prejudice. Public opinion, attitudes and
             perceptions of China’s rise are the outcome of dynamic
             interactions and assemblage of factors, a synergy of
             material interests, ideational and emotional reactions, and
             values, ideologies, principles, unraveling themselves
             against a highly volatile, precarious and contentious
             geopolitical backdrop, in which the interests of
             nation-states and individuals became all intertwined and
             inseparable.</jats:p>},
   Doi = {10.1017/s1062798714000714},
   Key = {fds361891}
}

@article{fds361890,
   Author = {Kang, L},
   Title = {Social Sciences, Humanities and Liberal Arts: China and the
             West},
   Journal = {European Review},
   Volume = {26},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {241-261},
   Publisher = {Cambridge University Press (CUP)},
   Year = {2018},
   Month = {May},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1062798717000643},
   Abstract = {<jats:p>For the most part, modern China’s institutions and
             modes of knowledge have been shaped and predominantly
             influenced by the West. Since the modern Chinese knowledge
             system is an integral and inseparable part of that dominant
             western system, an immanent critique will view Chinese
             problems not as extraneous, but as intrinsic to modernity,
             to the world-system or globalization. This article traces
             the genealogy of modern European modes of knowledge under
             the rubrics of ‘liberal arts’, as the origin and basis
             for modern China’s institutions and modes of knowledge,
             and then examines China’s ‘liberal arts’ as
             institution and modes of knowledge from the early years of
             the twentieth century to the present. The paper’s
             objective is to question the relationship between
             (Eurocentric) universalism and Chinese exceptionalism within
             the dominant modern Western institutions and modes of
             knowledge today.</jats:p>},
   Doi = {10.1017/s1062798717000643},
   Key = {fds361890}
}

@article{fds346003,
   Author = {Kang, L},
   Title = {A (Meta)commentary on Western Literary Theories in China:
             The Case of Jameson and Chinese Jamesonism},
   Journal = {Modern Language Quarterly},
   Volume = {79},
   Number = {3},
   Pages = {323-340},
   Publisher = {Duke University Press},
   Year = {2018},
   Month = {September},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/00267929-6910785},
   Abstract = {<jats:title>Abstract</jats:title> <jats:p>This essay takes
             Fredric Jameson and Chinese Jamesonism as a case in point to
             illustrate the Chinese anxiety of influence with Western
             theory and the battle between (Western) universalism and
             Chinese exceptionalism. Chinese Jamesonism shows how an
             eclectic American neo-Marxist academic discourse has been
             invented in China on selected themes of postmodernism and
             Third World “national allegory.” However, as a
             “shadowy but central presence” in Jameson and other
             Western left theories, Maoism is nearly absent from
             China’s appropriation of Western theories. A vigorous
             critique of the relationship between Maoism and Western left
             theories sheds light on the issues of politics and ideology
             underlying the Chinese anxiety of influence.</jats:p>},
   Doi = {10.1215/00267929-6910785},
   Key = {fds346003}
}

@article{fds356910,
   Author = {Liu, K},
   Title = {Introduction: Rethinking critical theory and
             maoism},
   Journal = {CLCWeb - Comparative Literature and Culture},
   Volume = {20},
   Number = {3},
   Year = {2018},
   Month = {September},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.7771/1481-4374.3246},
   Abstract = {In his article, "Rethinking Critical Theory and Maoism,"
             Kang Liu reviews the existing literature in English on the
             relationship of Critical Theory and Maoism and discusses the
             need to explore and reconstruct a genealogy of Critical
             Theory and Maoism within the global context of political,
             ideological, and intellectual currents and trends. The
             special issue will focus on three clusters of issues: first,
             the western invention of Maoism as a universal theory of
             revolution; second, the reception of Critical Theory in
             China and its relationship to Maoism; and third, the
             relevance of Maoism and Critical Theory today. Liu raises
             the question in the end: can Maoism be seen as a
             revolutionary universalism, or a nationalist ideology of
             Chinese Exceptionalism?.},
   Doi = {10.7771/1481-4374.3246},
   Key = {fds356910}
}

@article{fds361889,
   Author = {Liu, K},
   Title = {Introduction: China question of western theory},
   Journal = {CLCWeb - Comparative Literature and Culture},
   Volume = {22},
   Number = {5},
   Pages = {1-5},
   Year = {2020},
   Month = {December},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.7771/1481-4374.3819},
   Abstract = {In his article, “The China Question of Western Theory,”
             Kang Liu formulates the China Question of western theory as
             both western critical frameworks to understand the rise of
             China, and how these critical frameworks present China not
             only as an object of study but also as a question intrinsic
             to contemporary cultural and social theories. The essays in
             this special issue address the China Question of western
             theory in multilinear, multivalent ways: first, the Chinese
             reception and appropriation of western theory; second, the
             western reception and appropriation of Chinese theory,
             namely Maoism, and third, the Chinese reception and
             re-appropriation of those western theories that reinvented
             and appropriated Chinese theory.},
   Doi = {10.7771/1481-4374.3819},
   Key = {fds361889}
}


%% Liu, Yan   
@article{fds227705,
   Author = {Taguchi, N and Li, S and Liu, Y},
   Title = {Comprehension of conversational implicature in L2
             Chinese},
   Journal = {Pragmatics and Cognition},
   Volume = {21},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {139-157},
   Year = {2013},
   Month = {November},
   ISSN = {1569-9943},
   Key = {fds227705}
}

@article{fds227704,
   Author = {Kuo, L-J and Kim, T-J and Yang, X and Li, H and Liu, Y and Wang, H and Hyun
             Park, J and Li, Y},
   Title = {Acquisition of Chinese characters: the effects of character
             properties and individual differences among second language
             learners.},
   Journal = {Frontiers in psychology},
   Volume = {6},
   Pages = {986},
   Year = {2015},
   Month = {January},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2015.00986},
   Abstract = {In light of the dramatic growth of Chinese learners
             worldwide and a need for cross-linguistic research on
             Chinese literacy development, this study drew upon theories
             of visual complexity effect (Su and Samuels, 2010) and
             dual-coding processing (Sadoski and Paivio, 2013) and
             investigated (a) the effects of character properties (i.e.,
             visual complexity and radical presence) on character
             acquisition and (b) the relationship between individual
             learner differences in radical awareness and character
             acquisition. Participants included adolescent
             English-speaking beginning learners of Chinese in the U.S.
             Following Kuo et al. (2014), a novel character acquisition
             task was used to investigate the process of acquiring the
             meaning of new characters. Results showed that (a)
             characters with radicals and with less visual complexity
             were easier to acquire than characters without radicals and
             with greater visual complexity; and (b) individual
             differences in radical awareness were associated with the
             acquisition of all types of characters, but the association
             was more pronounced with the acquisition of characters with
             radicals. Theoretical and practical implications of the
             findings were discussed.},
   Doi = {10.3389/fpsyg.2015.00986},
   Key = {fds227704}
}

@article{fds355974,
   Author = {Liu, Y},
   Title = {Assessing Chinese in the United States: An overview of major
             tests.},
   Pages = {43-65},
   Booktitle = {Assessing Chinese as a Second Language.},
   Publisher = {Springer},
   Editor = {Zhang, D and Lin, C-H},
   Year = {2017},
   Month = {April},
   ISBN = {978-981-13-5045-0},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-10-4089-4_3},
   Abstract = {The past few decades have witnessed a rapid expansion of
             Chinese language and culture programs in higher education
             institutions as well as PreK-12 schools in the USA. The fast
             growth of Chinese education has naturally boosted assessment
             demands. To satisfy the demands, many tests and assessment
             tools have been developed in the country. Contextualized in
             the recent history of foreign language education in the USA,
             this chapter provides an overview of Chinese assessments in
             the country. Major tests reviewed include the ACTFL Oral
             Proficiency Interview (OPI) and its computerized version
             (OPIc), the Simulated Oral Proficiency Interview (SOPI), the
             Computerized Oral Proficiency Instrument (COPI), the ACTFL
             Writing Proficiency Test (WPT), the Advanced Placement (AP)
             Chinese Language and Culture Test, the ACTFL Assessment of
             Performance toward Proficiency in Languages (AAPPL), the SAT
             II Chinese Subject Test, and the Chinese Proficiency Test
             (CPT). In addition, this chapter also reviews a small number
             of studies that either aimed to validate these tests or used
             them as instruments for various research
             purposes.},
   Doi = {10.1007/978-981-10-4089-4_3},
   Key = {fds355974}
}

@article{fds370592,
   Author = {Reisinger, D and Quammen, SV and Liu, Y and Virgüez,
             E},
   Title = {Sustainability across the Curriculum: A Multilingual and
             Intercultural Approach},
   Pages = {197-214},
   Booktitle = {Education for Sustainable Development in Foreign Language
             Learning: Content-Based Instruction in College-Level
             Curricula, First Edition},
   Year = {2021},
   Month = {January},
   ISBN = {9780367530327},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003080183-15},
   Abstract = {Developed in the 1980s, Cultures and Languages Across the
             Curriculum (CLAC) programs provide a content-based
             curricular framework for developing and applying language
             and intercultural competence within diverse academic
             disciplines through the use of multilingual resources and
             the inclusion of multiple cultural perspectives. In this
             chapter, we analyze the development of a cluster of
             tutorials housed in a department of environmental studies.
             In these tutorials, learners explored how cultural and
             linguistic perspectives inform and shape sustainability
             policies and practices. Details about the structure of these
             CLAC tutorials are offered to emphasize how primary course
             objectives are achieved through case studies, project-based
             activities, and community interactions. Despite challenges
             related to teacher preparation and materials selection,
             student survey data suggested that the tutorials led to
             gains in student language development, understanding of
             sustainability concepts, and motivation to continue studying
             the language, underscoring the essential role of foreign
             languages in the broader discussion of education for
             sustainability.},
   Doi = {10.4324/9781003080183-15},
   Key = {fds370592}
}

@article{fds366830,
   Author = {Reisinger, D and Valnes Quammen and S and Liu, Y and Virguez,
             E},
   Title = {Sustainability across the Curriculum: A Multilingual and
             Intercultural Approach},
   Booktitle = {Education for Sustainable Development in Foreign Language
             Learning: Content-Based Instruction in College-Level
             Curricula},
   Publisher = {Routledge},
   Editor = {Fuente, MDL},
   Year = {2021},
   Month = {November},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003080183},
   Doi = {10.4324/9781003080183},
   Key = {fds366830}
}

@article{fds370591,
   Author = {Liu, Y},
   Title = {Cross-language and cross-disciplinary collaborations in a
             Mandarin CLAC course},
   Pages = {159-175},
   Booktitle = {A Transdisciplinary Approach to Chinese and Japanese
             Language Teaching},
   Publisher = {Routledge},
   Year = {2023},
   Month = {February},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003266976-15},
   Doi = {10.4324/9781003266976-15},
   Key = {fds370591}
}

@article{fds370590,
   Author = {Liu, Y},
   Title = {Boundary Crossing: Integrating Visual Arts into Teaching
             Chinese as a Foreign Language},
   Booktitle = {Crossing Boundaries in Researching, Understanding, and
             Improving Language Education: Essays in Honor of G. Richard
             Tucker.},
   Publisher = {Springer},
   Editor = {Zhang, D and Miller, R},
   Year = {2023},
   Month = {March},
   ISBN = {978-3-031-24078-2},
   Abstract = {This chapter reports on the author’s effort to cross
             disciplinary boundaries in teaching Chinese as a foreign
             language (CFL). It presents a mixed-methods study that
             examines student perceptions about, as well as the benefits
             and the challenges of, integrating visual arts and online
             art museum visits into CFL teaching. Quantitative and
             qualitative data were collected from a questionnaire and
             semi-structured interviews. Based on the findings, the
             author discusses the benefits of using art-integration
             approaches in CFL teaching, particularly their potential in
             answering the Modern Language Association’s call for
             curricular transformation in collegiate foreign language
             curriculum (MLA, Foreign languages and higher education: New
             structures for a changed world. Retrieved from
             http://www.mla.org/flreport, 2007). The author also analyzes
             the challenges encountered and proposes future research
             directions and suggestions for future integration of visual
             arts in the CFL curriculum.},
   Key = {fds370590}
}

@book{fds370589,
   Author = {Liu, Y and Ji, J and Wu, G and Liang, M-M},
   Title = {传承中文 Modern Chinese for Heritage Beginners Stories
             about Us},
   Pages = {257 pages},
   Publisher = {Taylor & Francis},
   Year = {2023},
   Month = {April},
   ISBN = {9781000860344},
   Abstract = {The book starts with talking about individuals and families
             and then expands to the Chinese and Asian American
             communities in the U.S. and eventually to the entire
             American society, all from the unique perspective of Chinese
             American ...},
   Key = {fds370589}
}


%% Lo, Mbaye   
@book{fds227731,
   Author = {Lo, M},
   Title = {The intricacy of Power Transfer in Africa: Nigeria, a Case
             Study},
   Pages = {311 pages},
   Publisher = {International University of Africa, University
             Press},
   Year = {1998},
   Abstract = {In Arabic. Reprinted in 2001.},
   Key = {fds227731}
}

@article{fds227745,
   Author = {Lo Mbaye},
   Title = {Arabic and the Development of ‘ajami Writings in
             Africa},
   Journal = {El-Multaqa. Journal},
   Year = {2000},
   Month = {October},
   Key = {fds227745}
}

@book{fds227732,
   Author = {Lo, M},
   Title = {Arabic Language and Literary Themes in the African
             Literature},
   Pages = {148 pages},
   Publisher = {Arab and African Research Center},
   Year = {2001},
   Key = {fds227732}
}

@misc{fds227708,
   Author = {Lo, M},
   Title = {Genesis of Islam in the African American
             community”},
   Year = {2002},
   Key = {fds227708}
}

@book{fds227733,
   Author = {Lo, M},
   Title = {Muslims in America: Race, Politics and Community
             Building},
   Pages = {152 pages},
   Publisher = {Amana Publications},
   Year = {2004},
   Key = {fds227733}
}

@misc{fds227709,
   Author = {Lo, M},
   Title = {Women, Islam and popular culture in Africa: a
             comparison},
   Year = {2004},
   Key = {fds227709}
}

@misc{fds227710,
   Author = {Lo, M},
   Title = {The development of Arabic literature in Africa},
   Year = {2004},
   Key = {fds227710}
}

@article{fds227743,
   Author = {Lo Mbaye},
   Title = {Seeking the Roots of Terrorism: a Traditional Islamic
             Perspective},
   Journal = {Journal of Religion and Popular Culture},
   Volume = {X},
   Publisher = {University of Toronto Press},
   Year = {2005},
   Month = {Summer},
   ISSN = {1703-289X},
   url = {http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G1-143027232.html},
   Key = {fds227743}
}

@article{fds227741,
   Author = {Lo, MB},
   Title = {Re-conceptualizing Civil Society: The Debate Continues With
             Specific Reference to Contemporary Senegal},
   Journal = {African & Asian Studies},
   Volume = {5},
   Number = {1},
   Year = {2006},
   Key = {fds227741}
}

@article{fds227742,
   Author = {Lo, MB},
   Title = {Eavesdropping on Civil Society Associations in
             Senegal},
   Journal = {Dirasaat Ifrikiyyah Journal},
   Volume = {3},
   Publisher = {International University of Africa Press},
   Address = {Khartoum},
   Year = {2007},
   Month = {December},
   Key = {fds227742}
}

@book{fds227734,
   Author = {Lo, M},
   Title = {Understanding the Muslim Discourse: Language, Tradition and
             the Message of Ben Laden},
   Pages = {122 pages},
   Publisher = {University Press of America},
   Address = {Lanham, Maryland},
   Year = {2009},
   Key = {fds227734}
}

@article{fds227719,
   Author = {M. Lo and Lo, MB and 2009, TAT},
   Title = {Muslim Marriage Goes Online: The Use of Internet
             Match-making by American Muslims},
   Journal = {Journal of Religion and Popular Culture.},
   Volume = {21},
   Series = {Fall Edition},
   Number = {3},
   Publisher = {Journal of Religion & Popular Culture},
   Address = {http://www.usask.ca/relst/jrpc/index.html},
   Year = {2009},
   url = {http://www.usask.ca/relst/jrpc/art21(3)-MuslimMarriage.html},
   Abstract = {This paper analytically explores the recent rise of Internet
             use among American Muslims who are looking for marriage.
             Because American Muslims are a heterogeneous community
             consisting of individuals who, while confessing to a single
             article of faith, come from a plethora of ethnic and
             cultural backgrounds, finding a suitable mate within one’s
             religious, cultural and emotional sphere has become a
             complex and, at times, problematic journey. As a result,
             American Muslims are increasing their use of the Internet to
             overcome existing spatial and cultural barriers. This paper
             introduces the background of the Islamic marriage tradition,
             examines American Muslims’ marriage practices and then
             analysis how current online match-making sites are
             accommodating as well as challenging the American Muslim
             communities’ traditional practices in matters of finding
             love and marriage partners.},
   Key = {fds227719}
}

@article{fds227740,
   Author = {Lo, MB},
   Title = {The Evolution of Arabic Literature in West
             Africa},
   Journal = {Afro-Arab Selections for Social Sciences},
   Volume = {10},
   Number = {10},
   Pages = {171-178},
   Booktitle = {Afro-Arab Selections for Social Sciences},
   Address = {Cairo, Egypt},
   Year = {2009},
   Month = {January},
   Key = {fds227740}
}

@book{fds227735,
   Author = {Lo, MB},
   Title = {Civil Society-Based Governance in Africa: Theories and
             Practices: ( A Case Study of Senegal)},
   Pages = {218 pages},
   Publisher = {Society Studies Center},
   Year = {2010},
   ISBN = {978-99942-968-3-5},
   url = {http://www.africanbookscollective.com/books/civil-society-based-governance-in-africa-theories-and-practices/@@cover},
   Keywords = {Civil Society, Africa, Senegal, Development, governance,
             Liberal theory,},
   Abstract = {This book examines the liberal conception of civil society
             and its applicability to the context of Africa. Although the
             book acknowledges the reality of civil society as a
             paradigmatic way of thinking about democracy and good
             governance, it questions the conception of ‘civil
             society’ and its use for development in Africa. The
             book’s basic argument is that if the concept of civil
             society is to be successful, it has to capture fully and
             correctly most aspects of Africa’s associational life,
             without leaving out major portions of behavioral mosaic.
             Only then, can the concept of civil society be a legitimate
             tool for recognizing groups’ associations and organizing
             their problems and claims for a sustainable democracy and
             development. To examine this argument, the study explores
             Senegal as a case study to show how the idiosyncrasy of
             societal development has constructed and produced different
             types of associational life that are not grasped within the
             mainstream liberal convention of civil society. Senegal was
             selected to make a deductive analysis. As an ideal case, it
             is widely regarded as a vibrant model of civil society and
             democracy. In essence, the question is whether the civil
             society that exists in Senegal conforms with the liberal
             argument of civil society.},
   Key = {fds227735}
}

@article{fds227739,
   Author = {M. Lo and Lo, MB and Nadhiri, A},
   Title = {Contextualizing "Muridiyyah" within the American muslim
             community: Perspectives on the past, present and
             future},
   Journal = {African Journal of Political Science and International
             Relations},
   Volume = {4},
   Number = {6},
   Pages = {231-240},
   Year = {2010},
   Month = {June},
   Abstract = {This paper examines the presence of the West African Sufi
             order, known as the Muridiyyah, within the broader context
             of muslims in America. The advent of the Murids in the
             American muslim community has not been the object of much
             research. This paper draws on the historical experience of
             the American Muslim community in order to situate the
             Muridiyyah within these temporal and spatial parameters.
             Based on analyzing commonalities and differences, as well as
             changes and continuity in this formative experience, the
             paper will illustrate possible challenges to the ongoing
             globalization of the muridiyyah order.},
   Key = {fds227739}
}

@book{fds227707,
   Author = {Lo, MB},
   Title = {Reforming Higher Education in Africa: the Case of
             IUA},
   Pages = {116 pages},
   Booktitle = {International Uni of Africa, Khartoum},
   Publisher = {International University of African Press},
   Year = {2011},
   url = {http://www.siyassa.org.eg/NewsContent/2/106/5145/تحليلات/عالم-عربى/في-ذكرى-الربيع-العربي-هواجس-وتأملات.aspx},
   Abstract = {Commissioned Report by the IUA Board of Trustees.},
   Key = {fds227707}
}

@book{fds227736,
   Author = {Lo, MB},
   Title = {Amrika: al-Islam wa al-Sudan: Qiraat fi Ghayahib al-Fikr
             al-Siyasi al-Hadith (America, Islam and Sudan: Readings in
             the Darkness of Modern Political Thought)},
   Publisher = {Arab and African Research Center & Center for the Studies of
             Islam and Contemporary Muslim World},
   Address = {Cairo: http://www.aarcegypt.org/ Khartoum:
             http://csicw.org/},
   Year = {2011},
   Abstract = {http://http://sites.duke.edu/dukeengagecairo2011/2011/07/16/we-are-famous/},
   Key = {fds227736}
}

@misc{fds314771,
   Author = {Lo, M},
   Title = {Bin Laden, CEO of al-Qaida},
   Journal = {The Herald-Sun},
   Year = {2011},
   Month = {May},
   Key = {fds314771}
}

@book{fds227737,
   Author = {Lo, MB},
   Title = {International Uni of Africa, Khartoum},
   Publisher = {International University of African Press},
   Year = {2011},
   Month = {December},
   Key = {fds227737}
}

@misc{fds227721,
   Author = {Lo, MB},
   Title = {The Discourse of the Arab Spring},
   Journal = {Sudanile},
   Year = {2012},
   Month = {February},
   url = {http://http//www.sudanile.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=37668:2012-02-05-18-51-27&catid=34:2008-05-19-17-14-27&Itemid=55},
   Key = {fds227721}
}

@article{fds314769,
   Author = {Lo, M},
   Title = {Debating Secularism in the Arab Spring},
   Journal = {SudaNile},
   Year = {2012},
   Month = {April},
   Key = {fds314769}
}

@article{fds227723,
   Author = {Lo, MB},
   Title = {Democracy is at Work in Egypt},
   Publisher = {Duke University},
   Year = {2012},
   Month = {May},
   url = {http://sites.duke.edu/dukeinarabworld/2012/05/30/democracy-is-at-work-in-egypt/},
   Key = {fds227723}
}

@misc{fds227722,
   Author = {Lo, MB},
   Title = {Lessons Learned in the wake of the Arab Spring},
   Journal = {Sudanile},
   Year = {2012},
   Month = {May},
   Key = {fds227722}
}

@misc{fds315036,
   Author = {Lo, M},
   Title = {Democracy is at Work in Egypt},
   Journal = {Sites@Duke},
   Publisher = {Duke University},
   Year = {2012},
   Month = {May},
   url = {http://sites.duke.edu/dukeinarabworld/2012/05/30/democracy-is-at-work-in-egypt/},
   Key = {fds315036}
}

@misc{fds227724,
   Author = {Lo, MB},
   Title = {Egypt at the Crossroads:},
   Journal = {The Immanent Frame},
   Year = {2012},
   Month = {July},
   Key = {fds227724}
}

@misc{fds227725,
   Author = {Lo, MB},
   Title = {Arab-African relationsh in Light of the Arab
             Revolutions},
   Journal = {Sudanile},
   Year = {2012},
   Month = {August},
   url = {http://www.online.sd/2008-05-19-17-39-36/34-2008-05-19-17-14-27/43669-2012-08-16-08-22-48.html},
   Key = {fds227725}
}

@misc{fds227726,
   Author = {Lo, MB},
   Title = {Freedom vs. Justice —The Problem with Islamic
             Militancy},
   Journal = {Duke IslamiCommentary},
   Year = {2012},
   Month = {November},
   url = {http://islamicommentary.org/},
   Key = {fds227726}
}

@misc{fds314772,
   Author = {Lo, M},
   Title = {The Discourse of Islamic Militancy},
   Journal = {The Immanent Frame},
   Year = {2012},
   Month = {November},
   Abstract = {Republished from Duke IC Article “Freedom vs. Justice —
             The Problem with Islamic Militancy" November 14,
             2012.},
   Key = {fds314772}
}

@article{fds227738,
   Author = {Lo, M and Frkovich, A},
   Title = {Challenging authority in cyberspace: Evaluating Al Jazeera
             Arabic writers},
   Journal = {Journal of Religion and Popular Culture},
   Volume = {25},
   Number = {3},
   Pages = {388-402},
   Publisher = {University of Toronto Press Inc. (UTPress)},
   Year = {2013},
   Month = {January},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/jrpc.25.3.388},
   Abstract = {The Arab Spring has been widely branded as a social media
             revolution. Evidence has shown that many Arab citizens
             consider Al Jazeera one of the most popular and credible
             Arab news networks, making it important to explore the
             manner and the extent to which this media network may have
             impacted the Revolution. One way to do so is by examining
             the meaning, configuration, and providers of the Al Jazeera
             network's news content. This exploration seems to raise
             important questions: what are the contents of Al Jazeera's
             Arabic politico-religious articles? Are political writers
             revolutionaries in their views? Do they identify with the
             Arab mainstream or with a political/ideological group, or do
             they court the interests of Arab states? To what extent are
             writers affected by their country of origin, their
             ideological affiliations, or the country in which Al Jazeera
             is based-Qatar? This article attempts to answer these
             questions by analyzing the fluidity and the complexities of
             a sample of articles collected from Al Jazeera's Arabic
             political columns between 30 January and 31 August 2011. In
             doing so, this article contributes to a timely discussion of
             social media, religion, and authority in the Arab world by
             presenting a case study of the political content of one of
             the Arab world's leading media outlets.},
   Doi = {10.3138/jrpc.25.3.388},
   Key = {fds227738}
}

@misc{fds227727,
   Author = {Lo, MB},
   Title = {Mali: Between the ’Curse of Jefferson’ and the ’Spirit
             of Timbuktu'},
   Journal = {Mondoweiss},
   Year = {2013},
   Month = {February},
   url = {http://http//mondoweiss.net/2013/02/between-jefferson-timbuktu.html},
   Key = {fds227727}
}

@misc{fds227728,
   Author = {Lo, MB},
   Title = {The Arab Revolution in World Revolutions},
   Journal = {Al Arabiyya},
   Year = {2013},
   Month = {April},
   url = {http://http//www.alarabiya.net/ar/arabic-studies/2013/04/06/%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%AB%D9%88%D8%B1%D8%A7%D8%AA-%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%B9%D8%B1%D8%A8%D9%8A%D8%A9-%D8%A8%D9%8A%D9%86-%D8%AB%D9%88%D8%B1%D8%A7%D8%AA-%D8%A7%D9%84%D9%82%D8%B1%D9%86-%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%B9%D8%B4%D8%B1%D9%8A%D9%86.html},
   Key = {fds227728}
}

@misc{fds314770,
   Author = {Lo, M},
   Title = {The Arab Revolution Within the Twenty-First Century
             Revolutions},
   Journal = {al Arabiyya Institute of Studies},
   Year = {2013},
   Month = {April},
   Key = {fds314770}
}

@article{fds328327,
   Author = {Sene, I and Diagne, SB and Gueye, B and Duke Bryant and K and Lo,
             M},
   Title = {Overcoming the Challenges of (Im)Mobility: A Discussion on
             the Past, Present, and Future of Higher Education in
             Senegal},
   Year = {2013},
   Month = {April},
   Key = {fds328327}
}

@misc{fds227729,
   Author = {Lo, MB},
   Title = {Morsi, the Last Muslim Caliph of Egypt},
   Journal = {Mondoweiss.net},
   Year = {2013},
   Month = {July},
   url = {http://http//mondoweiss.net/2013/07/morsi-the-last-caliph-president-of-egypt.html},
   Key = {fds227729}
}

@article{fds222449,
   Author = {M.B. Lo},
   Title = {Challenging Authority in Cyberspace: Evaluating Al Jazeera
             Arabic Writers},
   Journal = {Journal of Religion and Popular Culture},
   Volume = {21},
   Number = {3},
   Pages = {388-402},
   Year = {2013},
   Month = {December},
   Key = {fds222449}
}

@misc{fds227730,
   Author = {Lo, MB},
   Title = {Mandela’s Dilemma: Western Politics, Native’s
             Ethics},
   Journal = {al Arabiyya Institute of Studies},
   Year = {2013},
   Month = {December},
   url = {http://http//estudies.alarabiya.net/content/mandela%E2%80%99s-dilemma-western-politics-native%E2%80%99s-ethics},
   Key = {fds227730}
}

@article{fds227720,
   Author = {Lo, MB},
   Title = {Religion and Religious Teachings in Al-Qaeda},
   Pages = {171-201},
   Booktitle = {Religion and Terrorism},
   Publisher = {Lexington Books},
   Editor = {Ward, V and Sherlock, R},
   Year = {2014},
   ISBN = {9870739185681},
   Key = {fds227720}
}

@article{fds303153,
   Author = {Lo, MB},
   Title = {The Role of Religion and Religious Teachings in
             Al-Qaeda},
   Pages = {171-201},
   Booktitle = {Religion and Terrorism: The Use of Violence in Abrahamic
             Monotheism},
   Publisher = {Lexington Books},
   Editor = {Ward, V and Sherlock, R},
   Year = {2014},
   Key = {fds303153}
}

@article{fds314776,
   Author = {Lo, M},
   Title = {Egypt and the Elusiveness of Shar’iyyah},
   Journal = {The Immanent Frame},
   Year = {2014},
   Month = {April},
   url = {http://blogs.ssrc.org/tif/the-future-of-egyptian-democracy/},
   Abstract = {Invited Contribution},
   Key = {fds314776}
}

@article{fds314777,
   Author = {Lo, M},
   Title = {Beyond Duality, for Plurality},
   Journal = {The Immanent Frame},
   Year = {2014},
   Month = {July},
   url = {http://http://blogs.ssrc.org/tif/2014/07/10/beyond-duality-for-plurality/},
   Abstract = {Invited Response},
   Key = {fds314777}
}

@article{fds225562,
   Author = {M.B. Lo},
   Title = {Militant Islam and the End of Time},
   Journal = {قناة العربية Al Arabiya},
   Year = {2014},
   Month = {August},
   url = {http://http://estudies.alarabiya.net/content/islamic-radicalism-and-end-time},
   Key = {fds225562}
}

@misc{fds314773,
   Author = {Lo, M},
   Title = {Islamic Radicalism and the End of time},
   Journal = {al Arabiyya Institute of Studies},
   Year = {2014},
   Month = {August},
   Key = {fds314773}
}

@article{fds314774,
   Author = {Lo, M},
   Title = {The Rise of the Islamic State and How to Reverse
             It},
   Journal = {Small Wars Journal},
   Year = {2014},
   Month = {November},
   url = {http://http://smallwarsjournal.com/jrnl/art/the-rise-of-the-islamic-state-and-how-to-reverse-it},
   Key = {fds314774}
}

@article{fds314778,
   Author = {Lo, M},
   Title = {Remembering the Arab Spring: Perspectives and
             Reflections},
   Journal = {Siyasah Dualiyyah (Journal of International
             Politics)},
   Volume = {199},
   Year = {2015},
   Month = {February},
   url = {http://http://www.siyassa.org.eg/NewsContent/2/106/5145/تحليلات/عالم-عربى/في-ذكرى-الربيع-العربي-هواجس-وتأملات.aspx},
   Key = {fds314778}
}

@book{fds314783,
   Author = {M. Lo and Mbaye Lo and Muhammed Haron},
   Title = {Muslim Institutions of Higher Education in Postcolonial
             Africa},
   Pages = {304 pages},
   Publisher = {Palgrave Macmillan},
   Editor = {Lo, M and Haron, M},
   Year = {2015},
   Month = {November},
   ISSN = {9781137552303},
   url = {http://http://www.palgrave.com/page/detail/muslim-institutions-of-higher-education-in-postcolonial-africa-mbaye-lo/?isb=9781137552303},
   Abstract = {Muslim Institutions of Higher Education in Postcolonial
             Africa seeks to enrich the public debate on Muslim education
             in Africa by offering new insight into the evolving
             encounter between the diversity of local Islamic knowledge
             and the politics of transnational trends of Muslim
             education. Contributors include scholars in the field of
             Islamic education and administrators in Muslim institutions.
             Using theoretical studies, case studies of these
             institutions, and analyzing issues of intellectual viability
             and graduate visibility in these institutions this volume
             will serve students from a variety of disciplinary
             backgrounds.},
   Key = {fds314783}
}

@article{fds312927,
   Author = {Lo, M},
   Title = {Islam and the idea of the “African university”: An
             analytical framework},
   Pages = {13-39},
   Booktitle = {Muslim Institutions of Higher Education in Postcolonial
             Africa},
   Publisher = {Palgrave Macmillan US},
   Year = {2016},
   Month = {January},
   ISBN = {9781137552303},
   url = {http://download.springer.com/static/pdf/208/bok%253A978-1-137-55231-0.pdf?originUrl=http://link.springer.com/book/10.1057/9781137552310&token2=exp=1462300375~acl=/static/pdf/208/bok%25253A978-1-137-55231-0.pdf?originUrl=http%253A%252F%252Flink.springer.com%252Fbook%252F10.1057%252F9781137552310*~hmac=ff5497c2369285d3e6b5650e56b453a4ca42f667e0c3571f7ca67098499b24a9},
   Abstract = {Muslim Institutions of Higher Education in Postcolonial
             Africa examines the colonial discriminatory practices
             against Muslim education through control and dismissal and
             discusses the education reform movement of the post-colonial
             experience ...},
   Doi = {10.1057/9781137552310},
   Key = {fds312927}
}

@article{fds315013,
   Author = {Ahmed, AAA},
   Title = {The International University of Africa, Sudan: Its History,
             Mission and Dissertation},
   Pages = {211-220},
   Booktitle = {Muslim Institutions of Higher Education in Postcolonial
             Africa},
   Publisher = {Palgrave Macmillan US},
   Year = {2016},
   Month = {January},
   ISBN = {9781349567171},
   url = {http://download.springer.com/static/pdf/208/bok%253A978-1-137-55231-0.pdf?originUrl=http://link.springer.com/book/10.1057/9781137552310&token2=exp=1462300375~acl=/static/pdf/208/bok%25253A978-1-137-55231-0.pdf?originUrl=http%253A%252F%252Flink.springer.com%252Fbook%252F10.1057%252F9781137552310*~hmac=ff5497c2369285d3e6b5650e56b453a4ca42f667e0c3571f7ca67098499b24a9},
   Abstract = {Translated from Arabic},
   Doi = {10.1057/9781137552310_13},
   Key = {fds315013}
}

@article{fds315012,
   Author = {Moussa, AY},
   Title = {King Faisal University in Chad: Challenges, Opportunities
             and Future Prospects},
   Pages = {157-177},
   Booktitle = {Muslim Institutions of Higher Education in Postcolonial
             Africa},
   Publisher = {Palgrave Macmillan US},
   Year = {2016},
   Month = {January},
   ISBN = {9781349567171},
   url = {http://download.springer.com/static/pdf/208/bok%253A978-1-137-55231-0.pdf?originUrl=http://link.springer.com/book/10.1057/9781137552310&token2=exp=1462300375~acl=/static/pdf/208/bok%25253A978-1-137-55231-0.pdf?originUrl=http%253A%252F%252Flink.springer.com%252Fbook%252F10.1057%252F9781137552310*~hmac=ff5497c2369285d3e6b5650e56b453a4ca42f667e0c3571f7ca67098499b24a9},
   Abstract = {Translated from Arabic},
   Doi = {10.1057/9781137552310_10},
   Key = {fds315012}
}

@article{fds315011,
   Author = {Lo, M},
   Title = {The Islamic University of Niger from Lahore, Pakistan, to
             Say, Niger: The Challenge of Establishing a Transnational
             Islamic University},
   Pages = {265-265},
   Booktitle = {Muslim Institutions of Higher Education in Postcolonial
             Africa},
   Publisher = {Palgrave Macmillan US},
   Year = {2016},
   Month = {January},
   ISBN = {9781349567171},
   url = {http://download.springer.com/static/pdf/208/bok%253A978-1-137-55231-0.pdf?originUrl=http%3A%2F%2Flink.springer.com%2Fbook%2F10.1057%2F9781137552310&token2=exp=1462300375~acl=%2Fstatic%2Fpdf%2F208%2Fbok%25253A978-1-137-55231-0.pdf%3ForiginUrl%3Dhttp%253A%252F%252Flink.springer.com%252Fbook%252F10.1057%252F9781137552310*~hmac=ff5497c2369285d3e6b5650e56b453a4ca42f667e0c3571f7ca67098499b24a9},
   Doi = {10.1057/9781137552310_17},
   Key = {fds315011}
}

@article{fds314782,
   Author = {Lo, M and Haron, M},
   Title = {Introduction: Africa's Muslim institutions of higher
             learning: moving forward},
   Pages = {1-9},
   Booktitle = {Muslim Institutions of Higher Education in Postcolonial
             Africa},
   Publisher = {Springer},
   Editor = {Lo, M and Haron, M},
   Year = {2016},
   Month = {January},
   ISBN = {9781137552310},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137552310_1},
   Abstract = {Muslim Institutions of Higher Education in Postcolonial
             Africa examines the colonial discriminatory practices
             against Muslim education through control and dismissal and
             discusses the education reform movement of the post-colonial
             experience ...},
   Doi = {10.1057/9781137552310_1},
   Key = {fds314782}
}

@article{fds340235,
   Author = {Lo, M},
   Title = {Islam and the Idea of the "African University": An
             Analytical Framework},
   Pages = {13-39},
   Booktitle = {Muslim Institutions of Higher Education in Postcolonial
             Africa},
   Publisher = {Palgrave Macmillan US},
   Year = {2016},
   Month = {January},
   ISBN = {9781349567171},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137552310_2},
   Doi = {10.1057/9781137552310_2},
   Key = {fds340235}
}

@misc{fds314775,
   Author = {Lo, M},
   Title = {The West’s Freedom Problem and the Roots of Islamic
             Militancy},
   Journal = {IslamiCommentary},
   Publisher = {Duke University},
   Year = {2016},
   Month = {February},
   url = {http://islamicommentary.org/},
   Key = {fds314775}
}

@article{fds336251,
   Title = {The Rise of the Islamic State and How to Reverse
             it},
   Booktitle = {Global Radical Islamist Insurgency: Al Qaeda and Islamic
             State Networks Focus: A Small Wars Journal
             Anthology},
   Year = {2016},
   Month = {February},
   ISBN = {9781491788042},
   Abstract = {This volume is composed of sixty-six chapters divided into
             sections on a) radical Islamist OPFORs (opposition forces)
             and context and b) U.S.-allied policy and counter radical
             Islamist strategies.},
   Key = {fds336251}
}

@misc{fds312926,
   Author = {Lo, M},
   Title = {Muslim University Models in the 21st Century: Challenges and
             Opportunitie},
   Year = {2016},
   Month = {April},
   Key = {fds312926}
}

@misc{fds315010,
   Author = {Lo, M},
   Title = {The Last Scholar: Cheikh Moussa Kamara and the Condemnation
             of Jihad by the Sword},
   Journal = {ISLAMiCommentary},
   Publisher = {Duke Islamic Studies Center & Carolina Center for the Study
             of the Middle East and Muslim Civilizations (UNC-Chapel
             Hill)},
   Year = {2016},
   Month = {April},
   url = {http://islamicommentary.org/2016/04/the-last-scholar-cheikh-moussa-kamara-and-the-condemnation-of-jihad-by-the-sword/},
   Key = {fds315010}
}

@book{fds314779,
   Author = {Lo, M},
   Title = {The Arabic Classroom: Context, Text and Students (In
             Progress)},
   Year = {2016},
   Month = {April},
   Abstract = {Edited volume of conference papers.},
   Key = {fds314779}
}

@article{fds373588,
   Author = {Lo, M},
   Title = {Justice Versus Freedom: The Dilemma of Political
             Islam},
   Pages = {1-27},
   Booktitle = {Political Islam, Justice and Governance},
   Publisher = {Springer International Publishing},
   Year = {2019},
   ISBN = {9783319963273},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-96328-0_1},
   Doi = {10.1007/978-3-319-96328-0_1},
   Key = {fds373588}
}

@article{fds373589,
   Author = {Lo, M},
   Title = {From Political Islam to Militant Islam: The Pursuit of
             Justice},
   Pages = {95-145},
   Booktitle = {Political Islam, Justice and Governance},
   Publisher = {Springer International Publishing},
   Year = {2019},
   ISBN = {9783319963273},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-96328-0_4},
   Doi = {10.1007/978-3-319-96328-0_4},
   Key = {fds373589}
}

@article{fds373590,
   Author = {Lo, M},
   Title = {Conclusions: Beyond Justice and Freedom!},
   Pages = {351-362},
   Booktitle = {Political Islam, Justice and Governance},
   Publisher = {Springer International Publishing},
   Year = {2019},
   ISBN = {9783319963273},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-96328-0_9},
   Doi = {10.1007/978-3-319-96328-0_9},
   Key = {fds373590}
}

@article{fds373591,
   Author = {Lo, M},
   Title = {From Liberal Freedom to Neo-liberal Inequality: The History
             of the Freedom Agenda},
   Pages = {29-52},
   Booktitle = {Political Islam, Justice and Governance},
   Publisher = {Springer International Publishing},
   Year = {2019},
   ISBN = {9783319963273},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-96328-0_2},
   Doi = {10.1007/978-3-319-96328-0_2},
   Key = {fds373591}
}

@article{fds373592,
   Author = {Lo, M},
   Title = {Turabi’s Islamic Project: From the Rhetoric of Freedom to
             the Politics of Tamkeen},
   Pages = {249-303},
   Booktitle = {Political Islam, Justice and Governance},
   Publisher = {Springer International Publishing},
   Year = {2019},
   ISBN = {9783319963273},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-96328-0_7},
   Doi = {10.1007/978-3-319-96328-0_7},
   Key = {fds373592}
}

@article{fds373593,
   Author = {Lo, M},
   Title = {Morsi’s Dilemma: The Shifting Sands Between Shar’iyyah
             and Shari’a},
   Pages = {305-350},
   Booktitle = {Political Islam, Justice and Governance},
   Publisher = {Springer International Publishing},
   Year = {2019},
   ISBN = {9783319963273},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-96328-0_8},
   Doi = {10.1007/978-3-319-96328-0_8},
   Key = {fds373593}
}

@article{fds373594,
   Author = {Lo, M},
   Title = {Freedom in Islamic Political Thought and Justice and Its
             Islamist Agents},
   Pages = {53-93},
   Booktitle = {POLITICAL ISLAM, JUSTICE AND GOVERNANCE},
   Year = {2019},
   ISBN = {978-3-319-96327-3},
   Key = {fds373594}
}

@article{fds373595,
   Author = {Lo, M},
   Title = {The Collapse of the Egyptian Revolution: Liberal Freedom
             Versus Islamist Justice},
   Pages = {147-195},
   Booktitle = {Political Islam, Justice and Governance},
   Publisher = {Springer International Publishing},
   Year = {2019},
   ISBN = {9783319963273},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-96328-0_5},
   Doi = {10.1007/978-3-319-96328-0_5},
   Key = {fds373595}
}

@article{fds373596,
   Author = {Lo, M},
   Title = {The Islamic State: The Rise of Vigilante
             Justice},
   Pages = {197-248},
   Booktitle = {Political Islam, Justice and Governance},
   Publisher = {Springer International Publishing},
   Year = {2019},
   ISBN = {9783319963273},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-96328-0_6},
   Doi = {10.1007/978-3-319-96328-0_6},
   Key = {fds373596}
}

@book{fds346767,
   Author = {Lo, M},
   Title = {The Arabic Classroom Context, Text and Learners},
   Pages = {310 pages},
   Year = {2019},
   Month = {April},
   ISBN = {9781138350731},
   Abstract = {Collected here is recent scholarly work, and also critical
             writing from Arabic instructors, Arabists and language
             experts, to examine the status of the teaching and learning
             of Arabic in the modern classroom.},
   Key = {fds346767}
}

@article{fds342572,
   Author = {Lo, M},
   Title = {Introduction},
   Pages = {1-10},
   Year = {2019},
   Month = {April},
   ISBN = {9780429435713},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429435713},
   Abstract = {The book provides a regional perspective through global case
             studies and explores the status of Arabic teaching and
             learning in the modern classroom through three parameters;
             contexts, texts and learners.},
   Doi = {10.4324/9780429435713},
   Key = {fds342572}
}

@book{fds339490,
   Author = {Lo, M},
   Title = {Political Islam, Justice and Governance},
   Pages = {386 pages},
   Publisher = {Palgrave Macmillan},
   Year = {2019},
   Month = {November},
   ISBN = {9783319963273},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-96328-0},
   Abstract = {This book argues that political Islam (represented by its
             moderate and militant forms) has failed to govern
             effectively or successfully due to its inability to
             reconcile its discursive understanding of Islam, centered on
             literal justice, ...},
   Doi = {10.1007/978-3-319-96328-0},
   Key = {fds339490}
}

@article{fds353441,
   Author = {Lo, M},
   Title = {9780429325816},
   Booktitle = {Understanding the Higher Education Market in
             Africa},
   Publisher = {Routledge},
   Editor = {mmanuel, M and Felix, M and Robert Ebo and H},
   Year = {2020},
   Month = {March},
   ISBN = {9780429325816},
   Abstract = {The rise of Muslim institutions of higher learning in the
             21st century represents a major change and challenge to
             traditional Muslim education. There are two Muslim
             credentialing centres for Muslim universities, and both are
             based in Africa – the Federation of the Universities of
             the Islamic World (FUIW) in Rabat, Morocco, and the League
             of Islamic Universities in Cairo, Egypt – and each
             maintains a membership of nearly 200 institutions of higher
             learning. Although these institutions play an essential role
             in educating Muslims about their faith and providing them
             with crucial life skills, several important questions remain
             regarding the pedagogical vision of these institutions. If
             the Islamisation of knowledge constitutes the
             epistemological borders of Muslim education (Al-Faruqi,
             1982), then how does it fare against its nemesis – the
             globalisation movement – that characterises the trends of
             modern universities? Similarly, what qualifies an
             institution to be labelled ‘Islamic’? Is it a Muslim
             majority presence among the student body, or its Islamic
             content? Furthermore, what are the developing models in
             these institutions, and how do they fit into the
             institutions’ missions and functions? This study examines
             these questions by analysing the processes and the discourse
             through which marketing model institutions have evolved in
             the 21st century},
   Key = {fds353441}
}

@article{fds353440,
   Author = {Lo, M and Ernst, CW},
   Title = {The 1850’s Photographic Portrait of Omar Ibn Said: The
             Eloquence of Resilience},
   Journal = {Muslim World},
   Volume = {110},
   Number = {3},
   Pages = {428-450},
   Year = {2020},
   Month = {July},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/muwo.12343},
   Doi = {10.1111/muwo.12343},
   Key = {fds353440}
}

@article{fds353439,
   Title = {Black Africans in Arabic Sources: A Critical Assessment of
             Method and Rhetoric},
   Booktitle = {The Palgrave Handbook of Islam in Africa},
   Publisher = {Springer Nature},
   Year = {2020},
   Month = {September},
   ISBN = {9783030457594},
   Abstract = {Blacks of African background played a pioneering role in the
             intellectual and political life of pre-Islamic Arabia. Their
             presence weighs heavily on some of the illustrative language
             of the Quran as well as on the historical timeline used in
             Al-Sīra al-Nabawiyya of Ibn Hishām, the first biography
             about the life and time of Prophet Muhammed. Blacks were
             also widely represented in the first generation of soldiers
             and military commanders that spearheaded the Muslim
             conquests of Egypt. However, this situation changed with the
             expansion of the Arab Muslim empire. As the quest for
             knowledge increased in the centuries that followed the birth
             of Islam, Arab armies, traveler historians, duʿāt
             (preachers), and traders used the existing knowledge to
             access Bilād al-Sūdān (the Land of Blacks) or to acquire
             new knowledge on Africa as they promoted Islam among its
             inhabitants. In this new era of expansion in Africa, many
             Arabic sources perpetuated held stereotypes and learned
             prejudices about blackness, which they subsequently equated
             with slavery. Faced with this challenge, Black poets and
             writers vigorously resisted and crafted their personal
             narratives of triumph, resistance, and resilience.},
   Key = {fds353439}
}

@book{fds373586,
   Author = {Lo, M and Ernst, CW},
   Title = {I Cannot Write My Life Islam, Arabic, and Slavery in Omar
             Ibn Said's America},
   Year = {2023},
   ISBN = {9781469674674},
   Abstract = {&quot;This work centers on the life and writing of Omar Ibn
             Said, born in 1770 in a border region between Senegal and
             Mauritania that played a significant role in Islamic
             nations.},
   Key = {fds373586}
}

@book{fds373587,
   Author = {Kamara, M},
   Title = {Sheikh Moussa Kamara's Islamic Critique of
             Jihadists},
   Year = {2023},
   ISBN = {9781666933864},
   Abstract = {If peace is at the foundation of the Islamic message, then
             waging any types of jihad as a means of imposing change or
             gaining power will run counter to the nature of
             Islam.},
   Key = {fds373587}
}


%% McLarney, Ellen   
@article{fds293989,
   Author = {McLarney, EA},
   Title = {The Algerian Personal Statute: A French Legacy},
   Journal = {Islamic Quarterly},
   Volume = {41},
   Number = {3},
   Year = {1997},
   Key = {fds293989}
}

@article{fds293990,
   Author = {McLarney, EA},
   Title = {Unlocking the Female in Ahlem Mosteghanemi},
   Journal = {Journal of Arabic Literature},
   Volume = {33},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {24-44},
   Publisher = {BRILL},
   Year = {2002},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15700640252955478},
   Doi = {10.1163/15700640252955478},
   Key = {fds293990}
}

@article{fds305820,
   Author = {McLarney, E},
   Title = {Review: Under the Naked Sky by Denis Johnson-Davies},
   Journal = {Journal of Arabic Literature},
   Volume = {33},
   Number = {2},
   Year = {2002},
   Key = {fds305820}
}

@article{fds305818,
   Author = {McLarney E},
   Title = {Review: The House on Arnus Square by Samar
             Attar},
   Journal = {Journal of Arabic Literature},
   Volume = {34},
   Number = {3},
   Year = {2003},
   Key = {fds305818}
}

@article{fds305826,
   Author = {McLarney, E},
   Title = {The 'House on Arnus Street'},
   Journal = {JOURNAL OF ARABIC LITERATURE},
   Volume = {34},
   Number = {3},
   Pages = {289-293},
   Year = {2003},
   ISSN = {0085-2376},
   url = {http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=WOS:000186566800007&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=47d3190e77e5a3a53558812f597b0b92},
   Key = {fds305826}
}

@article{fds305822,
   Author = {McLarney, E},
   Title = {Politics of Le passé simple},
   Journal = {Journal of North African Studies},
   Volume = {8},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {1-18},
   Publisher = {Informa UK Limited},
   Year = {2003},
   Month = {January},
   ISSN = {1362-9387},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13629380308718505},
   Abstract = {The uproar incited by Driss Chraibi's Le passé simple
             resulted from the political climate at the time of the
             novel's publication in 1954, skewing the interpretation of
             the text. The novel allegorically describes tensions between
             different political groups in terms of family conflict. The
             hero Driss's rebellion against his father, 'Le Seigneur',
             hence assumes the dimensions of a revolt against the king,
             as he tries to rally his brothers to a 'coup d'état'. The
             author's images, both historical and novelistic, are
             modelled on the French revolution and the family romance
             novels that were its literary complement. Le passé simple
             draws a historical blueprint for the Moroccan nation, one
             that was not executed in the short run, but was partially
             realised over time. The novel dramatises (and predicts) the
             conflict between the monarchy and elites such as the
             intelligentsia, symbolised as a father-son conflict. Most
             analyses have reduced the work to its psychoanalytic
             dimensions, eliding its political substratum.},
   Doi = {10.1080/13629380308718505},
   Key = {fds305822}
}

@article{fds293991,
   Author = {McLarney, EA},
   Title = {The Politics of Driss Chraibi’s Le passé
             simple},
   Journal = {Journal of North African Studies},
   Volume = {8},
   Number = {2},
   Year = {2003},
   Month = {Summer},
   Key = {fds293991}
}

@article{fds376511,
   Title = {Women, Gender, and Love: Modern Discourses: Arab
             States},
   Volume = {3},
   Publisher = {Brill},
   Year = {2005},
   Key = {fds376511}
}

@misc{fds305817,
   Author = {McLarney, E},
   Title = {Women, Gender, and Love: Modern Discourses: Arab
             States},
   Volume = {3},
   Booktitle = {Encyclopedia of Women and Islamic Cultures},
   Publisher = {Brill},
   Editor = {Joseph, S},
   Year = {2005},
   Key = {fds305817}
}

@article{fds293988,
   Author = {McLarney, EA},
   Title = {Literacy and the Literary: Reading and Speaking
             Arabic},
   Journal = {ADFL Bulletin},
   Volume = {37},
   Number = {1},
   Year = {2005},
   Month = {Fall},
   Key = {fds293988}
}

@misc{fds305821,
   Author = {McLarney, EA},
   Title = {Islam in Vogue: Muslim Women in the Media},
   Journal = {"Imagining Ourselves." International Museum of
             Women},
   Year = {2007},
   url = {http://imaginingourselves.imow.org/pb/Story.aspx?G=1&C=0&id=1341&lang=1},
   Key = {fds305821}
}

@article{fds376347,
   Title = {Latifah al-Zayyat},
   Publisher = {Thompson-Gale},
   Year = {2008},
   Key = {fds376347}
}

@misc{fds305816,
   Author = {McLarney, E},
   Title = {Latifah al-Zayyat},
   Booktitle = {Dictionary of Literary Biography: 20th-Century Arabic
             Literature},
   Publisher = {Thompson-Gale},
   Editor = {al-Mallah, M},
   Year = {2008},
   Key = {fds305816}
}

@article{fds305928,
   Author = {Roy, O},
   Title = {Secularism Confronts Islam},
   Journal = {Middle Eastern Studies Association Bulletin},
   Year = {2009},
   Key = {fds305928}
}

@article{fds148755,
   Author = {Olivier Roy},
   Title = {Review: Secularism Confronts Islam},
   Journal = {Middle Eastern Studies Association Bulletin},
   Year = {2009},
   Key = {fds148755}
}

@article{fds293985,
   Author = {McLarney, E},
   Title = {"Empire of the machine": Oil in the Arabic
             Novel},
   Journal = {Boundary 2},
   Volume = {36},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {177-198},
   Publisher = {Duke University Press},
   Year = {2009},
   Month = {Summer},
   ISSN = {0190-3659},
   url = {http://hdl.handle.net/10161/7008 Duke open
             access},
   Doi = {10.1215/01903659-2009-010},
   Key = {fds293985}
}

@article{fds293986,
   Author = {McLarney, E},
   Title = {The socialist romance of the postcolonial Arabic
             novel},
   Journal = {Research in African Literatures},
   Volume = {40},
   Number = {3},
   Pages = {186-205},
   Publisher = {Indiana University Press},
   Year = {2009},
   Month = {Fall},
   ISSN = {0034-5210},
   url = {http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=WOS:000267954300012&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=47d3190e77e5a3a53558812f597b0b92},
   Abstract = {This essay examines the politics of love in the Arabic
             novel: how love is used to envision a more just and
             egalitarian society. The marriage market, courtship
             practices, and kinship ties - which propagate and calcify
             gender and class hierarchies - prove formidable obstacles to
             the realization of the utopian vision of social equality.
             love ideology becomes a means of defying these conventions,
             conceived of as a powerful force breaking down the hegemony
             of the upper classes and male privilege, challenging their
             sense of propriety and entitlement, and restructuring
             society according to more egalitarian principles. This essay
             contests the dichotomization of romantic and politically
             committed literature in Arabic literary criticism, and
             likewise, corresponding assumptions about the division
             between the personal and political, private and public
             presumably coded in the novel.},
   Doi = {10.2979/RAL.2009.40.3.186},
   Key = {fds293986}
}

@article{fds293984,
   Author = {McLarney, EA},
   Title = {Burqa in Vogue: Fashioning Afghanistan},
   Journal = {Journal of Middle East Women's Studies},
   Volume = {5},
   Number = {1},
   Year = {2009},
   Month = {Winter},
   url = {http://hdl.handle.net/10161/6446 Duke open
             access},
   Key = {fds293984}
}

@article{fds376583,
   Author = {McLarney, E},
   Title = {Burqa in Vogue: Fashioning Afghanistan},
   Year = {2009},
   Month = {December},
   Key = {fds376583}
}

@article{fds293976,
   Author = {McLarney, EA and Gokariksel, B},
   Title = {Marketing Muslim Women, Special Issue},
   Journal = {Journal of Middle East Women’s Studies},
   Year = {2010},
   Month = {Fall},
   Key = {fds293976}
}

@article{fds293979,
   Author = {McLarney, E},
   Title = {The private is political: Women and family in intellectual
             Islam},
   Journal = {Feminist Theory},
   Volume = {11},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {129-148},
   Publisher = {SAGE Publications},
   Year = {2010},
   Month = {August},
   ISSN = {1464-7001},
   url = {http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=WOS:000280610900004&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=47d3190e77e5a3a53558812f597b0b92},
   Abstract = {In Hiba Ra'uf's Woman and Political Work, she argues that
             the family is the basic political unit of the Islamic
             community or nation (the umma). Her thesis is both feminist
             and Islamist, as she argues that the 'private is political'.
             By drawing analogies between family and umma, family and
             caliphate, the personal and the political, the private and
             public, Ra'uf seeks to dismantle the oppositions of secular
             society, to challenge the division of society into discrete
             spheres. This entails an implicit challenge to the secular
             state, but effected through the politics of the family. An
             Islamic family, she argues, is a powerful site for the
             transformation of socio-political institutions; a politics
             of the microcosmic with macrocosmic ramifications, effected
             through the very embodiment and practice of an Islamic ethos
             at a grassroots, capillary level. However, though Ra'uf
             contests liberal secularism's division of spheres with
             feminist and Islamist critical methods, she reproduces some
             of its fundamental assumptions about the nature of the
             family: as the domain of religion, in opposition to the
             secular state; as rooting community, in opposition to the
             individualism of the citizen; as an ethics grounded in
             affect; and as an essentially feminine world. In making the
             family the sphere of Islamic politics, Ra'uf re-enacts
             secularism's division of spheres, sacralizing the affective
             bonds of intimate relations and making the family the domain
             of religion. Furthermore, by emphasizing the family as the
             domain of women's political work, she reinscribes the family
             as a feminine sphere, so that woman's vocation is familial,
             as is her ethical disposition. © The Author(s)
             2010.},
   Doi = {10.1177/1464700110366805},
   Key = {fds293979}
}

@article{fds293983,
   Author = {McLarney, EA and co-authors, BG},
   Title = {Muslim Women, Consumer Capitalism, and the Islamic Culture
             Industry},
   Journal = {Journal of Middle East Women's Studies},
   Year = {2010},
   Month = {Fall},
   url = {http://hdl.handle.net/10161/6972 Duke open
             access},
   Key = {fds293983}
}

@article{fds293982,
   Author = {McLarney, EA},
   Title = {The Islamic Public Sphere and the Discipline of
             Adab},
   Journal = {International Journal of Middle Eastern Studies},
   Volume = {43},
   Number = {3},
   Pages = {429-449},
   Publisher = {Cambridge University Press (CUP)},
   Year = {2011},
   url = {http://hdl.handle.net/10161/6998 Duke open
             access},
   Doi = {10.1017/s0020743811000602},
   Key = {fds293982}
}

@article{fds293981,
   Author = {McLarney, EA},
   Title = {American Freedom and Islamic Fascism: Ideology in the Hall
             of Mirrors},
   Journal = {Theory and Event},
   Volume = {14},
   Number = {3},
   Year = {2011},
   Month = {September},
   url = {http://hdl.handle.net/10161/6988 Duke open
             access},
   Key = {fds293981}
}

@article{fds305815,
   Author = {McLarney, E},
   Title = {Review: Reconfiguring Islamic Tradition: Reform,
             Rationality, and Modernity by Samira Haj},
   Journal = {International Journal of Middle East Studies},
   Volume = {44},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {177-179},
   Publisher = {Cambridge University Press (CUP)},
   Year = {2012},
   Month = {February},
   ISSN = {1471-6380},
   url = {http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=000299881600020&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=47d3190e77e5a3a53558812f597b0b92},
   Doi = {10.1017/S0020743811001401},
   Key = {fds305815}
}

@article{fds293977,
   Author = {McLarney, E},
   Title = {Women’s Rights in the Egyptian Constitution:
             (Neo)Liberalism’s Family Values},
   Journal = {Jadaliyya},
   Year = {2013},
   Month = {May},
   url = {http://http//www.jadaliyya.com/pages/index/11852/womens-rights-in-the-egyptian-constitution_(neo)li},
   Key = {fds293977}
}

@misc{fds305824,
   Author = {McLarney, E},
   Title = {Egypt on the Brink},
   Journal = {The State of Things},
   Publisher = {WUNC Radio},
   Year = {2013},
   Month = {August},
   Key = {fds305824}
}

@book{fds293969,
   Author = {McLarney, EA},
   Title = {Soft force: Women in Egypt's Islamic awakening},
   Pages = {1-312},
   Publisher = {Princeton University Press},
   Year = {2015},
   Month = {June},
   ISBN = {9780691158488},
   url = {http://press.princeton.edu/titles/10512.html},
   Abstract = {In the decades leading up to the Arab Spring in 2011, when
             Hosni Mubarak's authoritarian regime was swept from power in
             Egypt, Muslim women took a leading role in developing a
             robust Islamist presence in the country's public sphere.
             Soft Force examines the writings and activism of these
             women-including scholars, preachers, journalists, critics,
             actors, and public intellectuals-who envisioned an Islamic
             awakening in which women's rights and the family, equality,
             and emancipation were at the center. Challenging Western
             conceptions of Muslim women as being oppressed by Islam,
             Ellen McLarney shows how women used "soft force"-a women's
             jihad characterized by nonviolent protest-to oppose secular
             dictatorship and articulate a public sphere that was both
             Islamic and democratic. McLarney draws on memoirs, political
             essays, sermons, newspaper articles, and other writings to
             explore how these women imagined the home and the family as
             sites of the free practice of religion in a climate where
             Islamists were under siege by the secular state. While they
             seem to reinforce women's traditional roles in a
             male-dominated society, these Islamist writers also
             reoriented Islamist politics in domains coded as feminine,
             putting women at the very forefront in imagining an Islamic
             polity. Bold and insightful, Soft Force transforms our
             understanding of women's rights, women's liberation, and
             women's equality in Egypt's Islamic revival.},
   Key = {fds293969}
}

@misc{fds343304,
   Author = {McLarney, E},
   Title = {Women’s Rights and Equality: Egyptian Constitutional
             Law},
   Booktitle = {Women’s Movements in Post-Arab Spring North
             Africa},
   Publisher = {Palgrave Macmillan},
   Editor = {Sadiqi, F},
   Year = {2016},
   Key = {fds343304}
}

@article{fds226018,
   Author = {E.A. McLarney},
   Title = {The Redemption of Women’s Liberation: Reviving Qasim
             Amin},
   Booktitle = {Transformations of Modern Arab Thought: Intellectual History
             after the Liberal Age},
   Publisher = {Princeton University Press},
   Editor = {Max Weiss and Jens Hanssen},
   Year = {2016},
   Key = {fds226018}
}

@article{fds226019,
   Author = {E.A. McLarney},
   Title = {On Constitutions and Women’s Rights: Egypt in 2012 and
             2014},
   Booktitle = {Women's Rights in the Aftermath of the Arab
             Spring},
   Editor = {Fatima Sadiqi},
   Year = {2016},
   Key = {fds226019}
}

@article{fds305823,
   Author = {McLarney, E},
   Title = {Freedom, Justice, and the Power of Adab},
   Journal = {International Journal of Middle East Studies},
   Volume = {48},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {25-46},
   Publisher = {Cambridge University Press (CUP)},
   Year = {2016},
   Month = {February},
   ISSN = {0020-7438},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0020743815001452},
   Abstract = {This article analyzes in depth four main writings by the
             pioneering nahda intellectual Rifa'a Rafi'al-Tahtawi, who
             drew on classical kinds of adab to articulate new kinds of
             political subjectivities. He especially draws on the image
             of the body politic as a body with the king at its heart.
             But he reconfigures this image, instead placing the public,
             or the people, at the heart of politics, a "vanquishing
             sultan" that governs through public opinion. For al-Tahtawi,
             adab is a kind of virtuous comportment that governs self and
             soul and structures political relationships. In this, he
             does not diverge from classical conceptions of adab as
             righteous behavior organizing proper social and political
             relationships. But in his thought, disciplinary training in
             adab is crucial to the citizen-subject's capacity for
             self-rule, as he submits to the authority of his individual
             conscience, ensuring not only freedom, but also justice.
             These ideas have had lasting impact on Islamic thought, as
             they have been recycled for the political struggles of new
             generations.},
   Doi = {10.1017/S0020743815001452},
   Key = {fds305823}
}

@misc{fds343303,
   Author = {McLarney, E},
   Title = {The Revival of Women’s Liberation},
   Booktitle = {Arabic Thought Against the Authoritarian Age: Towards an
             Intellectual History of the Present},
   Publisher = {Cambridge University Press},
   Editor = {Hanssen, J and Weiss, M},
   Year = {2018},
   Key = {fds343303}
}

@misc{fds363304,
   Author = {McLarney, E},
   Title = {Reviving Qasim Amin, Redeeming Women’s
             Liberation},
   Pages = {262-284},
   Booktitle = {Arabic Thought against the Authoritarian Age: Towards an
             Intellectual History of the Present},
   Year = {2018},
   Month = {January},
   ISBN = {9781107193383},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/9781108147781.016},
   Abstract = {The fin-de-siècle concept of “women’s liberation”
             attributed to Egyptian lawyer Qasim Amin (d. 1909) has been
             revived for the age of the Islamic awakening, both in state
             discourse and in writings of thinkers associated with the
             Islamic movement. Two major conferences organized in Cairo
             around the turn of the twenty-first century commemorated
             this notion of women’s liberation.},
   Doi = {10.1017/9781108147781.016},
   Key = {fds363304}
}

@article{fds345807,
   Author = {McLarney, E},
   Title = {Cover art concept},
   Journal = {Journal of Middle East Women's Studies},
   Volume = {15},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {235-236},
   Year = {2019},
   Month = {January},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/15525864-7491143},
   Doi = {10.1215/15525864-7491143},
   Key = {fds345807}
}

@article{fds345808,
   Author = {McLarney, E},
   Title = {Cover art concept},
   Journal = {Journal of Middle East Women's Studies},
   Volume = {15},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {116},
   Year = {2019},
   Month = {January},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/15525864-7273857},
   Doi = {10.1215/15525864-7273857},
   Key = {fds345808}
}

@article{fds345809,
   Author = {Bayoumi, S and Hafez, S and McLarney, E},
   Title = {From the new editorial team},
   Journal = {Journal of Middle East Women's Studies},
   Volume = {15},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {1-2},
   Year = {2019},
   Month = {January},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/15525864-7273664},
   Doi = {10.1215/15525864-7273664},
   Key = {fds345809}
}

@article{fds343184,
   Author = {McLarney, E},
   Title = {James baldwin and the power of black muslim
             language},
   Journal = {Social Text},
   Volume = {37},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {51-84},
   Publisher = {Duke University Press},
   Year = {2019},
   Month = {March},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/01642472-7286264},
   Doi = {10.1215/01642472-7286264},
   Key = {fds343184}
}

@article{fds346562,
   Author = {McLarney, E},
   Title = {Beyoncé's soft power: Poetics and politics of an
             afro-diasporic aesthetics},
   Journal = {Camera Obscura},
   Volume = {34},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {1-39},
   Publisher = {Duke University Press},
   Year = {2019},
   Month = {September},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/02705346-7584892},
   Abstract = {<jats:p>This article charts Beyoncé’s multimedia
             intervention into the politics of the Trump presidency as
             she draws on the work of black Muslim and Latinx artists to
             challenge white monopolies on representation in the
             Breitbart era. It specifically looks at the political
             interventions Beyoncé staged through collaborations with
             Warsan Shire, a British poet born in Kenya to Somali
             parents; Awol Erizku, an Ethiopian-born American artist
             raised in the Bronx; and Daniela Vesco, a Costa Rican
             photographer. This collective of artists forge a black
             aesthetics at a heightened level of visibility, using new
             performative technologies to intervene in the politics of
             #BlackLivesMatter, crackdowns on Muslim and Latinx refugees
             and immigrants, the proposed wall with Mexico, and neo-Nazi
             mobilization. Focusing on Beyoncé’s pregnancy
             announcement, the article explores the politics of
             representation of black bodies and black lives, as she
             transforms the trope of suffering black mothers and their
             martyred black youth into a celebration of black motherhood
             and the pregnant body. These images are consciously rooted
             in a genealogy of black women’s representations of black
             women’s bodies. Despite the political power of these
             interventions, accusations were leveled at Beyoncé of
             cultural appropriation and exploitation of suffering by the
             neoliberal entertainment machine. By mentoring these
             artists, Beyoncé sought to convey the fertility of creative
             foment across borders and power hierarchies, even if her
             star power ultimately eclipsed the message as well as the
             marginalized artist that she sought to highlight.</jats:p>},
   Doi = {10.1215/02705346-7584892},
   Key = {fds346562}
}

@article{fds357640,
   Author = {McLARNEY, E},
   Title = {Cover art concept},
   Journal = {Journal of Middle East Women's Studies},
   Volume = {16},
   Number = {3},
   Pages = {329-330},
   Year = {2020},
   Month = {January},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/15525864-8637452},
   Doi = {10.1215/15525864-8637452},
   Key = {fds357640}
}

@article{fds352325,
   Author = {McLARNEY, E and MOTTAHEDEH, N},
   Title = {Soundscapes of the iranian revolution},
   Journal = {Journal of Middle East Women's Studies},
   Volume = {16},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {227-234},
   Year = {2020},
   Month = {July},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/15525864-8238258},
   Doi = {10.1215/15525864-8238258},
   Key = {fds352325}
}

@article{fds362641,
   Author = {LARNEY, EM and Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Images of an undocumented revolution: Interview with
             claudine mulard},
   Journal = {Journal of Middle East Women's Studies},
   Volume = {16},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {235-243},
   Year = {2020},
   Month = {July},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/15525864-8238272},
   Doi = {10.1215/15525864-8238272},
   Key = {fds362641}
}

@article{fds362640,
   Author = {McLarney, E},
   Title = {Agency versus Insurgency},
   Journal = {Journal of Middle East Women's Studies},
   Volume = {17},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {256-264},
   Publisher = {Duke University Press},
   Year = {2021},
   Month = {July},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/15525864-8949464},
   Doi = {10.1215/15525864-8949464},
   Key = {fds362640}
}

@article{fds372241,
   Author = {McLarney, E},
   Title = {The Burning House: Revolution and Black Art},
   Journal = {Souls},
   Volume = {23},
   Number = {3-4},
   Pages = {185-210},
   Year = {2022},
   Month = {January},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10999949.2023.2189680},
   Abstract = {In a 1961 radio discussion about Black art and its
             relationship to Black nationalism, Lorraine Hansberry asked:
             “Is it necessary to integrate oneself into a burning
             house?” James Baldwin quoted Hansberry in The Fire Next
             Time without citing her—words that circulated widely in
             the Black liberation movement. Variously attributed to
             Malcolm X, Baldwin, and King, Hansberry’s role in this
             literary political genealogy has been unacknowledged. She
             was riffing on Malcolm X’s idea of Islam as a “flaming
             fire.” But he also developed his parable of the master’s
             house on fire after Baldwin quoted Hansberry’s words,
             using the burning house as a symbol of revolution, class
             struggle, and the relationship between property and
             citizenship rights in a racial capitalist system. That
             Malcolm X influenced the Black Arts Movement is widely
             acknowledged, but he also read, listened to, and conversed
             with leftist artists, writers, and intellectuals that
             influenced the development of his own thought and rhetoric.
             This article explores the call and response between these
             intellectuals, their critique of integration, and call for a
             radical Black art—looking at Hansberry’s seminal
             contribution to these debates.},
   Doi = {10.1080/10999949.2023.2189680},
   Key = {fds372241}
}

@article{fds370813,
   Author = {McLarney, E},
   Title = {The Literary Qurʾan: Narrative Ethics in the Maghreb. Hoda
             El Shakry (New York: Fordham University Press, 2020). Pp.
             235. $28.00 paper. ISBN: 9780823286355},
   Journal = {International Journal of Middle East Studies},
   Volume = {54},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {190-191},
   Publisher = {Cambridge University Press (CUP)},
   Year = {2022},
   Month = {February},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0020743821001136},
   Doi = {10.1017/s0020743821001136},
   Key = {fds370813}
}

@article{fds362639,
   Author = {McLarney, E},
   Title = {Malcolm X's Gospel},
   Journal = {Black Perspectives},
   Publisher = {African American Intellectual History Society},
   Year = {2022},
   Month = {March},
   Key = {fds362639}
}

@article{fds371285,
   Author = {McLarney, E and Idris, S},
   Title = {Black Muslims and the Angels of Afrofuturism},
   Journal = {Black Scholar},
   Volume = {53},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {30-47},
   Publisher = {Informa UK Limited},
   Year = {2023},
   Month = {January},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00064246.2023.2177948},
   Doi = {10.1080/00064246.2023.2177948},
   Key = {fds371285}
}


%% Metzger, Sean   
@article{fds22806,
   Title = {Farewell My Fantasy},
   Journal = {Journal of Homosexuality},
   Volume = {39},
   Number = {3-4},
   Pages = {213-232},
   Year = {2000},
   Key = {fds22806}
}

@article{fds26731,
   Author = {S. Metzger and Hope Medina},
   Title = {Performing America: Cultural Nationalism in American
             Theater},
   Journal = {Theatre Journal},
   Volume = {53},
   Pages = {358-360},
   Year = {2001},
   Month = {May},
   Key = {fds26731}
}

@article{fds26734,
   Title = {Filmic Revisions of Vietnam and the MIAs (Male Indochinese
             Asexuals)},
   Journal = {Quarterly Review of Film and Video},
   Volume = {19},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {107-121},
   Year = {2002},
   Key = {fds26734}
}

@article{fds26735,
   Title = {Eugenie Chan},
   Pages = {18-23},
   Booktitle = {Asian American Playwrights: A Bio-Bibliographical Critical
             Sourcebook},
   Publisher = {Greenwood Publishing},
   Editor = {Miles X. Liu},
   Year = {2002},
   Key = {fds26735}
}

@article{fds22797,
   Title = {Mulan, verkleedpartijen in China},
   Journal = {Zorro & Co. : Populaire personages en het koloniale
             verleden.},
   Pages = {117-126},
   Publisher = {Nijmegen:Vantilt},
   Editor = {Nadia Lie and Theo D'haen},
   Year = {2002},
   Key = {fds22797}
}

@article{fds22794,
   Title = {Ice Queens, Rice Queens and Intercultural Investments in
             Zhang Yimou's Turandot},
   Journal = {Asian Theatre Journal},
   Volume = {20},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {209-217},
   Year = {2003},
   Month = {Fall},
   Key = {fds22794}
}

@article{fds22793,
   Author = {S. Metzger and Cathy Irwin},
   Title = {Keeping Up Appearances: Ethnic Alien-Nation in Female Solo
             Performance},
   Journal = {Mixing It Up: Multiracial Subjects},
   Pages = {163-180},
   Publisher = {University of Texas},
   Editor = {Sansan Kwan and Kenneth Speirs},
   Year = {2004},
   Key = {fds22793}
}

@article{fds26729,
   Title = {Charles Parsloe's Chinese Fetish: An Example of Yellowface
             Performance in Nineteenth-Century American
             Melodrama},
   Journal = {Theatre Journal},
   Volume = {56},
   Pages = {627-651},
   Year = {2004},
   Month = {December},
   Key = {fds26729}
}

@article{fds32384,
   Title = {The Protestant Ethnic and the Spirit of Capitalism by Rey
             Chow},
   Journal = {Modern Chinese Literature and Culture and MCLC Resource
             Center Publication},
   Year = {2005},
   Month = {February},
   url = {http://mclc.osu.edu/rc/pubs/reviews/metzger.htm},
   Key = {fds32384}
}

@article{fds26733,
   Title = {Patterns of Resistance?: Anna May Wong and the Fabrication
             of China in American Cinema of the late 30s},
   Journal = {Quarterly Review of Film and Video},
   Volume = {23},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {1-11},
   Year = {2006},
   Key = {fds26733}
}

@article{fds50970,
   Title = {Yellowface: Creating the Chinese in American Popular Music
             and Performance, 1850s-1920s and From Inner Worlds to Outer
             Space: The Multimedia Performances of Dan
             Kwong},
   Journal = {TDR},
   Volume = {50},
   Number = {192},
   Year = {2006},
   Month = {Winter},
   Key = {fds50970}
}

@article{fds138871,
   Author = {S. Metzger},
   Title = {The Little (Chinese) Mermaid: Importing "Western" Femininity
             in Lou Ye's Suzhou he (Suzhou River)},
   Pages = {135-154},
   Booktitle = {How East Asian Films Are Reshaping National Identities:
             Essays on the Cinemas of China, Japan, South Korea, and Hong
             Kong},
   Publisher = {The Edwin Mellen Press},
   Editor = {Andrew David Jackson and Michael Gibb and Dave
             White},
   Year = {2007},
   Key = {fds138871}
}

@misc{fds26737,
   Author = {S. Metzger and Gina Masequesmay},
   Title = {Embodying Asian/American Sexualities},
   Publisher = {Lexington Books},
   Year = {2007},
   url = {http://www.lexingtonbooks.com/Catalog/SingleBook.shtml?command=Search&db=^DB/CATALOG.db&eqSKUdata=0739129031},
   Key = {fds26737}
}

@article{fds138869,
   Author = {S. Metzger},
   Title = {Double Agency: Acts of Impersonation in Asian American
             Literature and Culture and Americans First: Chinese
             Americans and the Second World War},
   Journal = {American Literature},
   Volume = {79},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {201-203},
   Year = {2007},
   Month = {March},
   Key = {fds138869}
}

@article{fds138870,
   Author = {S. Metzger},
   Title = {The Provincetown Players and the Culture of Modernity;
             Avant-Garde Performance and the Limits of Criticism:
             Approaching the Living Theatre, Happenings/Fluxus, and the
             Black Arts Movement; Performance in America: Contemporary
             U.S. Culture and the Performing Arts},
   Journal = {American Literature},
   Volume = {79},
   Number = {4},
   Year = {2007},
   Month = {December},
   Key = {fds138870}
}

@misc{fds152490,
   Author = {S. Metzger and Yuko Kurahashi et al},
   Title = {Performance Review of The First National Asian American
             Theater Festival},
   Journal = {Theatre Journal},
   Volume = {60},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {283-285},
   Year = {2008},
   Key = {fds152490}
}

@misc{fds152492,
   Title = {Performance Review of Yohen},
   Journal = {Theatre Journal},
   Volume = {51},
   Number = {4},
   Pages = {68-70},
   Year = {2008},
   Key = {fds152492}
}

@article{fds152277,
   Title = {Ripples in the Seascape: The Cuba Commission Report and the
             Idea of Freedom},
   Journal = {Afro-Hispanic Review},
   Volume = {27},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {105-121},
   Year = {2008},
   Month = {Spring},
   Key = {fds152277}
}

@article{fds169410,
   Author = {S. Metzger},
   Title = {Saving Face, or the Future Perfect of Queer Chinese/American
             Cinema?},
   Pages = {223-240},
   Booktitle = {Futures of Chinese Cinema: Technologies and Temporalities in
             Chinese Screen Cultures},
   Year = {2009},
   Key = {fds169410}
}

@article{fds169411,
   Author = {Olivia Khoo},
   Title = {Introduction},
   Pages = {13-34},
   Booktitle = {Futures of Chinese Cinema: Technologies and Temporalities in
             Chinese Screen Cultures},
   Year = {2009},
   Key = {fds169411}
}

@article{fds169412,
   Author = {Gina Masequesmay},
   Title = {Introduction: Embodying Asian/American Sexualities},
   Pages = {1-21},
   Booktitle = {Embodying Asian/American Sexualities},
   Year = {2009},
   Key = {fds169412}
}

@article{fds169413,
   Author = {Michaeline Crichlow and Patricia Northover},
   Title = {Questioning Freedoms in the Atlantic World (intro
             essay)},
   Journal = {Cultural Dynamics},
   Volume = {21},
   Number = {3},
   Pages = {215-225},
   Year = {2009},
   Key = {fds169413}
}

@article{fds169414,
   Author = {S. Metzger},
   Title = {Unsettling: Towards a Chinese/Cuban Cultural
             Critique},
   Journal = {Cultural Dynamics},
   Volume = {21},
   Number = {3},
   Pages = {317-338},
   Year = {2009},
   Key = {fds169414}
}

@misc{fds169409,
   Author = {Michaeline Crichlow},
   Title = {Race, Space, Place: Making and Unmaking Freedoms in the
             Atlantic World},
   Journal = {Cultural Dynamics},
   Volume = {21},
   Number = {3},
   Year = {2009},
   Key = {fds169409}
}

@misc{fds160789,
   Author = {S. Metzger and Olivia Khoo},
   Title = {Futures of Chinese Cinema: Technologies and Temporalities in
             Chinese Screen Cultures},
   Publisher = {Intellect},
   Year = {2009},
   url = {http://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/books/view-Book,id=4653/},
   Key = {fds160789}
}

@misc{fds186065,
   Title = {Embodying Asian/American Sexualities},
   Year = {2010},
   Key = {fds186065}
}

@article{fds193520,
   Author = {S. Metzger},
   Title = {At the Vanishing Point: Theatre and Asian/American
             Critique},
   Journal = {American Quarterly},
   Volume = {63},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {277-300},
   Year = {2011},
   Key = {fds193520}
}

@article{fds193521,
   Author = {S. Metzger},
   Title = {Le Rugissement du Lion: Mapping and Memory in Montreal’s
             Chinese/Canadian Street Theater},
   Booktitle = {New Essays in Canadian Theatre Vol. 1: Asian Canadian
             Theatre},
   Publisher = {Playwrights Canada Press},
   Editor = {Nina Lee Aquino and Ric Knowles},
   Year = {2011},
   url = {http://www.playwrightscanada.com/plays/asian_canadian_theatre.html},
   Key = {fds193521}
}

@article{fds200889,
   Author = {S. Metzger},
   Title = {Slaves to Fashion: Black Dandyism and the Styling of Black
             Diasporic Identity; Beyond the Black Lady: Sexuality and the
             New African American Middle Class},
   Journal = {American Literature},
   Volume = {83},
   Number = {4},
   Pages = {866-868},
   Year = {2011},
   Key = {fds200889}
}

@article{fds205975,
   Author = {S. Metzger},
   Title = {Mifune and Me: Asian/American Corporeal Citations and the
             Politics of Mobility},
   Journal = {The Journal of Transnational American Studies},
   Volume = {4},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {18 pages},
   Year = {2012},
   url = {http://escholarship.org/uc/acgcc_jtas},
   Key = {fds205975}
}

@article{fds205976,
   Author = {S. Metzger},
   Title = {When Men Dance: Choreographing Masculinities across
             Borders},
   Journal = {Dance Research Journal},
   Volume = {44},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {118-119},
   Year = {2012},
   Month = {Summer},
   Key = {fds205976}
}


%% Mottahedeh, Negar   
@article{fds287058,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Scheduled For Judgment Day: The Ta'ziyeh Performance in
             Qajar Persia and Walter Benjamin's Dramatic Vision of
             History},
   Journal = {Theatre InSight},
   Volume = {8},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {12-20},
   Year = {1997},
   Month = {Spring},
   Key = {fds287058}
}

@article{fds302972,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Ruptured Spaces and Effective Histories: The Unveiling of
             the Babi Poetess Qurrat al- ’Ayn-Tahirih in the Gardens of
             Badasht},
   Journal = {UCLA Historical Journal},
   Volume = {17},
   Pages = {59-81},
   Year = {1997},
   Key = {fds302972}
}

@article{fds347585,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {“Ruptured Spaces, Effective Histories”},
   Volume = {16},
   Publisher = {Kalimat press},
   Editor = {Afaqi, S},
   Year = {1997},
   Key = {fds347585}
}

@article{fds347586,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Ruptured Spaces and Effective Histories: The Unveiling of
             the Babi Poetess Qurrat al-’Ayn-Tahirih in the Gardens of
             Badasht},
   Volume = {17},
   Pages = {59-81},
   Year = {1997},
   Key = {fds347586}
}

@article{fds287046,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {The Mutilated Body of the Modern Nation},
   Journal = {Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle
             East},
   Volume = {18},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {38-50},
   Publisher = {Duke University Press},
   Year = {1998},
   ISSN = {1089-201X},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/1089201x-18-2-38},
   Doi = {10.1215/1089201x-18-2-38},
   Key = {fds287046}
}

@article{fds302971,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Ruptured Spaces and Effective Histories: The Unveiling of
             the Babi Poetess Qurrat al- ’Ayn-Tahirih in the Gardens of
             Badasht},
   Volume = {2},
   Number = {2},
   Year = {1998},
   Month = {February},
   Key = {fds302971}
}

@article{fds287057,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Resurrection, Return, Reform: Ta'ziyeh as Model for Early
             Babi Historiography},
   Journal = {Iranian Studies},
   Volume = {32},
   Number = {3},
   Pages = {387-399},
   Year = {1999},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00210869908701962},
   Doi = {10.1080/00210869908701962},
   Key = {fds287057}
}

@article{fds287039,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Bahram Bayza'i: Filmography},
   Pages = {74-82},
   Booktitle = {Life and Art: The New Iranian Cinema},
   Publisher = {BFI},
   Editor = {Issa, R and Whitaker, S},
   Year = {1999},
   Key = {fds287039}
}

@misc{fds347584,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {“Bahram Bayza‘i’s Maybe Some Other Time: The
             un-Present-able Iran”},
   Journal = {Camera Obscura: Feminism, Culture and Media
             Studies},
   Volume = {43},
   Pages = {163-191},
   Year = {1999},
   Key = {fds347584}
}

@article{fds287031,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Review of Nader Ahmadi and Fereshteh Ahmadi's 'Iranian
             Islam: The Concept of the Individual'},
   Journal = {Iranian Studies},
   Volume = {33},
   Number = {1-2},
   Pages = {200-201},
   Year = {2000},
   Key = {fds287031}
}

@article{fds287056,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Bahram Bayzai'sMaybe...Some Other Time: The un-Present-able
             Iran},
   Journal = {Camera Obscura: Feminism, Culture, and Media
             Studies},
   Volume = {15},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {163-191},
   Publisher = {Duke University Press},
   Year = {2000},
   ISSN = {0270-5346},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/02705346-15-1_43-163},
   Doi = {10.1215/02705346-15-1_43-163},
   Key = {fds287056}
}

@article{fds287040,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Images of Women: [08] Middle East},
   Volume = {4},
   Series = {4 Vols},
   Pages = {1118-1120},
   Booktitle = {The Routledge International Encyclopedia of Women: Global
             Women's Issues and Knowledge},
   Publisher = {Routledge},
   Editor = {Kramarae, C and Spender, D},
   Year = {2000},
   Key = {fds287040}
}

@article{fds287029,
   Author = {Mottahedeh N},
   Title = {Review of Kamran Talattof and Jerome W. Clinton's 'The
             Poetry of Nizami Ganjavi: Knowledge, Love, and
             Rhetoric'},
   Journal = {Journal for Iranian Research and Analysis},
   Pages = {113-114},
   Year = {2001},
   Key = {fds287029}
}

@article{fds287021,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Review of Nasrin Rahimieh's 'Missing Persians: Discovering
             Voices in Iranian Cultural History'},
   Journal = {Iranian Studies},
   Volume = {36},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {141-145},
   Year = {2003},
   Key = {fds287021}
}

@article{fds287030,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Review of Hamid Naficy's 'An Accented Cinema: Exilic and
             Diasporic Filmmaking'},
   Journal = {Iranian Studies},
   Volume = {36},
   Number = {3},
   Pages = {398-400},
   Year = {2003},
   Key = {fds287030}
}

@article{fds287047,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {After Images of a Revolution: On the Work of Shirin Neshat
             and Gita Hashemi},
   Journal = {Radical History Review},
   Volume = {86},
   Pages = {183-192},
   Publisher = {Duke University Press},
   Year = {2003},
   ISSN = {1534-1453},
   url = {http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=000183414500014&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=47d3190e77e5a3a53558812f597b0b92},
   Key = {fds287047}
}

@article{fds347583,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {'Rapture'},
   Journal = {RADICAL HISTORY REVIEW},
   Number = {86},
   Pages = {183-192},
   Year = {2003},
   Key = {fds347583}
}

@article{fds347582,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Of shifting shadows: Returning to the 1979 Iranian
             Revolution through an exilic journey in memory and history
             (CD-ROM)},
   Journal = {RADICAL HISTORY REVIEW},
   Number = {86},
   Pages = {183-192},
   Year = {2003},
   Key = {fds347582}
}

@article{fds347581,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {'Women of Allah'},
   Journal = {RADICAL HISTORY REVIEW},
   Number = {86},
   Pages = {183-192},
   Year = {2003},
   Key = {fds347581}
}

@article{fds347579,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {The fictive primitives global (short-) circuit},
   Journal = {Signs},
   Year = {2003},
   Key = {fds347579}
}

@article{fds347580,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {'Turbulent'},
   Journal = {RADICAL HISTORY REVIEW},
   Number = {86},
   Pages = {183-192},
   Year = {2003},
   Key = {fds347580}
}

@article{fds347578,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Where are Kiarostami's women?},
   Publisher = {MIT Press},
   Year = {2003},
   Key = {fds347578}
}

@article{fds363838,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {After-Images of a Revolution},
   Journal = {Radical History Review},
   Volume = {2003},
   Number = {86},
   Pages = {183-192},
   Year = {2003},
   Month = {March},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/01636545-2003-86-183},
   Doi = {10.1215/01636545-2003-86-183},
   Key = {fds363838}
}

@article{fds287041,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Christine Jeff's 'Rain': Universality and Narrative
             Displacement in Cinema},
   Journal = {World Order Magazine},
   Volume = {35},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {33-41},
   Year = {2004},
   Month = {Spring},
   Key = {fds287041}
}

@article{fds287055,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {'Life is Color!' Towards a Transnational Feminist Analysis
             of Mohsen Makhmalbaf's 'Gabbeh'},
   Journal = {Signs},
   Volume = {30},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {1403-1426},
   Publisher = {University of Chicago Press},
   Year = {2004},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/421887},
   Abstract = {Special Issue on film feminisms},
   Doi = {10.1086/421887},
   Key = {fds287055}
}

@article{fds306175,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Memory and Gender in Iranian History},
   Year = {2004},
   Key = {fds306175}
}

@article{fds347577,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Off the Grid: Reading Iranian Memoirs in Our Time of Total
             War},
   Journal = {MIddle East Research and Information Project},
   Year = {2004},
   Key = {fds347577}
}

@article{fds287035,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Ruptured Spaces, Effective Histories},
   Volume = {16},
   Series = {Studies in the Babi and Baha’I Religions},
   Pages = {203-219},
   Booktitle = {Tahirih in History: Perspective on Qurrat al-'Ayn from East
             and West, Studies in the Babi and Baha’i
             Religions},
   Publisher = {Kalimat Press},
   Editor = {Afaqi, S},
   Year = {2004},
   Month = {Fall},
   Key = {fds287035}
}

@article{fds287036,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Where are Kiarostami’s Women?},
   Pages = {309-333},
   Booktitle = {Subtitles: On the Foreignness of Film},
   Publisher = {MIT Press},
   Editor = {Egoyan, A and Balfour, I},
   Year = {2004},
   Key = {fds287036}
}

@misc{fds347576,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Representing the Unpresentable: Historical Images of Reform
             from the Qajars to the Islamic Republic of
             Iran},
   Publisher = {Syracuse University Press},
   Year = {2004},
   Key = {fds347576}
}

@article{fds287042,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Off the Grid: Reading Iranian Memoirs in Our Time of Total
             War},
   Journal = {Middle East Research and Information Project},
   Year = {2004},
   Month = {September},
   url = {http://www.merip.org/mero/interventions/mottahedeh_interv.html},
   Key = {fds287042}
}

@article{fds287054,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Karbala Drag Kings and Queens},
   Journal = {The Drama Review: Ta’ziyeh},
   Volume = {49},
   Number = {4},
   Pages = {73-85},
   Publisher = {MIT Press - Journals},
   Year = {2005},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/105420405774762989},
   Doi = {10.1162/105420405774762989},
   Key = {fds287054}
}

@article{fds376555,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Karbala Drag Kings and Queens},
   Journal = {The Drama Review},
   Year = {2005},
   Key = {fds376555}
}

@article{fds287033,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Body: Female: Iran},
   Volume = {5},
   Booktitle = {Encyclopedia of Women and Islamic Cultures},
   Publisher = {Brill},
   Year = {2005},
   Key = {fds287033}
}

@article{fds287034,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Ta'ziyeh: A Twist of History in Everyday
             Life},
   Pages = {25-43},
   Booktitle = {The Women of Karbala: Ritual Performance and Symbolic
             Discourses in Modern Shi'i Islam},
   Publisher = {University of Texas Press},
   Editor = {Aghaie, KS},
   Year = {2005},
   ISBN = {9780292709362},
   Abstract = {Ta'ziyeh (or shabih) is the traditionally accepted term for
             the "theatrical" performances or dramas that reenact,
             recount, and recollect the lives of the extended family of
             the Prophet Mohammad during the month of Moharram. The
             venerated figures represented in the ta'ziyeh are known as
             the "Fourteen Infallibles" (chahardah ma'sum) by Shi'i
             Muslims.1 They include the Prophet Mohammad himself, the
             Twelve Imams, starting with Imam Ali, and the Prophet
             Mohammad's daughter, the mother of Imams Hasan and Hosayn,
             known as Fatemeh.2 In the ta'ziyeh drama, these Fourteen
             Infallibles come alive on the stage of the Iranian "newest
             days" and take part in the dramatic reenactment of Islam's
             antiquity-a resurrection, in drama, historically scheduled
             for Judgment Day. The ta'ziyehs enacted during the month of
             Moharram and sometimes Safar revolve around the tragic death
             of the Third Imam, Hosayn. They are performed in
             recollection of the Battle of Karbala, in which Imam Hosayn,
             his meager army, and members of his family were slaughtered
             on the plains of Karbala (now in Iraq) by rival claimants to
             Prophet Mohammad's successorship and the military army of
             Caliph Yazid. © 2005 by The University of Texas Press. All
             rights reserved.},
   Key = {fds287034}
}

@article{fds287037,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Memory, Women, and Community: Iran},
   Volume = {5},
   Booktitle = {Encyclopedia of Women and Islamic Cultures},
   Publisher = {Brill},
   Year = {2005},
   Key = {fds287037}
}

@misc{fds347575,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Reel Evil Industries},
   Year = {2005},
   Key = {fds347575}
}

@article{fds287032,
   Author = {Mottahedeh N},
   Title = {Review of Richard Tapper's 'The New Iranian Cinema:
             Politics, Representation, and Identity'},
   Journal = {Iranian Studies},
   Volume = {38},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {341-344},
   Editor = {Tapper, R},
   Year = {2005},
   Month = {June},
   Key = {fds287032}
}

@article{fds347574,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {New Iranian cinema: 1982-present},
   Pages = {176-190},
   Booktitle = {Traditions in World Cinema},
   Year = {2005},
   Month = {December},
   ISBN = {9780748618620},
   Key = {fds347574}
}

@article{fds287043,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Negative Refractions: Recent Feminist Writing on the Middle
             East},
   Journal = {Women’s Studies Quarterly: The Global Intimate},
   Volume = {34},
   Series = {Special Issue on the Global Intimate},
   Number = {1/2},
   Pages = {464-470},
   Year = {2006},
   Month = {Winter},
   Key = {fds287043}
}

@article{fds302992,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Female Body as Metaphor},
   Volume = {5},
   Booktitle = {Encyclopedia of Women and Islamic Cultures},
   Publisher = {Brill},
   Editor = {Joseph, S},
   Year = {2006},
   Key = {fds302992}
}

@article{fds302993,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Women, Gender and Constituting the Female
             Body},
   Booktitle = {Iran, Encyclopedia of Women and Islamic Cultures},
   Publisher = {Brill},
   Editor = {Joseph, S},
   Year = {2006},
   Key = {fds302993}
}

@article{fds287038,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {The New Iranian Cinema},
   Pages = {176-189},
   Booktitle = {Traditions in World Cinema},
   Publisher = {Edinburgh University Press},
   Editor = {Badley, L and Schneider, S and Palmer, RB},
   Year = {2006},
   Key = {fds287038}
}

@article{fds302991,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Memory and Gender in Iranian History},
   Volume = {2},
   Booktitle = {Encyclopedia of Women and Islamic Cultures},
   Publisher = {Brill},
   Editor = {Joseph, S},
   Year = {2006},
   Key = {fds302991}
}

@book{fds287044,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Representing the Unpresentable: Images of Reform from the
             Qajars to the Islamic Republic of Iran},
   Publisher = {Syracuse University Press},
   Year = {2008},
   url = {http://www.syracuseuniversitypress.syr.edu/fall-2007/representing-unpresentable.html},
   Key = {fds287044}
}

@book{fds287045,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Displaced Allegories: Post-Revolutionary Iranian
             Cinema},
   Publisher = {Duke University Press},
   Year = {2008},
   url = {http://www.dukeupress.edu/books.php3?isbn=8223-4275-5},
   Key = {fds287045}
}

@article{fds287024,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Woman is Color: on Mohsen Makhmalbaf’s
             Gabbeh},
   Booktitle = {Cines del Sul (International Film Festival
             Book)},
   Year = {2008},
   Month = {May},
   Abstract = {English/Spanish},
   Key = {fds287024}
}

@article{fds287053,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Collection and Recollection: On Studying the Early History
             of Motion Pictures in Iran},
   Journal = {Early Popular Visual Culture},
   Volume = {6},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {103-120},
   Publisher = {Informa UK Limited},
   Year = {2008},
   Month = {June},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17460650802150374},
   Doi = {10.1080/17460650802150374},
   Key = {fds287053}
}

@article{fds287049,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Review of Hamid Dabashi's 'The Making of a Rebel Filmmaker:
             Makhmalbaf at Large'},
   Journal = {Cinema Journal},
   Volume = {49},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {167-169},
   Year = {2009},
   ISSN = {1527-2087},
   url = {http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=000275242400015&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=47d3190e77e5a3a53558812f597b0b92},
   Key = {fds287049}
}

@article{fds347572,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Review of Abbas Kiarostami by Mehrnaz Saeed-Vafa and
             Jonathan Rosenbaum},
   Journal = {Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television},
   Volume = {29},
   Year = {2009},
   Key = {fds347572}
}

@article{fds347573,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Review of The Making of a Rebel Filmmaker: Makhmalbaf at
             Large by Hamid Dabashi},
   Journal = {Cinema Journal},
   Volume = {49},
   Year = {2009},
   Key = {fds347573}
}

@misc{fds303500,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Picturing Ourselves: 1953, 1979 and 2009},
   Journal = {Frontline: Tehran Bureau},
   Year = {2009},
   Month = {July},
   url = {http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/tehranbureau/2009/07/picturing-ourselves-1953-1979-},
   Key = {fds303500}
}

@article{fds287048,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Review of Mehrnaz Saeed-Vafa and Jonathan Rosenbaum's 'Abbas
             Kiarostami'},
   Journal = {Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television},
   Volume = {29},
   Number = {3},
   Pages = {409-411},
   Publisher = {Informa UK Limited},
   Year = {2009},
   Month = {August},
   ISSN = {0143-9685},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01439680903115911},
   Doi = {10.1080/01439680903115911},
   Key = {fds287048}
}

@article{fds287052,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Iranian Cinema in the Twentieth Century: A Sensory
             History},
   Journal = {Iranian Studies},
   Volume = {42},
   Number = {4},
   Pages = {529-548},
   Publisher = {Cambridge University Press (CUP)},
   Year = {2009},
   Month = {September},
   ISSN = {0021-0862},
   url = {http://negarpontifiles.blogspot.com/2009/09/sensory-history.html},
   Abstract = {<jats:p>This essay addresses itself to the century long
             history of cinema in Iran, focusing on the history of the
             senses as they combine with and are extended by film
             technologies. It argues that Khomeini's aim was to produce a
             transformed and Shi'ite Iran by purifying the sensorial
             national body by means of film technologies.</jats:p>},
   Doi = {10.1080/00210860903106279},
   Key = {fds287052}
}

@article{fds287026,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Picturing Ourselves: 1953, 1979 and 2009},
   Journal = {Frontline: Tehran Bureau},
   Year = {2010},
   url = {http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/tehranbureau/2009/07/picturing-ourselves-1953-1979-and-2009.html},
   Abstract = {http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/tehranbureau/2009/07/picturing-ourselves-1953-1979-and-2009.html},
   Key = {fds287026}
}

@article{fds347571,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Iranian Women in Protest},
   Journal = {Equilibri Magazine (Italy)},
   Year = {2010},
   Key = {fds347571}
}

@article{fds287023,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Karbala Drag Kings and Queens},
   Pages = {149-169},
   Booktitle = {Eternal Performance: Ta'ziyeh and Other Shiite
             Rituals},
   Publisher = {Seagull Books},
   Editor = {Chelkowski, PJ},
   Year = {2010},
   Key = {fds287023}
}

@misc{fds303502,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Green is the New Green: Social Media and the Post Election
             Crisis in Iran 2009},
   Journal = {New Politics},
   Volume = {8},
   Number = {1},
   Year = {2010},
   url = {http://www.newpol.org/fromthearchives?nid=346},
   Key = {fds303502}
}

@article{fds287027,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Brainquake Not Boobquake},
   Journal = {Religion Dispatches},
   Year = {2010},
   Month = {May},
   url = {http://www.religiondispatches.org/dispatches/2549/brainquake_not_boobquake},
   Abstract = {http://www.religiondispatches.org/dispatches/2549/brainquake_not_boobquake},
   Key = {fds287027}
}

@misc{fds303501,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Brainquake Not Boobquake},
   Journal = {Religion Dispatches},
   Year = {2010},
   Month = {May},
   Key = {fds303501}
}

@article{fds287051,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Green is the New Green: Social Media and the Post Election
             Crisis in Iran 2009},
   Journal = {New Politics},
   Volume = {8},
   Number = {1},
   Year = {2010},
   Month = {Summer},
   url = {http://newpolitics.mayfirst.org/fromthearchives?nid=346},
   Abstract = {http://newpolitics.mayfirst.org/fromthearchives?nid=346},
   Key = {fds287051}
}

@article{fds302957,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Iranian Women in Protest 1953, 1978, 2009},
   Journal = {Scholar and Feminist Online: Feminist Media
             Theory},
   Volume = {10},
   Series = {Special Issue: Feminist Media Theory.},
   Number = {3},
   Editor = {Beller, J},
   Year = {2012},
   Month = {Summer},
   url = {http://sfonline.barnard.edu/feminist-media-theory/},
   Key = {fds302957}
}

@misc{fds287028,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Allah-o-Akhbar},
   Journal = {ArteEast Quarterly C+: The Iran Issue.},
   Year = {2012},
   Month = {April},
   url = {http://arteeast.org/pages/artenews/Cplus/992/},
   Keywords = {Iranian presidential election 2009, social media, YouTube,
             Allah-o-Akbar},
   Abstract = {http://arteeast.org/pages/artenews/Cplus/992/ April
             2012},
   Key = {fds287028}
}

@article{fds287050,
   Author = {N. Mottahedeh and Saljoughi, S and Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Rethinking Gender in Contemporary Iranian Art and
             Cinema},
   Journal = {Iranian Studies},
   Volume = {45},
   Number = {4},
   Pages = {499-502},
   Year = {2012},
   Month = {July},
   ISSN = {0021-0862},
   url = {http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=WOS:000305758400003&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=47d3190e77e5a3a53558812f597b0b92},
   Doi = {10.1080/00210862.2012.673828},
   Key = {fds287050}
}

@article{fds287025,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Review of Nacim Pak-Shiraz's 'Islam in Iranian Cinema:
             Religion and Spirituality in Film'},
   Journal = {Contemporary Islam},
   Pages = {79-80},
   Year = {2012},
   Month = {August},
   Key = {fds287025}
}

@book{fds306174,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Abdu'l-Bahá's Journey West: The Course of Human
             Solidarity},
   Pages = {1-196},
   Publisher = {Palgrave},
   Editor = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Year = {2013},
   ISBN = {9781137032003},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137032010},
   Abstract = {This edited volume of specially commissioned essays written
             for the anniversary of 'Abdu'l-Baha's journey to America
             tells the story of this former prisoner's interactions with
             the white upper echelon of American society as well as his
             impact on the lives and writings of important early figures
             in the African-American civil rights movement.},
   Doi = {10.1057/9781137032010},
   Key = {fds306174}
}

@article{fds287022,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Review of Pedram Khosronejad's 'Iranian Sacred Defence
             Cinema: Religion, Martyrdom, and National
             Identity'},
   Journal = {Anthropology of the Contemporary Middle East and Central
             Eurasia},
   Volume = {1},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {178-180},
   Editor = {Khosronejad, P},
   Year = {2013},
   Key = {fds287022}
}

@article{fds366907,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {'ABDU'L-BAHA'S JOURNEY WEST THE COURSE OF HUMAN SOLIDARITY
             INTRODUCTION},
   Pages = {1-+},
   Booktitle = {ABUDU'L-BAHA'S JOURNEY WEST: THE COURSE OF HUMAN
             SOLIDARITY},
   Year = {2013},
   Key = {fds366907}
}

@misc{fds347570,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {‘Abdu’l-Bahá’s Journey West: The Course of Human
             Solidarity (Palgrave, April 2013)},
   Year = {2013},
   Month = {April},
   Abstract = {"Born in 1844 in Persia (Iran), ’Abdu’l-Bahá is best
             known as the eldest son of Mírzá Ḥusayn-‘Alí Núrí,
             Bahá’u’lláh (1817-1892), the founder of the Bahá’í
             Faith. Negar Mottahedeh’s edited volume of specially
             commissioned essays marking the centenary of
             ’Abdu’l-Bahá’s journey to the West documents the
             uniqueness of ’Abdu’l-Bahá’s vision of human
             solidarity and peace in the context of twentieth century
             modernity and shows the moral impact of his principled
             positions on the emergent Civil Rights movement in
             America."},
   Key = {fds347570}
}

@book{fds327180,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Introduction},
   Pages = {1-13},
   Publisher = {Palgrave Macmillan},
   Year = {2013},
   Month = {April},
   ISBN = {9781137032003},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137032010},
   Doi = {10.1057/9781137032010},
   Key = {fds327180}
}

@article{fds287018,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {How #Iranelection Transformed the Public
             Sphere},
   Journal = {IslamiCommentary: Forum for Public Scholarship},
   Year = {2014},
   Month = {June},
   url = {http://islamicommentary.org/2014/06/how-iranelection-transformed-the-public-sphere},
   Key = {fds287018}
}

@misc{fds303503,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {How #Iranelection transformed the Public
             Sphere},
   Journal = {IslamiCommentary: Forum for Public Scholarship},
   Year = {2014},
   Month = {June},
   url = {http://islamicommentary.org/2014/06/how-iranelection-transformed-the-public-sphere/},
   Key = {fds303503}
}

@book{fds287020,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {#iranelection: Hashtag Solidarity and the Transformation of
             Online Life},
   Publisher = {Stanford University Press},
   Year = {2015},
   Key = {fds287020}
}

@article{fds302955,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Anatomy of a Tweet},
   Journal = {The Immanent Frame: a journal for the SSRC},
   Year = {2015},
   Month = {February},
   url = {http://blogs.ssrc.org/tif/2015/02/24/anatomy-of-a-tweet/},
   Key = {fds302955}
}

@article{fds287019,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Hashtag solidarity in Iran: How the Green Movement mobilized
             social media in the interest of social change},
   Journal = {Stanford University Press Blog},
   Year = {2015},
   Month = {June},
   url = {http://stanfordpress.typepad.com/blog/2015/06/hashtag-solidarity-in-iran.html?utm_content=buffer8dc2a&utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter.com&utm_campaign=buffer},
   Key = {fds287019}
}

@misc{fds302966,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Hashtag solidarity and the radical kinship of Twitter’s
             #iraneletion},
   Journal = {Medium},
   Year = {2015},
   Month = {June},
   url = {https://medium.com/@negaratduke},
   Key = {fds302966}
}

@article{fds287013,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {'Hashtag solidarity and the radical kinship of Twitter’s
             #iraneletion' Medium https://medium.com/@negaratduke June 12
             2015},
   Journal = {Medium},
   Publisher = {Medium},
   Year = {2015},
   Month = {June},
   url = {https://medium.com/@negaratduke},
   Key = {fds287013}
}

@article{fds303504,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Hashtag solidarity in Iran: How the Green Movement mobilized
             social media in the interest of social change},
   Publisher = {Stanford University Press Blog},
   Year = {2015},
   Month = {June},
   url = {http://bit.ly/1KljmmT},
   Key = {fds303504}
}

@article{fds302967,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N and Kuntsman, A and Stein, R},
   Title = {Political Consciousness of a Selfie},
   Publisher = {Stanford University Press Blog},
   Year = {2015},
   Month = {July},
   url = {http://stanfordpress.typepad.com/blog/2015/07/the-political-consciousness-of-the-selfie.html},
   Abstract = {Parts 1 & 2.},
   Key = {fds302967}
}

@misc{fds302969,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {#iranelection},
   Journal = {The Page 99 Test},
   Year = {2015},
   Month = {July},
   url = {http://page99test.blogspot.com/2015/07/negar-mottahedehs-iranelection-hashtag.html},
   Key = {fds302969}
}

@misc{fds302968,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {A Revolution of Flesh and Data},
   Journal = {Duke Magazine},
   Year = {2015},
   Month = {July},
   url = {http://dukemagazine.duke.edu/article/a-revolution-of-flesh-and-data},
   Key = {fds302968}
}

@misc{fds302970,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {A Revolutionary Meme},
   Journal = {Cinema Journal: In Media Res},
   Year = {2015},
   Month = {August},
   url = {http://mediacommons.futureofthebook.org/imr/2015/08/25/revolutionary-meme},
   Key = {fds302970}
}

@book{fds302956,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N and Szeman, I and O'Driscoll, M},
   Title = {After oil 2015},
   Publisher = {Petrocultures Research Group (in partnership with
             press)},
   Year = {2016},
   url = {http://afteroil.ca/resources-2/after-oil-2015/},
   Key = {fds302956}
}

@article{fds302973,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Unruly voices and Narratives},
   Publisher = {Amodern},
   Year = {2016},
   Key = {fds302973}
}

@article{fds302974,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Crude Extraction in Iran: Territorial Expansion and Benthic
             depths in sponsored oil films},
   Publisher = {Cultural Studies},
   Year = {2016},
   Key = {fds302974}
}

@article{fds302975,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Le Vent Nous Portera: of lovers possessed, times entangled,
             and bodies carried away},
   Publisher = {Asian Cinema},
   Year = {2016},
   Key = {fds302975}
}

@article{fds302994,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {the people [pee-puh l] verb, noun : networked contagion.
             related forms: #selfie},
   Year = {2016},
   Key = {fds302994}
}

@article{fds287014,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Tehran in Cinema},
   Booktitle = {Tehran in the Iranian Cultural Imaginary},
   Editor = {Rahimieh, N and Parviz Brookshaw and D},
   Year = {2016},
   Key = {fds287014}
}

@article{fds287015,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Crude Extractions: the Voice in Iranian Cinema},
   Booktitle = {Locating the Voice in Film},
   Editor = {Whittaker, T and Wright, S},
   Year = {2016},
   Key = {fds287015}
}

@article{fds287016,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {One Light : Cinema and Islamic Spirituality},
   Booktitle = {Whiley-Blackwell Companion to Islamic Spirituality},
   Editor = {Lawrence, B and Cornell, V},
   Year = {2016},
   Key = {fds287016}
}

@article{fds287017,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Abdu’l Bahá and the Baha’i Message of Human
             Solidarity},
   Booktitle = {The First Universal Races Congress of 1911: Empires,
             Civilizations, Encounters},
   Editor = {Bonakdarian, M and Fletcher, IC and Simpson Fletcher,
             Y},
   Year = {2016},
   Key = {fds287017}
}

@article{fds326693,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {The people: The #selfie's urform},
   Pages = {59-62},
   Booktitle = {Selfie Citizenship},
   Publisher = {Springer International Publishing},
   Year = {2017},
   Month = {January},
   ISBN = {9783319452692},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-45270-8_7},
   Abstract = {The chapter considers the ways in which the selfie is
             connected, in its quotidianness, to private life. In its
             daily co-articulation and its challenge to objects invested
             with power, it upends contemporary notions of the state, of
             government, of capital, of art and urban design, of
             copyright and of privacy. As such, the selfie aligns with
             the quotidian body of the collective, indeed, 'the people'
             comprised of both flesh and data - an amorphous sensing
             body, articulated with and networked to others across
             national boundaries at a distance away.},
   Doi = {10.1007/978-3-319-45270-8_7},
   Key = {fds326693}
}

@article{fds347569,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Nahid Siamdoust, Soundtrack of the Revolution: The Politics
             of Music in Iran, Stanford Studies in Middle Eastern and
             Islamic Societies and Cultures (Stanford, Calif.: Stanford
             University Press, 2017). Pp. 368. $29.95 paper. ISBN:
             9781503600324},
   Journal = {International Journal of Middle East Studies},
   Volume = {50},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {348-349},
   Publisher = {Cambridge University Press (CUP)},
   Year = {2018},
   Month = {May},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s002074381800034x},
   Doi = {10.1017/s002074381800034x},
   Key = {fds347569}
}

@article{fds362342,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Reel Evil},
   Journal = {Journal of Cinema and Media Studies},
   Volume = {57},
   Number = {4},
   Pages = {146-150},
   Year = {2018},
   Month = {June},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/cj.2018.0060},
   Doi = {10.1353/cj.2018.0060},
   Key = {fds362342}
}

@book{fds347568,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Whisper Tapes Kate Millett in Iran},
   Pages = {224 pages},
   Publisher = {Stanford University Press},
   Year = {2019},
   Month = {February},
   ISBN = {9781503610156},
   Abstract = {Published with the fortieth anniversary of the Iranian
             Revolution and the women&#39;s protests that followed on its
             heels, Whisper Tapes re-introduces Millett&#39;s historic
             visit to Iran and lays out the nature of her encounter with
             the Iranian ...},
   Key = {fds347568}
}

@article{fds352329,
   Author = {McLARNEY, E and MOTTAHEDEH, N},
   Title = {Soundscapes of the iranian revolution},
   Journal = {Journal of Middle East Women's Studies},
   Volume = {16},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {227-234},
   Year = {2020},
   Month = {July},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/15525864-8238258},
   Doi = {10.1215/15525864-8238258},
   Key = {fds352329}
}

@article{fds352330,
   Author = {LARNEY, EM and Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Images of an undocumented revolution: Interview with
             claudine mulard},
   Journal = {Journal of Middle East Women's Studies},
   Volume = {16},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {235-243},
   Year = {2020},
   Month = {July},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/15525864-8238272},
   Doi = {10.1215/15525864-8238272},
   Key = {fds352330}
}

@article{fds375361,
   Author = {Mottahedeh, N},
   Title = {Not Feminism, Human Solidarity: Qurrat al-'~Ayn Tahirih in
             Early Historical Drama},
   Journal = {Hawwa},
   Volume = {21},
   Number = {4},
   Pages = {410-432},
   Year = {2023},
   Month = {January},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15692086-12341407},
   Abstract = {Qurrat al-'Ayn Tahirih has long been associated with
             feminism and early agitation for women’s rights in Iran
             and elsewhere. These articulations fly in the face of her
             repeated construction in the historical work of her
             contemporaries as the condition of the new. Qurrat al-'Ayn
             Tahirih was a dramatic and messianic player. And it was out
             of the messianism on which she acted that “the new” came
             into being. This essay studies her unveiling at the Badasht
             conclave in the work of her chroniclers as a sacred
             performance.},
   Doi = {10.1163/15692086-12341407},
   Key = {fds375361}
}


%% Musawi Natanzi, Paniz   
@misc{fds365348,
   Author = {Musawi Natanzi and P},
   Title = {The Continent - Tracing the Social Power of the City of the
             Dead},
   Journal = {Re:public},
   Editor = {Blagojević, M and Jerković, J and Lozo, M and Marić, T and Othenin-Girard, G and Paulson, N and Piškorec, L and Shelley, P and Zimonjić, N},
   Year = {2015},
   Key = {fds365348}
}

@misc{fds365349,
   Author = {Musawi Natanzi and P},
   Title = {Feminist responsibilities: thinking about art history,
             epistemology and geopolitics},
   Journal = {Feminist Review},
   Year = {2015},
   Key = {fds365349}
}

@misc{fds366891,
   Author = {Musawi Natanzi and P},
   Title = {Feminist responsibility when researching art and gender in
             the contemporary Middle East},
   Journal = {Art Represent},
   Year = {2015},
   Key = {fds366891}
}

@misc{fds365347,
   Author = {Musawi Natanzi and P},
   Title = {Same same but different: “A present in duality” in
             Tehran},
   Journal = {ArtNow Pakistan},
   Year = {2017},
   Key = {fds365347}
}

@misc{fds367166,
   Author = {Musawi Natanzi and P},
   Title = {Art, Geopolitics and Gendering in Afghanistan, Part
             2},
   Journal = {The Centre for Feminist Foreign Policy},
   Year = {2017},
   Key = {fds367166}
}

@misc{fds367167,
   Author = {Musawi Natanzi and P},
   Title = {Art, Geopolitics and Gendering in Afghanistan, Part
             1},
   Journal = {The Centre for Feminist Foreign Policy},
   Year = {2017},
   Key = {fds367167}
}

@misc{fds365346,
   Author = {Musawi Natanzi and P},
   Title = {Questionnaire 2: Civil Society & Marginalised
             Groups},
   Journal = {Working Paper Series for the Governance Programme},
   Publisher = {Aga Khan University, Institute for the Study of Muslim
             Civilisations},
   Editor = {Alimia, S and Parolin, G},
   Year = {2020},
   Key = {fds365346}
}

@misc{fds365345,
   Author = {Musawi Natanzi and P},
   Title = {Frauen als Legitimation für den "Krieg gegen den
             Terror"?},
   Publisher = {Heise Online},
   Year = {2021},
   Key = {fds365345}
}

@misc{fds365304,
   Author = {Musawi Natanzi and SP},
   Title = {The politics of madness and love in new Iranian poetry in
             the 1950s–60s. The legacy of Majnūn in She‘re Now:
             Ahmad Shamlu and Forough Farrokhzad’s love
             poetry},
   Pages = {188-212},
   Booktitle = {Love and Poetry in the Middle East. Love and Literature from
             the Antiquity to the Present},
   Publisher = {I.B. Tauris},
   Editor = {Alshaer, A},
   Year = {2021},
   Month = {December},
   ISBN = {9780755640942},
   Key = {fds365304}
}

@misc{fds372082,
   Author = {Musawi Natanzi and P},
   Title = {Gender Studies in Afghanistan or jender bazi: The Neoliberal
             University, Knowledge Production and Labour Under Military
             Occupation},
   Publisher = {TRAFO - Blog for Transregional Research},
   Year = {2023},
   Month = {June},
   Key = {fds372082}
}


%% Natavar, Mekhala D.   
@article{fds7813,
   Title = {Rajasthan},
   Series = {Vol.5: South Asia},
   Pages = {639-649},
   Booktitle = {The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music},
   Publisher = {New York: Garland Publishing, Inc},
   Editor = {Alison Arnold},
   Year = {2000},
   Key = {fds7813}
}

@article{fds7814,
   Author = {M.D. Natavar and Saskia Kersenboom},
   Title = {Music and Dance: Southern Area},
   Series = {Vol.5: South Asia},
   Pages = {507-523},
   Booktitle = {The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music},
   Publisher = {New York: Garland Publishing, Inc},
   Editor = {Alison Arnold},
   Year = {2000},
   Key = {fds7814}
}

@article{fds7815,
   Title = {Music and Dance: Northern Area},
   Series = {Vol.5: South Asia},
   Pages = {492- 506},
   Booktitle = {The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music},
   Publisher = {New York:Garland Publishing, Inc},
   Editor = {Alison Arnold},
   Year = {2000},
   Key = {fds7815}
}

@article{fds7810,
   Title = {Performances at the Govindevji Temple in
             Jaipur},
   Pages = {268-269},
   Booktitle = {South Asian Folklore: An Encyclopedia},
   Publisher = {New York: Routledge},
   Editor = {Peter J. Claus and Margaret Mills},
   Year = {2003},
   Key = {fds7810}
}

@article{fds7811,
   Title = {Hijra (transvestite/transsexual) Performances},
   Pages = {283-284},
   Booktitle = {South Asian Folklore: An Encyclopedia},
   Publisher = {New York: Routledge},
   Editor = {Peter J. Claus and Margaret Mills},
   Year = {2003},
   Key = {fds7811}
}

@article{fds7812,
   Title = {Kathak Dancers},
   Pages = {331-332},
   Booktitle = {South Asian Folklore: An Encyclopedia},
   Publisher = {New York: Routledge},
   Editor = {Peter J. Claus and Margaret Mills},
   Year = {2003},
   Key = {fds7812}
}


%% Odagiri, Takushi   
@article{fds318012,
   Author = {Odagiri, T},
   Title = {From Self-Reflexivity to Contingency: Nishida’s Thesis on
             Self-Knowledge},
   Journal = {Frontiers of Japanese Philosophy},
   Volume = {3},
   Pages = {73-92},
   Year = {2008},
   Month = {December},
   Key = {fds318012}
}

@article{fds326656,
   Author = {Odagiri, T},
   Title = {映画と哲学},
   Journal = {Nishida Philosophy Association},
   Volume = {7},
   Pages = {91-103},
   Year = {2010},
   Key = {fds326656}
}

@article{fds318011,
   Author = {Odagiri, T},
   Title = {Maeda Ai’s Predicate-Theory},
   Journal = {Japan Review},
   Volume = {22},
   Pages = {201-212},
   Year = {2010},
   Month = {January},
   Key = {fds318011}
}

@article{fds318010,
   Author = {Odagiri, T},
   Title = {Gaizai suru Ichinin Sho 外在する一人称 西田における合理性命題},
   Journal = {Tetsugaku 哲學},
   Volume = {62},
   Pages = {189-204},
   Publisher = {Japan Philosophy Association 日本哲学会},
   Year = {2011},
   Key = {fds318010}
}

@article{fds318009,
   Author = {Odagiri, T},
   Title = {ON NISHIDA'S RATIONALITY THESIS},
   Journal = {Philosophy East & West},
   Volume = {62},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {197-222},
   Year = {2012},
   Month = {April},
   Key = {fds318009}
}

@article{fds318008,
   Author = {Odagiri, T},
   Title = {Self-Knowledge and Ethics of Suicide},
   Journal = {Journal of Philosophy and Ethics in Medicine},
   Volume = {6},
   Pages = {79-97},
   Year = {2012},
   Month = {August},
   Key = {fds318008}
}

@article{fds318007,
   Author = {Odagiri, T},
   Title = {Investigating PCBE (President Committee on Bioethics)
             reports on Human Dignity},
   Journal = {Bioethics},
   Volume = {23},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {176-183},
   Year = {2013},
   Key = {fds318007}
}

@article{fds318006,
   Author = {Odagiri, T},
   Title = {The End of Literature and The Beginning of Praxis: Wagô
             Ryôichi’s Pebbles of Poetry},
   Journal = {Japan Forum: the international journal of Japanese
             studies},
   Volume = {26},
   Number = {3},
   Pages = {361-382},
   Publisher = {Taylor & Francis (Routledge): SSH Titles},
   Year = {2014},
   Key = {fds318006}
}

@article{fds318005,
   Author = {Odagiri, T},
   Title = {Crisis and World Temporality: The Post-Fukushima Binary of
             the Everyday},
   Journal = {Boundary 2},
   Volume = {42},
   Number = {3},
   Pages = {97-112},
   Year = {2015},
   Month = {August},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/01903659-2919522},
   Doi = {10.1215/01903659-2919522},
   Key = {fds318005}
}

@article{fds318004,
   Author = {Odagiri, T},
   Title = {Dōgen’s Fallibilism: Three Fascicles of
             Shōbōgenzō},
   Journal = {Journal of Religion},
   Volume = {96},
   Number = {4},
   Pages = {467-487},
   Year = {2016},
   Month = {October},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/687798},
   Doi = {10.1086/687798},
   Key = {fds318004}
}


%% Prasad, Leela   
@article{fds297755,
   Author = {Prasad, L},
   Title = {Bilingual Joking-Questions: Narrating Ethnicity and Politics
             in Indian Citylore},
   Pages = {211-225},
   Booktitle = {Folklore in Modern India},
   Publisher = {Mysore, India: Central Institute of Indian
             Languages},
   Editor = {Handoo, J},
   Year = {1998},
   Key = {fds297755}
}

@misc{fds309914,
   Author = {Prasad, L},
   Title = {Live Like the Banyan Tree: Images of the Indian American
             Experience},
   Publisher = {Philadelphia: The Balch Institute for Ethnic
             Studies.},
   Year = {1999},
   Key = {fds309914}
}

@article{fds297756,
   Author = {Prasad, L},
   Title = {Gatekeeping “the Subaltern?” A Response to Frank
             Korom’s review of exhibit, Live Like the Banyan
             Tree.},
   Journal = {Journal of American Folklore},
   Volume = {114},
   Number = {451},
   Pages = {73-75},
   Year = {2001},
   Key = {fds297756}
}

@article{fds376464,
   Author = {Prasad, L},
   Title = {Gatekeeping 'the subaltern'? A response to Frank J. Korom's
             review of the exhibition 'Live Like the Banyan Tree, Images
             of the Indian American Experience'},
   Journal = {JOURNAL OF AMERICAN FOLKLORE},
   Volume = {114},
   Number = {451},
   Pages = {73-75},
   Year = {2001},
   Key = {fds376464}
}

@article{fds297749,
   Author = {Prasad, L},
   Title = {Hindu Goddesses" (254-259); "Character Stereotypes in
             Folklore" (107-109); "Folklore about the British" (77-79);
             "Hospitality" (287-89); "Mary Frere" (232-233); "Pandit S.
             M. Natesa Sastri" (436-438)},
   Booktitle = {South Asian Folklore: An Encyclopedia.},
   Publisher = {New York: Routledge},
   Editor = {Mills, M and Claus, P and Diamond, S},
   Year = {2002},
   Key = {fds297749}
}

@article{fds297762,
   Author = {Prasad, L},
   Title = {The Authorial Other in Folktale Collections in Colonial
             India: Tracing Narration and its Dis/Continuties},
   Journal = {Cultural Dynamics},
   Volume = {15},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {5-40},
   Publisher = {SAGE Publications},
   Year = {2003},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0921374003015001107},
   Abstract = {Between 1860 and 1920, a staggering number of collections of
             Indian folklore was published by British administrators,
             missionaries, wives and daughters of officials, and Indian
             scholars. Rich in local detail, these collections of
             folklore contain copious prefaces, notes and explanatory
             appendixes. I examine the prefatory material of two folktale
             collections-Mary Frere's Old Deccan Days (1868), and
             Georgiana A. Kingscote and S.M. Nateśa Śāstri's Tales of
             the Sun (1890)-for their display of multiple levels of
             engagement between co-authors, informants, and
             representatives of colonial authority, calling into question
             the concept of a stable authorial center. I argue that these
             collections comment on how collectors of folklore delineated
             alterity and subjectivity while themselves experiencing
             shifting subaltern positions.},
   Doi = {10.1177/0921374003015001107},
   Key = {fds297762}
}

@article{fds297761,
   Author = {Prasad, L},
   Title = {Conversational Narrative and the Moral Self:},
   Journal = {Journal of Religious Ethics},
   Volume = {32},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {153-174},
   Publisher = {Wiley},
   Year = {2004},
   Month = {March},
   ISSN = {0384-9694},
   url = {http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=WOS:000189211200007&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=47d3190e77e5a3a53558812f597b0b92},
   Abstract = {<jats:title>ABSTRACT</jats:title><jats:p>This article
             presents material from my ethnographic study in Śringēri,
             south India, the site of a powerful 1200‐year‐old
             Advaitic monastery that has been historically an interpreter
             of ancient Hindu moral treatises. A vibrant diverse local
             culture that provides plural sources of moral authority
             makes Śringēri a rich site for studying moral discourse.
             Through a study of two conversational narratives, this essay
             illustrates how the moral self is not an ossified product of
             written texts and codes, but is dynamic, gendered, and
             emergent, endowed with historical and political agency and
             an aesthetic capacity that mediates many normative sources
             to articulate “appropriate” conduct. In so doing, the
             essay shows the value of including oral narrative in ethical
             inquiry, especially in narrative ethics, which, for most
             part, has focused on written sources.</jats:p>},
   Doi = {10.1111/j.0384-9694.2004.00158.x},
   Key = {fds297761}
}

@article{fds297758,
   Author = {Prasad, L},
   Title = {Raja Nal and the Goddess: The North Indian Epic Dhola in
             Performance},
   Journal = {Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle
             East},
   Volume = {26},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {157-59},
   Year = {2006},
   Month = {Spring},
   Key = {fds297758}
}

@misc{fds309913,
   Author = {L. Prasad and Prasad, L and Bottigheimer, R and Handoo, L},
   Title = {Gender and Story in South India},
   Publisher = {State University of New York Press, Albany,
             NY.},
   Editor = {Prasad, L and Bottigheimer, RB and Handoo, L},
   Year = {2006},
   Key = {fds309913}
}

@article{fds297750,
   Author = {Prasad, L},
   Title = {Anklets on the Pyal: Women Present Women’s Stories from
             South India},
   Pages = {1-33},
   Booktitle = {Gender and Story in South India.},
   Publisher = {SUNY Press},
   Editor = {Prasad, L and Bottigheimer, R and Handoo, L},
   Year = {2006},
   Key = {fds297750}
}

@article{fds297751,
   Author = {Prasad, L},
   Title = {Celebrating Allegiances, Ambiguated Belonging: Regionality
             in Festival and Performance in Sringeri, South
             India."},
   Booktitle = {Region, Culture, and Politics in India},
   Publisher = {Manohar Publications, New Delhi.},
   Editor = {Vora, R and Feldhaus, A},
   Year = {2006},
   Key = {fds297751}
}

@article{fds297760,
   Author = {Prasad, L},
   Title = {Text, tradition, and imagination: Evoking the normative in
             everyday hindu life},
   Journal = {Numen},
   Volume = {53},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {1-47},
   Publisher = {BRILL},
   Year = {2006},
   Month = {Spring},
   ISSN = {0029-5973},
   url = {http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=WOS:000238823300001&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=47d3190e77e5a3a53558812f597b0b92},
   Abstract = {For over two thousand years, the notion of ®stra has had an
             astonishing presence in Hindu normative thought and culture,
             and ®stras, as codifications of knowledge, have been
             composed in virtually every aspect of life from love and
             politics to thieving and horse rearing. The concept of
             ®stra yokes precept and practice in a way that perhaps no
             other concept in Hindu life does, and indexes a complexity
             that is understated by dictionary meanings of the term which
             include “to instruct,” “order,” “command,”
             “precept,” “rules,” “scientific treatise,” or
             “law-book.” Drawing on my ethnographic research in the
             Hindu pilgrimage town of Sringeri, south India, my essay
             explores how the notion of ®stra, or, more widely, the
             “normative,” is expressed in everyday contexts of
             Sringeri. The location of Sringeri itself is significant. A
             small town in the lush southwestern mountains of India,
             Sringeri is famous for its sm®rta maflha (monastery) and
             its temples which are believed to have been founded by
             Ankara in approximately 800 A.D. Historical records of the
             maflha show that in an unbroken lineage of over 1200 years,
             the gurus who head the maflha have counseled royalty and
             laypersons on matters ranging from military campaigns and
             land disputes to propriety of marriage alliances and
             business practice. The maflha today is an influential
             interpreter of the Hindu codes of conduct, the
             Dharma®stras, for a large following of Hindus in south
             India. To a visitor to Sringeri, the monastic institution
             with its emphasis on ®stra, would seem to symbolize a
             normative centrality in the lives of Sringeri residents.
             However, conversations and oral narratives from Sringeri
             challenge this assumption, and demonstrate that ®stra is
             one concept among others such as paddhati (custom), ®c®ra
             (proper conduct), samprad®ya (tradition), and niyama
             (principle; restraint) that individuals employ to indicate
             moral authority and enactment. While these terms are often
             used interchangeably, they highlight subtle differences in
             agency, textuality, historicity, jurisdiction, and
             permissibility in the context of the normative. I argue that
             underlying ethical practice is a dynamically-constituted
             “text” that draws on and weaves together various sources
             of the normative — a sacred book, an exemplar, a
             tradition, a principle, and so on. Such a text is
             essentially an imagined text, a fluid “text” which
             engages.},
   Doi = {10.1163/156852706776942320},
   Key = {fds297760}
}

@misc{fds297759,
   Author = {Prasad, L},
   Title = {Poetics of Conduct: Oral Narrative and Moral Being in a
             South Indian Town},
   Publisher = {Columbia University Press},
   Year = {2007},
   Key = {fds297759}
}

@article{fds297752,
   Author = {Prasad, L},
   Title = {Sita’s Powers: ‘Do You Accept My Truth, My Lord?’ A
             Women’s Folksong},
   Booktitle = {Ramayana Stories in Modern South India: An
             Anthology.},
   Publisher = {Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press},
   Editor = {Richman, P},
   Year = {2008},
   Key = {fds297752}
}

@article{fds297753,
   Author = {Prasad, L},
   Title = {Ethical Subjects: Time, Timing, and Tellability},
   Pages = {pp. 174-191},
   Booktitle = {Ethical Life in South Asia},
   Publisher = {Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press},
   Editor = {Pandian, A and Ali, D},
   Year = {2010},
   Month = {Fall},
   Key = {fds297753}
}

@article{fds297754,
   Author = {Prasad, L},
   Title = {Constituting Ethical Subjectivities},
   Series = {Cambridge Companion to Religions},
   Pages = {360-379},
   Booktitle = {The Cambridge Companion to Religious Studies},
   Publisher = {Cambridge University Press},
   Editor = {Orsi, RA},
   Year = {2011},
   Key = {fds297754}
}

@article{fds318861,
   Author = {Prasad, LEELA},
   Title = {Cordelia’s Salt: Interspatial Reading of Indic Filial-Love
             Stories},
   Journal = {Oral Tradition},
   Volume = {29},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {245-270},
   Publisher = {Center for Studies in Oral Tradition},
   Year = {2015},
   Key = {fds318861}
}

@article{fds318860,
   Author = {Prasad, LEELA},
   Title = {Hinduism in South India},
   Pages = {15-30},
   Booktitle = {Hinduism in the Modern World.},
   Publisher = {New York: Routledge},
   Year = {2015},
   ISBN = {978-0-415-83604-3},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203362037-10},
   Abstract = {As new technologies and new diasporas emerge across the
             world, as tourism and the marketplace offer new religious
             mobilities and goods, and as modern governance exerts its
             claim on ancient political structure, Hinduism in modern
             South India invents and adapts itself. One illustration is a
             weekly Telugu-language television program called Dharma
             Sandehalu (Doubts about Dharma) that is viewed both through
             a live broadcast and through YouTube recordings by more than
             five million viewers across Asia, the Middle East, and North
             America. The program features an expert on South Indian
             Hindu traditions who resolves callers’ dilemmas of
             practicing Hinduism amidst the exigencies and diversity of
             modern life. In another example, temples in the Hindu
             diaspora commonly adjust their ritual calendars to
             accommodate the work routines of host countries and extend
             maps of traditional Hindu sacred landscapes to include their
             new local geographies. The Sri Venkateshvara temple in
             suburban Pittsburgh, the oldest temple in North America,
             uses its hilly geographic setting to authenticate its
             belonging to the network of temples in the tradition of the
             famous hill temple of Sri Venkateshvara in Tirupati in South
             India. Almost every temple today has a cyber-presence: an
             elaborate website and Facebook pages that detail its origin
             stories and devotional experiences, web links to related
             temples, audiovisual streaming media of the worship rituals,
             and, often, facilities for ‘e-worship’ through which
             devotees can request and pay for particular rituals. Cell
             phone apps bring ritual procedures to handheld devices such
             as goddess worship in a South Indian format to an iPhone
             app. These new applications and mediations reflect the
             changing contours of sacred space and time and religious
             experience.},
   Doi = {10.4324/9780203362037-10},
   Key = {fds318860}
}

@misc{fds186312,
   Author = {Leela Prasad and Baba Prasad},
   Title = {Moved by Gandhi [A documentary film]},
   Year = {2015},
   Key = {fds186312}
}

@article{fds328641,
   Author = {Prasad, L},
   Title = {Unearthing Gender: Folksongs of North India. By Smita Tewari
             Jassal . Durham: N.C.: Duke University Press, 2012. xviii,
             296 pp. ISBN: 9780822351306 (paper, also available in cloth
             and as e-book).},
   Journal = {The Journal of Asian Studies},
   Volume = {75},
   Number = {4},
   Pages = {1157-1158},
   Publisher = {Duke University Press},
   Year = {2016},
   Month = {November},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0021911816001510},
   Doi = {10.1017/s0021911816001510},
   Key = {fds328641}
}

@article{fds344572,
   Author = {Prasad, L},
   Title = {Maithil Women's Tales: Storytelling on the Nepal-India
             Border},
   Journal = {JOURNAL OF AMERICAN FOLKLORE},
   Volume = {130},
   Number = {518},
   Pages = {478-480},
   Year = {2017},
   Key = {fds344572}
}

@article{fds344571,
   Author = {Prasad, L},
   Title = {Hindu Pilgrimage: Shifting Patterns of Worldview of Shri
             Shailam in South India},
   Journal = {ASIAN ETHNOLOGY},
   Volume = {76},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {180-182},
   Year = {2017},
   Key = {fds344571}
}

@article{fds340935,
   Author = {Prasad, L},
   Title = {Co-being, a praxis of the public: Lessons from hindu
             devotional (bhakti) narrative, arendt, and
             gandhi},
   Journal = {Journal of the American Academy of Religion},
   Volume = {85},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {199-223},
   Year = {2017},
   Month = {March},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jaarel/lfw040},
   Abstract = {Most controversies about religious representation enact
             conceptions of the public that construct boundaries which
             stridently mark insiders and outsiders, friends and foes, or
             practice and theory. This article begins with a controversy
             in California over representations of Hinduism in
             middle-school textbooks. A legal settlement closed the
             controversy but brought little sense of closure. Asking more
             broadly why publics fail, I put together, through deliberate
             anachronism, elements of a praxis of the public taking from
             political philosopher Hannah Arendt and bhakti poets of the
             Hindu tradition from the sixth century to the sixteenth
             century. This alternative praxis of the public creates
             "co-being," a state of society achieved by reimagining how
             we occupy space, how we own things and ideas, and how we
             form pacts. Gandhi's ashram, in concept and practice,
             exemplifies how an unlikely commonality is a possible one
             and is in fact the foundation of a meaningful and
             sustainable public.},
   Doi = {10.1093/jaarel/lfw040},
   Key = {fds340935}
}

@article{fds344570,
   Author = {Prasad, L},
   Title = {Nameless in history: when the imperial English become the
             subjects of Hindu narrative},
   Journal = {South Asian History and Culture},
   Volume = {8},
   Number = {4},
   Pages = {448-460},
   Year = {2017},
   Month = {October},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/19472498.2017.1371504},
   Abstract = {This article analyses an intriguing unfinished long
             narrative poem published in 1894 about the ‘origin and
             rise’ of the English empire in India. Written in Sanskrit
             by eminent literary scholar, P. V. Ramaswami Raju, Sreemat
             Rajangala Mahodyanam (The Great Park of the English Raj)
             also contains an English translation that he himself
             provides alongside. The story dramatically describes the
             birth of the English race through the fall to earth of a
             celestial musician in heaven who is cursed to be nameless.
             This article argues that Ramaswami Raju devised creative
             strategies and adapted Indian forms of narration such as the
             purāṇa to tell this story boldly, without fear of
             censure. With the imperial ruler being its subject, the
             narrative curates two ways of speaking within and across the
             Sanskrit and English texts–unfolding a double register of
             praise and critique–that creates an ethos of irony that
             suffuses the poem. Raju’s creative strategy of a double
             register becomes ‘visible’ to a bilingual reader who is
             also literate in a religious idiom. The inclusion of a
             colonial power into a Hindu mythology and cosmos creates a
             moral caesura in the narrative of British imperial glory and
             makes the very idea of ‘English’ history impossible.
             Colonial-era genre debates with their focus on categories
             such as folk and classical largely overlooked the highly
             improvisational ways in which Indian scholars such as
             Ramaswami Raju represented controversial subjects through
             their creative work. In the light of the creative freedom
             they display, authors like Ramaswami Raju express a cultural
             sovereignty that transcends their political
             subalternity.},
   Doi = {10.1080/19472498.2017.1371504},
   Key = {fds344570}
}

@article{fds344569,
   Author = {Prasad, L},
   Title = {Ethical Resonance: The Concept, the Practice, and the
             Narration},
   Journal = {Journal of Religious Ethics},
   Volume = {47},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {394-415},
   Year = {2019},
   Month = {June},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jore.12261},
   Abstract = {This essay defines ethical resonance through an ethnographic
             interlude that paves the way for a broader theorization of
             the concept. It begins by contextually recounting the story
             of an individual who had stayed at Sevagram, Mahatma
             Gandhi’s last ashram in 1944, shadowing Gandhi for some
             20 days. The young man’s brief meeting with Gandhi in
             which Gandhi uttered only one sentence transformed him for
             his lifetime. I reflect on the experience and its narrative
             qualities to explore the broader question of why one is
             moved, and moved enough to be altered. I propose that the
             theorization of resonance in modern physics, in
             phenomenology, and in 11th-century Sanskrit poetics is
             productive for understanding the subjective and the
             trans-subjective elements that underlie ethical persuasion.
             I argue that the idea of resonance helps bridge the
             affective and the aesthetic in moral self-formation that
             occurs in everyday life.},
   Doi = {10.1111/jore.12261},
   Key = {fds344569}
}

@misc{fds355107,
   Author = {Prasad, L},
   Title = {The Audacious Raconteur: Sovereignty and Storytelling in
             Colonial India},
   Pages = {222 pages},
   Publisher = {Cornell University Press},
   Year = {2020},
   Month = {November},
   ISBN = {9781501752285},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9781501752285},
   Abstract = {Can a subject be sovereign in a hegemony? Can creativity be
             reined in by forces of empire? Studying closely the oral
             narrations and writings of four Indian authors in colonial
             India, The Audacious Raconteur argues that even the most
             hegemonic circumstances cannot suppress "audacious
             raconteurs": skilled storytellers who fashion narrative
             spaces that allow themselves to remain sovereign and beyond
             subjugation. By drawing attention to the vigorous orality,
             maverick use of photography, literary ventriloquism, and
             bilingualism in the narratives of these raconteurs, Leela
             Prasad shows how the ideological bulwark of
             colonialism—formed by concepts of colonial modernity,
             history, science, and native knowledge—is dismantled.
             Audacious raconteurs wrest back meanings of religion,
             culture, and history that are closer to their lived
             understandings. The figure of the audacious raconteur does
             not only hover in an archive but suffuses everyday life.
             Underlying these ideas, Prasad's personal interactions with
             the narrators' descendants give weight to her innovative
             argument that the audacious raconteur is a necessary ethical
             and artistic figure in human experience.},
   Doi = {10.1515/9781501752285},
   Key = {fds355107}
}

@article{fds373413,
   Author = {Prasad, L},
   Title = {"Finding Anna"},
   Journal = {Critical Muslim},
   Volume = {44},
   Number = {1},
   Year = {2023},
   Key = {fds373413}
}


%% Rojas, Carlos   
@article{fds369223,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Review of Liu Kang, Aesthetics and Marxism},
   Journal = {CLEAR (Chinese Literature Essays and Review)},
   Volume = {23},
   Pages = {164-167},
   Year = {2001},
   Key = {fds369223}
}

@article{fds369222,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Review of Xiaobing Tang, The Chinese Modern},
   Journal = {Journal of Asian Studies},
   Volume = {62},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {260-261},
   Year = {2003},
   Key = {fds369222}
}

@article{fds369220,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Gao Xingjian},
   Volume = {2},
   Pages = {225-244},
   Booktitle = {Great World Writers: Twentieth Century},
   Publisher = {Marshall Cavendish},
   Editor = {O'Niel, P},
   Year = {2004},
   Key = {fds369220}
}

@article{fds369221,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Chou Shu-jen},
   Volume = {3},
   Pages = {377-388},
   Booktitle = {Great World Writers: Twentieth Century},
   Publisher = {Marshall Cavendish},
   Editor = {O'Niel, P},
   Year = {2004},
   Key = {fds369221}
}

@article{fds369219,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Li Yongping},
   Pages = {460},
   Booktitle = {Encyclopedia of Contemporary Chinese Culture},
   Publisher = {Routledge},
   Editor = {Davis, E},
   Year = {2005},
   Key = {fds369219}
}

@book{fds305939,
   Author = {David Der-wei Wang and Carlos Rojas},
   Title = {Writing Taiwan: A New Literary History},
   Publisher = {Duke University Press},
   Editor = {Der-wei Wang and D and Rojas, C},
   Year = {2007},
   Key = {fds305939}
}

@book{fds376622,
   Title = {Writing Taiwan: A New Literary History},
   Publisher = {Duke University Press},
   Year = {2007},
   Key = {fds376622}
}

@article{fds369217,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {The Politics of Secondary Virginity},
   Journal = {Litteraturmagasinet Standart},
   Volume = {1},
   Pages = {34-35},
   Year = {2007},
   Key = {fds369217}
}

@article{fds369218,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Wumingshi},
   Booktitle = {Dictionary of Literary Biography},
   Publisher = {Bruccoli Clary Layman, Inc.},
   Editor = {Moran, T},
   Year = {2007},
   Key = {fds369218}
}

@book{fds291370,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {The Naked Gaze: Reflections on Chinese Modernity},
   Publisher = {Harvard University Asia Center},
   Year = {2008},
   Key = {fds291370}
}

@article{fds369216,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Chinese modernity and global biopolitics: Studies in
             literature and visual culture},
   Journal = {CHINA JOURNAL},
   Volume = {60},
   Pages = {208-211},
   Year = {2008},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/tcj.60.20648022},
   Doi = {10.1086/tcj.60.20648022},
   Key = {fds369216}
}

@book{fds349156,
   Author = {Rojas, C and Chow, ECY},
   Title = {Rethinking chinese popular culture: Cannibalizations of the
             canon},
   Pages = {1-288},
   Year = {2008},
   Month = {December},
   ISBN = {9780415468800},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203886649},
   Abstract = {Through analyses of a wide range of Chinese literary and
             visual texts from the beginning of the twentieth century
             through the contemporary period, the thirteen essays in this
             volume challenge the view that canonical and popular culture
             are self-evident and diametrically opposed categories, and
             instead argue that the two cultural sensibilities are
             inextricably bound up with one another. An international
             line up of contributors present detailed analyses of
             literary works and other cultural products that have
             previously been neglected by scholars, while also examining
             more familiar authors and works from provocative new
             angles.The essays include investigations into the cultural
             industries and contexts that produce the canonical and
             popular, the position of contemporary popular works at the
             interstices of nostalgia and amnesia, and also the ways in
             which cultural texts are inflected with gendered and erotic
             sensibilities while at the same time also functioning as
             objects of desire in its own right. As the only volume of
             its kind to cover the entire span of the 20th century, and
             also to consider the interplay of popular and canonical
             literature in modern China with comparable rigor, Rethinking
             Chinese Popular Culture is an important resource for
             students and scholars of Chinese literature and
             culture.},
   Doi = {10.4324/9780203886649},
   Key = {fds349156}
}

@book{fds349158,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Introduction: The disease of canonicity},
   Pages = {1-12},
   Booktitle = {Rethinking Chinese Popular Culture: Cannibalizations of the
             Canon, Carlos Rojas and Eileen Cheng-yin Chow,
             eds.},
   Publisher = {Routledge},
   Year = {2008},
   Month = {December},
   ISBN = {9780415468800},
   Key = {fds349158}
}

@article{fds349157,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Authorial afterlives and apocrypha in 1990s Chinese
             fiction},
   Pages = {262-282},
   Booktitle = {Rethinking Chinese Popular Culture: Cannibalizations of the
             Canon},
   Publisher = {Routledge},
   Year = {2008},
   Month = {December},
   ISBN = {9780415468800},
   Key = {fds349157}
}

@book{fds305937,
   Author = {Carlos Rojas and Eileen Cheng-yin Chow},
   Title = {Rethinking Chinese Popular Culture: Cannibalizations of the
             Canon},
   Publisher = {Routledge},
   Editor = {Rojas, C and Cheng-yin Chow and E},
   Year = {2009},
   Key = {fds305937}
}

@book{fds305938,
   Author = {Yu, H},
   Title = {Brothers: A Novel by Yu Hua},
   Publisher = {Pantheon},
   Year = {2009},
   Key = {fds305938}
}

@article{fds369215,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Postsocialism and Cultural Politics: China in the Last
             Decade of the Twentieth Century},
   Journal = {JOURNAL OF ASIAN STUDIES},
   Volume = {68},
   Number = {3},
   Pages = {961-963},
   Year = {2009},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0021911809990313},
   Doi = {10.1017/S0021911809990313},
   Key = {fds369215}
}

@misc{fds216481,
   Author = {Yu Hua (Eileen Cheng-yin Chow and Carlos Rojas,
             trans.)},
   Title = {Brothers: A Novel},
   Publisher = {Pantheon},
   Year = {2009},
   Key = {fds216481}
}

@article{fds369214,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Our Embrace of Vampires Reflects the Needs of an
             Age},
   Journal = {The Herald-Sun},
   Year = {2009},
   Month = {November},
   Key = {fds369214}
}

@article{fds369213,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Obama's Majestic Shot at the Great Wal of
             China},
   Journal = {The Herald-Sun},
   Pages = {A7},
   Year = {2009},
   Month = {November},
   Key = {fds369213}
}

@book{fds291369,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {The Great Wall: A Cultural History},
   Publisher = {Harvard University Press},
   Year = {2010},
   Key = {fds291369}
}

@article{fds354192,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Alai and the linguistic politics of internal
             Diaspora},
   Journal = {Chinese Overseas},
   Volume = {3},
   Pages = {115-132},
   Booktitle = {Chinese Overseas},
   Publisher = {Brill Press},
   Year = {2010},
   Month = {January},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/ej.9789004187658.i-234.27},
   Doi = {10.1163/ej.9789004187658.i-234.27},
   Key = {fds354192}
}

@article{fds376915,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {ALAI AND THE LINGUISTIC POLITICS OF INTERNAL
             DIASPORA},
   Volume = {3},
   Pages = {115-132},
   Booktitle = {Chinese Overseas},
   Year = {2010},
   Month = {January},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/9789004186910_008},
   Doi = {10.1163/9789004186910_008},
   Key = {fds376915}
}

@article{fds369209,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Review of Shuang Shen, Cosmopolitian Publics: Anglophone
             Print Culture in Semi-Colonial Shanghai},
   Journal = {CLEAR (Chinese Literature, Essays, Articles,
             Reviews)},
   Volume = {33},
   Year = {2011},
   Key = {fds369209}
}

@article{fds369210,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Introduction: "The Germ of Life"},
   Journal = {MODERN CHINESE LITERATURE AND CULTURE},
   Volume = {23},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {1-16},
   Year = {2011},
   Key = {fds369210}
}

@article{fds369211,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Of Canons and Cannibalism: A Psycho-Immunological Reading of
             "Diary of a Madman"},
   Journal = {MODERN CHINESE LITERATURE AND CULTURE},
   Volume = {23},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {47-76},
   Year = {2011},
   Month = {Spring},
   Key = {fds369211}
}

@article{fds369212,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Discourses of Disease},
   Journal = {Modern Chinese Literature and Culture},
   Number = {23.1},
   Editor = {Rojas, C},
   Year = {2011},
   Month = {Spring},
   Abstract = {Guest editor, special issue},
   Key = {fds369212}
}

@book{fds305936,
   Author = {Yan, L},
   Title = {Lenin’s Kisses by Yan Lianke},
   Publisher = {Grove/Atlantic Press},
   Year = {2012},
   Key = {fds305936}
}

@article{fds369208,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Writing the Body},
   Pages = {199-223},
   Booktitle = {TRANSGENDER CHINA},
   Year = {2012},
   Key = {fds369208}
}

@misc{fds216480,
   Author = {Yan Lianke (Carlos Rojas and trans.)},
   Title = {Lenin's Kisses},
   Publisher = {Grove/Atlantic Press},
   Year = {2012},
   Key = {fds216480}
}

@article{fds369207,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {China's Literary Nobel Complex is Defused},
   Journal = {The New Republic},
   Year = {2012},
   Month = {October},
   Key = {fds369207}
}

@book{fds305935,
   Title = {The Oxford Handbook of Chinese Cinemas},
   Publisher = {Oxford University Press},
   Editor = {Rojas, C and Cheng-yin Chow and E},
   Year = {2013},
   Key = {fds305935}
}

@book{fds369206,
   Author = {Carlos Rojas and Eileen Chow},
   Title = {Oxford Handbook of Chinese Cinemas},
   Publisher = {Oxford University Press},
   Editor = {Rojas, C and Chow, E},
   Year = {2013},
   Key = {fds369206}
}

@article{fds369202,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Review of Jing Tsu, Sound and Script in Chinese
             Diaspora},
   Journal = {American Historical Review},
   Publisher = {Oxford University Press (OUP)},
   Year = {2013},
   Key = {fds369202}
}

@article{fds369203,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Review of Laikwan Pang, Creativity and its Discontents:
             China's Creative Industries and Property Rights
             Offensives},
   Journal = {Journal of Asian Studies},
   Publisher = {Cambridge University Press (CUP)},
   Year = {2013},
   Key = {fds369203}
}

@article{fds369204,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Creativity and Its Discontents: China's Creative Industries
             and Property Rights Offenses.},
   Journal = {JOURNAL OF ASIAN STUDIES},
   Volume = {72},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {455-457},
   Year = {2013},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S002191181300020X},
   Doi = {10.1017/S002191181300020X},
   Key = {fds369204}
}

@article{fds369205,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Sound and Script in Chinese Diaspora.},
   Journal = {AMERICAN HISTORICAL REVIEW},
   Volume = {118},
   Number = {3},
   Pages = {831-832},
   Year = {2013},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ahr/118.3.831},
   Doi = {10.1093/ahr/118.3.831},
   Key = {fds369205}
}

@article{fds369200,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Ng Kim Chew},
   Booktitle = {The Routledge Encyclopedia of Modernism},
   Publisher = {Routledge},
   Editor = {Ross, S},
   Year = {2014},
   Key = {fds369200}
}

@article{fds369201,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Mu Shiying},
   Booktitle = {The Routledge Encyclopedia of Modernism},
   Editor = {Ross, S},
   Year = {2014},
   Key = {fds369201}
}

@book{fds291367,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Luoguan: Zhongguo xiandaixing de fansi 裸觀:
             中國現代性的反思},
   Publisher = {Rye Field},
   Year = {2015},
   Abstract = {Chinese translation of The Naked Gaze},
   Key = {fds291367}
}

@book{fds291368,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Homesickness: Culture, Contagion, and National
             Transformation in Modern China},
   Publisher = {Harvard University Press},
   Year = {2015},
   Key = {fds291368}
}

@book{fds305933,
   Author = {Yan, L},
   Title = {The Four Books by Yan Lianke},
   Publisher = {Grove/Atlantic},
   Year = {2015},
   Key = {fds305933}
}

@book{fds305934,
   Author = {Yan, L},
   Title = {Marrow},
   Publisher = {Penguin Books China},
   Year = {2015},
   Key = {fds305934}
}

@book{fds369199,
   Author = {Yan, LK},
   Title = {Marrow},
   Publisher = {Penguin Random House},
   Year = {2015},
   Key = {fds369199}
}

@article{fds369191,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {How to do Things with Words: Don Quijote},
   Booktitle = {China's Literary Cosmopolitans: Qian Zhongshu, Yang Jiang,
             and the World of Modern Letters},
   Publisher = {Brill},
   Editor = {Race, C},
   Year = {2015},
   Key = {fds369191}
}

@article{fds369192,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Queer Utopias in Wong kar-wai's Happy Together},
   Booktitle = {Companion to Wong Kar-Wai},
   Publisher = {Wiley-Blackwell},
   Editor = {Nochimson, M},
   Year = {2015},
   Key = {fds369192}
}

@article{fds369193,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {The Persistence of Form: Nation, Literary Movement, and the
             Fiction of Ng Kim Chew},
   Booktitle = {A Companion to Modern Chinese Literature},
   Publisher = {Wiley-Blackwell},
   Editor = {Zhang, Y},
   Year = {2015},
   Key = {fds369193}
}

@article{fds369194,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Speaking from the Margins: Yan Lianke},
   Booktitle = {The Columbia Companion of Modern Chinese
             Literature},
   Publisher = {Columbia University Press},
   Editor = {Denton, K},
   Year = {2015},
   Key = {fds369194}
}

@article{fds369195,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Time out of Joint: Commemoration and Commodification of
             Socialism in Yan Lianke's Lenin's Kisses},
   Booktitle = {Red Legacies in China: Aferlives of the Revolution in
             Contemporary Chinese Culture and Society},
   Publisher = {Harvard University Asia Center},
   Editor = {Li, J and Zhang, E},
   Year = {2015},
   Key = {fds369195}
}

@article{fds369196,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Introduction: Specters of Marx, Shades of Mao, and the
             Ghosts of Global Capital},
   Booktitle = {Ghost Protocol: Development and Displacement in Global
             China},
   Publisher = {Duke Univesity Press},
   Editor = {Rojas, C and Litzinger, E},
   Year = {2015},
   Key = {fds369196}
}

@article{fds369197,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {I am Great Leap Liu!: Circuits of Labor, Information, and
             Identity in Contemporary China},
   Booktitle = {Ghost Protocol: Development and Displacement in Global
             China},
   Publisher = {Duke Univesity Press},
   Year = {2015},
   Key = {fds369197}
}

@article{fds369198,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Footsteps on the Beach: SARS, Viral Knowledge, and
             Rethinking Political Community},
   Booktitle = {20th ICLA Congress Proceedings},
   Publisher = {ICLA},
   Year = {2015},
   Key = {fds369198}
}

@book{fds223985,
   Author = {Carlos Rojas},
   Title = {Homesickness: Culture, Contagion, and National Reform in
             Modern China},
   Publisher = {Harvard University Press},
   Year = {2015},
   Key = {fds223985}
}

@misc{fds223986,
   Author = {Yan Lianke (Carlos Rojas and trans.)},
   Title = {The Four Books},
   Publisher = {Grove/Atlantic},
   Year = {2015},
   Key = {fds223986}
}

@book{fds291366,
   Author = {Rojas, C and Litzinger, RA},
   Title = {Ghost Protocol: Development and Displacement in Global
             China},
   Pages = {268 pages},
   Publisher = {Duke Univesity Press},
   Editor = {Rojas, C and Litzinger, R},
   Year = {2016},
   ISBN = {0822361930},
   Abstract = {This volume&#39;s contributors see contemporary China as
             haunted by the promises of capitalism, the institutional
             legacy of the Maoist regime, and the spirit of Marxist
             resistance.},
   Key = {fds291366}
}

@book{fds305929,
   Title = {The Oxford Handbook of Modern Chinese Literatures},
   Pages = {952 pages},
   Publisher = {Oxford University Press},
   Editor = {Rojas, C and Bachner, A},
   Year = {2016},
   ISBN = {978-0199383313},
   Abstract = {With over forty original essays, The Oxford Handbook of
             Modern Chinese Literatures offers an in-depth engagement
             with the current analytical methodologies and critical
             practices that are shaping the field in the twenty-first
             century. Divided into three sections--Structure, Taxonomy,
             and Methodology--the volume carefully moves across
             approaches, genres, and forms to address a rich range topics
             that include popular culture in Late Qing China, Zhang
             Guangyu's Journey to the West in Cartoons, writings of
             Southeast Asian migrants in Taiwan, the Chinese Anglophone
             Novel, and depictions of HIV/AIDS in Chu T'ien-wen's Notes
             of a Desolate Man.},
   Key = {fds305929}
}

@book{fds305930,
   Author = {Jia, P},
   Title = {The Lantern Bearer by Jia Pingwa},
   Publisher = {CN Times Books, Inc.},
   Year = {2016},
   Key = {fds305930}
}

@book{fds305931,
   Author = {Ng, KC},
   Title = {Slow Boat to China and Other Stories by Ng Kim
             Chew},
   Publisher = {Columbia University Press},
   Editor = {Rojas, C},
   Year = {2016},
   Key = {fds305931}
}

@book{fds305932,
   Author = {Yan, L},
   Title = {Explosion Chronicles by Yan Lianke},
   Publisher = {Grove/Atlantic Press},
   Year = {2016},
   Key = {fds305932}
}

@article{fds369190,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {The Stranger and the Chinese Moral Imagination by Haiyan
             Lee},
   Journal = {Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies},
   Volume = {76},
   Number = {1-2},
   Pages = {253-260},
   Publisher = {Project MUSE},
   Year = {2016},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/jas.2016.0015},
   Doi = {10.1353/jas.2016.0015},
   Key = {fds369190}
}

@book{fds318014,
   Author = {Ng, KC},
   Title = {Slow Boat to China and Other Stories},
   Pages = {304 pages},
   Publisher = {Columbia University Press},
   Editor = {Rojas, C},
   Year = {2016},
   Month = {March},
   ISBN = {978-0231168120},
   Abstract = {In prose that is intimate and atmospheric, these stories,
             selected from several Ng Kim Chew collections, depict the
             struggles of individuals torn between their ancestral and
             adoptive homes, communities pressured by violence, and
             minority ...},
   Key = {fds318014}
}

@article{fds363871,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Dream of the Red Chamber Internet Fan Fiction and Literary
             Canonicity},
   Journal = {Theoretical Studies in Literature and Art},
   Volume = {36},
   Number = {3},
   Pages = {190-200},
   Year = {2016},
   Month = {May},
   Abstract = {This article considers the contemporary genre of Internet
             fan fiction inspired by Dream of the Red Chamber, which is
             to say Chinese novels published over the Internet that take
             the plot of Dream of the Red Chamber as their starting
             point. Through a close textual analysis of thematics of
             incestuous desire, reproduction, and vestigial remains in
             two works of Dream, of the Red Chamber fan fiction, he
             argues that these contemporary novels comment allegorically
             not only on their own relationship to Dream of the Red
             Chamber itself, but also on more abstract processes of
             literary production and canon formation.},
   Key = {fds363871}
}

@article{fds325415,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Language, ethnicity, and the politics of literary taxonomy:
             Ng Kim Chew and Mahua literature},
   Journal = {PMLA},
   Volume = {131},
   Number = {5},
   Pages = {1316-1327},
   Publisher = {Modern Language Association (MLA)},
   Year = {2016},
   Month = {October},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1632/pmla.2016.131.5.1316},
   Abstract = {Through an examination of short stories from the Malaysian
             Chinese author Ng Kim Chew's 2001 collection From Island to
             Island, this essay reflects on the taxonomic functions of
             criteria such as language, ethnicity, and nationality,
             particularly as they inform contemporary discussions of
             Chinese, Sinophone, and Mahua (Malaysian Chinese)
             literature. Several of Ng's stories are set on remote
             islands and feature individuals who, having been forcibly
             separated from their original linguistic or social
             environment, offer a vehicle for reflecting on some of the
             consequences of literary taxonomies that arbitrarily
             prioritize one criterion (such as language or nationality)
             over others. Drawing on Wittgenstein's notion of family
             resemblance, the essay proposes a taxonomic system that does
             not rely on a single criterion but rather attends to the
             dynamic interaction among a variety of criteria. The
             resulting model is used to interrogate the naturalized
             conception of the family on which Wittgenstein
             relies.},
   Doi = {10.1632/pmla.2016.131.5.1316},
   Key = {fds325415}
}

@book{fds291365,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {A Unity of Fragments: Fruit Chan and Hong Kong
             Cinema},
   Publisher = {Hong Kong University Press},
   Year = {2017},
   Key = {fds291365}
}

@article{fds369189,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {The Impotence Epidemic: Men's Medicine and Sexual Desire in
             Contemporary China. By Everett Yuehong Zhang . Durham, N.C.:
             Duke University Press, 2015. 304 pp. ISBN: 9780822358565
             (paper, also available in cloth).},
   Journal = {The Journal of Asian Studies},
   Volume = {76},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {513-515},
   Publisher = {Duke University Press},
   Year = {2017},
   Month = {May},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0021911817000225},
   Doi = {10.1017/s0021911817000225},
   Key = {fds369189}
}

@article{fds347542,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {“A World Republic of Southern [Sinophone]
             Letters”},
   Journal = {Modern Chinese Literature and Culture},
   Volume = {30},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {42-62},
   Publisher = {FOREIGN LANGUAGE PUBL},
   Year = {2018},
   Month = {March},
   Key = {fds347542}
}

@article{fds354312,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {THE "TURN" TURN},
   Journal = {DIACRITICS-A REVIEW OF CONTEMPORARY CRITICISM},
   Volume = {47},
   Number = {4},
   Pages = {4-11},
   Year = {2019},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/dia.2019.0031},
   Doi = {10.1353/dia.2019.0031},
   Key = {fds354312}
}

@article{fds369188,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Contradiction},
   Pages = {43-+},
   Booktitle = {AFTERLIVES OF CHINESE COMMUNISM: POLITICAL CONCEPTS FROM MAO
             TO XI},
   Year = {2019},
   ISBN = {978-1-78873-476-9},
   Key = {fds369188}
}

@article{fds355805,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Of lice and men a parasitic reading of Jia Pingwa’s the
             lantern bearer},
   Journal = {Prism},
   Volume = {16},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {19-32},
   Year = {2019},
   Month = {March},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/25783491-7480317},
   Abstract = {Taking Jia Pingwa’s 2013 novel Daideng 帶燈 (The Lantern
             Bearer) as its focal point, this article considers a series
             of allusions to insects in this and other works. The article
             takes these references to insects in Jia’s literary
             publications as a starting point for reflecting on a set of
             parasitic or supplementary relationships as they relate to
             an interrelated set of sociopolitical, ecological, and
             literary concerns. Through this attention to parasitic
             relationships, the article uses Jia Pingwa’s works to
             pursue a critical reassessment of the relationship between
             individual entities and the sociopolitical, ecological, and
             literary collectives they inhabit.},
   Doi = {10.1215/25783491-7480317},
   Key = {fds355805}
}

@article{fds369187,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Book review: Chinese Surplus: Biopolitical Aesthetics and
             the Medically Commodified Body Ari Larissa
             Heinrich},
   Journal = {China Information},
   Volume = {33},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {111-113},
   Publisher = {SAGE Publications},
   Year = {2019},
   Month = {March},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0920203x18819280a},
   Doi = {10.1177/0920203x18819280a},
   Key = {fds369187}
}

@article{fds357481,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Method as method},
   Journal = {Prism},
   Volume = {16},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {211-220},
   Year = {2019},
   Month = {October},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/25783491-7978475},
   Doi = {10.1215/25783491-7978475},
   Key = {fds357481}
}

@article{fds357482,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Translation as method},
   Journal = {Prism},
   Volume = {16},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {221-235},
   Year = {2019},
   Month = {October},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/25783491-7978483},
   Abstract = {Taking Lu Xun’s work as its starting point, this essay
             examines translation as a methodology for negotiating not
             between different languages or dialects but rather between
             different voices. To the extent that some fiction attempts
             to manifest the voices of socially marginalized figures,
             this translational approach offers a way of examining the
             possibilities and limits of this sort of negotiation. By
             extension, a similar translational framework may also be
             used to understand the attempts by critics to assess
             fiction’s own attempts to render these marginalized
             voices.},
   Doi = {10.1215/25783491-7978483},
   Key = {fds357482}
}

@article{fds369186,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Before and after The Midnight After Occupy Central's
             Specters of Utopia and Dystopia},
   Pages = {183-195},
   Booktitle = {UTOPIA AND UTOPIANISM IN THE CONTEMPORARY CHINESE
             CONTEXT},
   Year = {2020},
   Key = {fds369186}
}

@book{fds353306,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Preface: Imagining China},
   Pages = {xi-xv},
   Year = {2020},
   Month = {January},
   ISBN = {9780367406653},
   Key = {fds353306}
}

@book{fds353307,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Introduction: My Language is not my own: Translation,
             displacement, and contemporary Chinese literature},
   Pages = {1-14},
   Year = {2020},
   Month = {January},
   ISBN = {9780367406653},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780367815158-1},
   Abstract = {Using Derrida’s statement “I have only one language, but
             it is not mine, " from Monolingualism of the Other, as its
             entry point, this chapter examines the different
             conjunctions of language, nationality, culture, and
             ethnicity in works by five contemporary authors from China,
             Greater China, or the global Chinese diaspora.},
   Doi = {10.4324/9780367815158-1},
   Key = {fds353307}
}

@book{fds353309,
   Author = {Rojas, C and Sung, MH},
   Title = {Reading China against the grain: Imagining
             communities},
   Pages = {1-237},
   Year = {2020},
   Month = {January},
   ISBN = {9780367406653},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780367815158},
   Abstract = {Through an analysis of a wide array of contemporary Chinese
             literature from inside and outside of China, this volume
             considers some of the ways in which China and Chineseness
             are understood and imagined. Using the central theme of the
             way in which literature has the potential to both reinforce
             and to undermine a national imaginary, the volume contains
             chapters offering new perspectives on well-known authors,
             from Jin Yucheng to Nobel Prize winning Mo Yan, as well as
             chapters focusing on authors rarely included in discussions
             of contemporary Chinese literature, such as the expatriate
             authors Larissa Lai and Xiaolu Guo. The volume is
             complemented by chapters covering more marginalized literary
             figures throughout history, such as Macau-born poet Yiling,
             the Malaysian-born novelist Zhang Guixing, and the
             ethnically Korean author Kim Hak-ch’ŏl. Invested in
             issues ranging from identity and representation, to
             translation and grammar, it is one of the few publications
             of its kind devoting comparable attention to authors from
             Mainland China, authors from Manchuria, Macau, and Taiwan,
             and throughout the global Chinese diaspora. Reading China
             Against the Grain: Imagining Communities is a rich resource
             of literary criticism for students and scholars of Chinese
             studies, sinophone studies, and comparative
             literature.},
   Doi = {10.4324/9780367815158},
   Key = {fds353309}
}

@article{fds353308,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Xiaolu guo’s i am China: On copulas and
             copulation},
   Pages = {214-231},
   Booktitle = {Reading China against the Grain: Imagining
             Communities},
   Year = {2020},
   Month = {January},
   ISBN = {9780367406653},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780367815158-16},
   Abstract = {This chapter examines themes of linguistic copulas and
             sexual copulation in Xiaolu Guo’s 2014 novel I Am China.
             In particular, the chapter uses these twin figures of
             copulas and copulation to consider the novel’s
             understanding of translation, as well as its broader
             implications for questions of reference and identity. In
             particular, I am interested in how translation comes to
             function as a metonym for political community.},
   Doi = {10.4324/9780367815158-16},
   Key = {fds353308}
}

@article{fds354568,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Cai Guo-Qiang},
   Journal = {Diacritics},
   Volume = {47},
   Number = {9},
   Pages = {130-135},
   Year = {2020},
   Month = {January},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/dia.2019.0037},
   Doi = {10.1353/dia.2019.0037},
   Key = {fds354568}
}

@article{fds370304,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Black and White Swans: Pandemics, Prognostications, and
             Preparedness},
   Pages = {61-68},
   Booktitle = {The Coronavirus: Human, Social and Political
             Implications},
   Year = {2020},
   Month = {January},
   ISBN = {9789811593611},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-15-9362-8_7},
   Abstract = {This essay examines why communities around the world have
             tended to respond relatively poorly and belatedly to the
             Covid pandemic-despite the fact that the likelihood of this
             sort of infectious outbreak had been widely recognized by
             public health experts, and furthermore in early 2020
             communities outside of China were, in effect, given an
             advance warning of the imminent threat of this particular
             outbreak before the virus began to spread globally. Drawing
             on Nassim Taleb’s recent discussion of the sociopolitical
             significance of “black swan events, " this essay argues
             that the global Covid response is symptomatic of a more
             general difficulty in thinking probabilistically.},
   Doi = {10.1007/978-981-15-9362-8_7},
   Key = {fds370304}
}

@article{fds356165,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Intermediality-"A weird concept": Queer intermediality in
             Dung Kai-cheung's fiction},
   Pages = {175-189},
   Booktitle = {Keywords in Queer Sinophone Studies},
   Year = {2020},
   Month = {April},
   ISBN = {9780367226039},
   Key = {fds356165}
}

@article{fds355804,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {“A new species” gender, sexuality, and taxonomic logics
             in sinophone communities},
   Journal = {Prism},
   Volume = {17},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {277-297},
   Year = {2020},
   Month = {October},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/25783491-8690396},
   Abstract = {Taking as its starting point Michel Foucault’s use of the
             biological species metaphor in his claim that, in
             nineteenth-century Europe, “the homosexual was now a new
             species,” this article considers the sudden explosion of
             homoerotic activities and cultural representations in
             Greater China beginning in the late 1980s and early 1990s.
             The article focuses in particular on four literary works
             dating from around 1994 that examine queer individuals in
             relation modern institutional structures associated with
             disciplines of biology/science, reportage/media,
             medicine/activism, and policing/psychiatry. At the same
             time, however, through attention to the role played by these
             institutional structures in shaping new queer
             subjectivities, each of these four works emphasizes the
             subject’s ability to intervene in the discursive
             formations within which those same subjectivities are
             positioned and thereby to narrativize the subject’s own
             identity.},
   Doi = {10.1215/25783491-8690396},
   Key = {fds355804}
}

@article{fds376759,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {OVERSEAS CHINESE NEWSPAPERS},
   Pages = {561-568},
   Booktitle = {LITERARY INFORMATION IN CHINA},
   Year = {2021},
   ISBN = {978-0-231-19552-2},
   Key = {fds376759}
}

@article{fds376760,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Contagion and Dissemination An Immunological Reading of
             Chang Kuei-hsing's Elephant
             Herd},
   Journal = {SUN YAT-SEN JOURNAL OF HUMANITIES},
   Number = {51},
   Pages = {99-114},
   Year = {2021},
   Key = {fds376760}
}

@article{fds363216,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Turning the Tables: Derrida, China, and the Asia
             Turn},
   Journal = {Diacritics},
   Volume = {49},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {88-105},
   Year = {2021},
   Month = {January},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/dia.2021.0004},
   Doi = {10.1353/dia.2021.0004},
   Key = {fds363216}
}

@article{fds362498,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {A Surplus of Fish: Language, Literature, and Cultural
             Ecologies in Ng Kim Chew’s Fiction},
   Journal = {International Journal of Taiwan Studies},
   Volume = {4},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {121-141},
   Year = {2021},
   Month = {January},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/24688800-20201150},
   Abstract = {This essay uses an examination of intertwined thematics of
             fish and text in the fiction of the ethnically Malaysian
             Chinese author Ng Kim Chew in order to reflect on a broader
             set of ecological concerns, including issues relating to the
             natural ecology of the Southeast Asian regions depicted in
             Ng’s works, together with the overlapping literary
             ecosystems within which his works are embedded. In
             particular, the essay is concerned with the ways in which
             Ng’s fiction reflects on the relationship between the
             field of Southeast Asian Sinophone literature and the
             partially overlapping ecosystem of world
             literature.},
   Doi = {10.1163/24688800-20201150},
   Key = {fds362498}
}

@article{fds362806,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Wandering the Garden, Waking from a Dream},
   Journal = {Chinese Literature Today},
   Volume = {10},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {25-33},
   Year = {2021},
   Month = {January},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21514399.2021.1916369},
   Abstract = {Through a comparative analysis of Yan Lianke’s The Day the
             Sun Died with James Joyce’s Ulysses and Lu Xun’s almost
             precisely contemporaneous collection Call to Arms, this
             essay considers the ways in which Yan Lianke’s novel uses
             motifs of death and “dreamwalking” to reflect on more
             abstract processes of representation and textual mediation.
             In particular, this essay argues that the trope of
             somnambulism in The Day the Sun Died is not merely an
             example of Yan’s mythorealist representational approach,
             it simultaneously offers a useful framework through which to
             understand mythorealism’s underlying representational
             logic.},
   Doi = {10.1080/21514399.2021.1916369},
   Key = {fds362806}
}

@article{fds362845,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {2014 Nomination Statement},
   Journal = {Chinese Literature Today},
   Volume = {10},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {7-8},
   Year = {2021},
   Month = {January},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21514399.2021.1925512},
   Doi = {10.1080/21514399.2021.1925512},
   Key = {fds362845}
}

@article{fds357894,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Introduction: Between the universal and the
             particular},
   Journal = {Prism},
   Volume = {18},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {235-243},
   Year = {2021},
   Month = {March},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/25783491-8922257},
   Doi = {10.1215/25783491-8922257},
   Key = {fds357894}
}

@article{fds359604,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Contagion and Dissemination An Immunological Reading of
             Chang Kuei-hsing's Elephant Herd},
   Journal = {Sun Yat-sen Journal of Humanities},
   Volume = {51},
   Number = {51},
   Pages = {111-127},
   Year = {2021},
   Month = {July},
   Abstract = {Taking inspiration from Priscilla Wald's analysis of an
             influential contemporary "outbreak narrative"-and
             specifically a set of narratives that place the spread of
             infectious disease within a set of implicit North-South
             oppositions-this essay examines how Chang Kuei-hsing's 1998
             novel Elephant Herd (Qunxiang) characterizes the spread of
             Communist ideology and influence in Sarawak. In particular,
             this essay proposes that the novel uses two types of
             animals, elephants and crocodiles, to present two very
             different attitudes toward the region's Communist guerilla
             fighters. Over the course of the novel, the characterization
             of each of these two sets of animals-as well as of the
             guerilla fighters themselves-is strategically
             inverted.},
   Key = {fds359604}
}

@article{fds370658,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {At Home in the World: Wandering Earth, Environmentalism, and
             Reimagined Homelands},
   Journal = {Journal of Chinese Film Studies},
   Volume = {1},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {223-236},
   Year = {2021},
   Month = {November},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/jcfs-2021-0017},
   Abstract = {Based on a 2000 novella by Cixin Liu with the same title,
             Frant Gwo's 2019 film Wandering Earth has been celebrated as
             China's first big-budget science fiction film. As a Chinese
             film with a global theme that simultaneously targets both a
             domestic and an international audience, accordingly, the
             work invites a reflection on the relationship between the
             local and the global-on how we understand the concept of
             home, and what it might mean to be home in the world. This
             essay, accordingly, examines three intersecting ways in
             which Wandering Earth (both the film and the original
             novella) explores the relationship between home and the
             world, including the status of the Earth as an ecological
             system, the planet's status as a lived environment, as well
             as a set of contemporary geopolitical discourses about
             China's shifting position within the contemporary world
             order, and particularly its relationship to the Global
             South.},
   Doi = {10.1515/jcfs-2021-0017},
   Key = {fds370658}
}

@article{fds369183,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {THE OLD WOMAN WITH THE KNIFE},
   Journal = {NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW},
   Volume = {127},
   Pages = {22-22},
   Year = {2022},
   Key = {fds369183}
}

@article{fds369184,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {PYRE},
   Journal = {NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW},
   Volume = {127},
   Pages = {22-22},
   Year = {2022},
   Key = {fds369184}
}

@article{fds369185,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {STRANGERS I KNOW},
   Journal = {NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW},
   Volume = {127},
   Pages = {22-22},
   Year = {2022},
   Key = {fds369185}
}

@article{fds370144,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {DIALECTICAL UTOPIANISM},
   Pages = {205-223},
   Booktitle = {SINOPHONE UTOPIAS},
   Year = {2022},
   ISBN = {978-1-62196-646-3},
   Key = {fds370144}
}

@article{fds376758,
   Author = {Rojas, C and Rofel, L},
   Title = {Contact, Communication, Imagination, and Strategies of
             Worldmaking INTRODUCTION},
   Pages = {1-+},
   Booktitle = {NEW WORLD ORDERINGS},
   Year = {2022},
   ISBN = {978-1-4780-1901-5},
   Key = {fds376758}
}

@article{fds376757,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {WRITING SOUTH Narratives of Homeland and Diaspora in
             Southeast Asia},
   Pages = {204-221},
   Booktitle = {NEW WORLD ORDERINGS},
   Year = {2022},
   ISBN = {978-1-4780-1901-5},
   Key = {fds376757}
}

@article{fds369182,
   Author = {Lin, S and Hong, L and Goedde, E and Rojas, C and Ying,
             H},
   Title = {China in One Village: A Conversation on Literature and
             Translation in a Changing World},
   Journal = {Chinese Literature and Thought Today},
   Volume = {53},
   Number = {1-2},
   Pages = {107-116},
   Publisher = {Informa UK Limited},
   Year = {2022},
   Month = {January},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/27683524.2022.2081049},
   Abstract = {This discussion derives from a bilingual virtual panel held
             at the University of California, Irvine on June 9, 2021. In
             light of the English publication of Liang Hong’s China in
             One Village, this roundtable is organized to discuss the
             significance of this work in Chinese literary, media, and
             social history. Originally published in 2010, China in One
             Village kickstarted a phenomenal wave of nonfiction writing
             in China and established Liang Hong’s reputation as an
             important chronicler of China’s fast-changing society. As
             the first public conversation with both Liang Hong and her
             translator Emily Goedde, this panel is convened by Shiqi Lin
             and joined by Hu Ying and Carlos Rojas. Linshan Jiang and
             Dingding Wang served as interpreters during the live
             discussion.},
   Doi = {10.1080/27683524.2022.2081049},
   Key = {fds369182}
}

@article{fds370143,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Discourses of Disease: Representations of Cancer and Viral
             Infection in Contemporary China},
   Journal = {Chinese Literature and Thought Today},
   Volume = {53},
   Number = {3-4},
   Pages = {53-59},
   Publisher = {Informa UK Limited},
   Year = {2022},
   Month = {January},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/27683524.2022.2131174},
   Abstract = {Through a discussion of several recent novels by Hu Fayun,
             Bi Shumin, and Yan Lianke—including Hu’s 2005 novel Such
             Is ThisWorld@SARS.come(Ruyan@SARS.come); Bi’s 2003 novel
             Saving the Breast (Zhengjiu rufang) and her 2012 novel
             Coronavirus (Huaguan bingdu); and Yan’s 1998 novel Streams
             of Time (Riguang liunian), his 2004 novel Lenin’s Kisses
             (Shouhuo), and his 2006 novel Dream of Ding Village
             (Dingzhuang meng)—this article examines how these authors
             a set of disease-inspired metaphors to explore potential
             responses to the medical concerns in question. More
             specifically, the article argues that, in each of the works
             in question, the authors use a set of disease-inspired to
             propose a productive means by which society might respond to
             the threat posed by disease itself.},
   Doi = {10.1080/27683524.2022.2131174},
   Key = {fds370143}
}

@article{fds371527,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Touching Father: Sight, Sound, Touch, and Intermedial
             Intimacies},
   Pages = {230-249},
   Booktitle = {Sensing China: Modern Transformations of Sensory
             Culture},
   Year = {2022},
   Month = {January},
   ISBN = {9781032008776},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003176220-14},
   Abstract = {Starting from a consideration of a 1997 performance titled
             “Touching Father" by the Beijing-based artist Song Dong,
             in which Song uses a video projection of his own hand to
             stroke his father’s face and torso, this article then
             three films from China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan, each of which
             can be dated almost precisely to the same historical moment
             that Song Dong completed his 1997 performance. Like Song
             Dong, each of these works uses a focus on mediated physical
             contact to examine a set of conflicted relationships between
             pairs of male protagonists. More specifically, each work
             explores a dialectics of proximity and distance, intimacy
             and alienation—suggesting that an attention to mediated
             and displaced forms of contact may function as a highly
             meaningful and intimate form of contact in its own
             right.},
   Doi = {10.4324/9781003176220-14},
   Key = {fds371527}
}

@article{fds364259,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Introduction: Ground and Background},
   Journal = {Prism},
   Volume = {19},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {157-166},
   Year = {2022},
   Month = {March},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/25783491-9645952},
   Doi = {10.1215/25783491-9645952},
   Key = {fds364259}
}

@article{fds369181,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Iwo Amelung (ed.), Discourses of Weakness in Modern China:
             Historical Diagnoses of the ‘Sick Man of East
             Asia’},
   Journal = {Social History of Medicine},
   Volume = {35},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {337-338},
   Publisher = {Oxford University Press (OUP)},
   Year = {2022},
   Month = {March},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/shm/hkab106},
   Doi = {10.1093/shm/hkab106},
   Key = {fds369181}
}

@article{fds369669,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Becoming Semi-wild: Colonial Legacies and Interspecies
             Intimacies in Zhang Guixing’s Rainforest
             Novels},
   Journal = {Prism},
   Volume = {19},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {438-453},
   Year = {2022},
   Month = {September},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/25783491-9966737},
   Abstract = {This article borrows Juno Salazar Parreñas’s concept of
             the “semi-wild” as an entry point into an analysis of
             Malaysian Chinese author Zhang Guixing’s novels Elephant
             Herd (1998) and Monkey Cup (2000). Set in Sarawak, both
             works feature a relatively simple plotline interwoven with
             an intricate web of flashbacks. More specifcally, each
             work’s primary plotline features an ethnically Chinese
             protagonist searching for a relative who has disappeared
             into the rainforest, while also becoming romantically
             interested in a young Indigenous woman whom he meets during
             his quest. In each case, a fascination with the relationship
             between humans and Sarawak’s various “semi-wild” flora
             and fauna is paralleled by an attention to the relationship
             between the region’s ethnic Chinese and its various
             Indigenous peoples—and particularly two subgroups of
             Sarawak’s Dayak ethnicity, the “Sea Dayaks” (also
             known as the Iban) and the “Land Dayaks” (who are often
             simply called “Dayaks”). Each work uses a set of
             quasi-anthropomorphized plants and animals (including
             silk-cotton trees, Nepenthes pitcher plants, elephants,
             crocodiles, rhinoceroses, and orangutans) to reflect on
             humans’ relationship to the local ecosystem, while
             simultaneously using Indigenous peoples to reflect on the
             way in which overlapping colonial legacies have shaped the
             region’s sociopolitical structures.},
   Doi = {10.1215/25783491-9966737},
   Key = {fds369669}
}

@article{fds369670,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Introduction: Worlds Built of Sand},
   Journal = {Prism},
   Volume = {19},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {265-282},
   Year = {2022},
   Month = {September},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/25783491-9966637},
   Abstract = {Opening with a discussion of Singaporean artist Charles Lim
             Yi Yong’s multiyear art project SEASTATE (2005–), this
             introduction uses Singapore’s recent land reclamation
             efforts to reflect on more general processes of world
             building in Sinophone Southeast Asia. More specifcally, the
             essay considers how multiple waves of migration from China
             to Southeast Asia have resulted in a wide array of Chinese
             communities throughout the region, and how modern literature
             may be used as a prism through which to examine some of the
             sociocultural formations that have been generated by these
             waves of migration from China throughout Southeast Asia. The
             essay considers how literature reflects the region’s
             diverse array of Sinitic communities, or “worlds,” and
             how literary production may be viewed as a process of world
             making in its own right. Although this special issue covers
             considerable territory (both literally and metaphorically),
             our objective is not to offer a comprehensive survey of all
             modern literary production from the entire region. Instead,
             we seek to showcase a set of novel approaches that may be
             used to examine the region’s eclectic body of literary
             production, including approaches grounded in concepts of
             mesology, postloyalism, interimperiality, oceanic
             epistemologies, offcenter articulations, and the condition
             of being “semiwild.”},
   Doi = {10.1215/25783491-9966637},
   Key = {fds369670}
}

@article{fds369180,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {The great Buddha+ (2017): Tracing the limits of the
             visible},
   Pages = {426-348},
   Booktitle = {Thirty-two New Takes on Taiwan Cinema},
   Year = {2022},
   Month = {December},
   ISBN = {9780472075461},
   Key = {fds369180}
}

@article{fds376756,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Chen Xue, Missing Fathers, and Queer Alternatives},
   Pages = {111-123},
   Booktitle = {Sinophone and Taiwan Studies},
   Publisher = {Springer Nature Singapore},
   Year = {2023},
   ISBN = {9789811983795},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-19-8380-1_8},
   Doi = {10.1007/978-981-19-8380-1_8},
   Key = {fds376756}
}

@article{fds376755,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Future Imperfect: Using the Future to Critique the
             Present},
   Journal = {CHINA PERSPECTIVES},
   Number = {135},
   Pages = {19-27},
   Year = {2023},
   Key = {fds376755}
}

@article{fds372686,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {YAN LIANKE’S HETEROTOPIC IMAGINARIES},
   Pages = {264-273},
   Booktitle = {A World History of Chinese Literature},
   Year = {2023},
   Month = {January},
   ISBN = {9780367764883},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003167198-28},
   Abstract = {A cancer village, an AIDS village, a rightist re-education
             camp during China’s Great Famine, and so forth - many of
             Yan Lianke’s fictional works revolve around remote
             communities that are comparatively isolated from mainstream
             Chinese society yet are defined by unusual, distorted, or
             even perverse features that are indexical traces of a set of
             structural transformations affecting the nation as a whole.
             In this respect, these fictional spaces may be viewed as
             examples of what Foucault calls heterotopias. This chapter
             examines several of the heterotopian spaces in Yan’s
             fiction, reflecting on how they are used to highlight a set
             of distortions and malignancies within contemporary China
             while, at the same time, offering a vision for possible
             reform.},
   Doi = {10.4324/9781003167198-28},
   Key = {fds372686}
}

@article{fds372796,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Untamed: Wilderness and Domestication in Zhang Guixing’s
             Elephant Herd},
   Journal = {Chinese Literature and Thought Today},
   Volume = {54},
   Number = {1-2},
   Pages = {27-37},
   Year = {2023},
   Month = {January},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/27683524.2023.2205786},
   Abstract = {This essay uses a dialectics of wildness and domestication
             as a prism through which to examine the first work in Zhang
             Guixing’s informal rainforest trilogy, his 1998 novel
             Elephant Herd (Qunxiang). Focusing on Zhang’s engagement
             with issues of nature, colonialism, language, and family,
             the essay argues that the novel pivots on a pair of
             intertwined impulses to domesticate wilderness, on the one
             hand, and to disrupt and figuratively “re-wild” these
             domesticated spaces, on the other hand. Even as wildness, in
             all its forms, is perceived as an existential threat that
             needs to be tamed, the resulting domestication process
             frequently involves patterns of violence that require new
             efforts of domestication in their own right.},
   Doi = {10.1080/27683524.2023.2205786},
   Key = {fds372796}
}

@article{fds372998,
   Author = {Chang, KH and Rojas, C},
   Title = {Elephant Herd (An Excerpt)},
   Journal = {Chinese Literature and Thought Today},
   Volume = {54},
   Number = {1-2},
   Pages = {38-43},
   Year = {2023},
   Month = {January},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/27683524.2023.2205787},
   Abstract = {Taken from the beginning of Zhang Guixing’s 1998 novel
             Elephant Herd (Qunxiang), this excerpt opens with a series
             of flashbacks to incidents that occurred when the narrator
             was six, seven, eight, and fourteen years old, respectively,
             focusing on the narrator’s relationship with various
             members of his extended family and family acquaintances. The
             novel’s main plotline (which is not introduced in this
             short excerpt) describes a trip that the twenty-year-old
             protagonist, Shi Shicai, takes up Sarawak’s Rajang River
             with his former high-school classmate Zhu Dezhong in search
             of Shicai’s uncle, Yu Jiatong, who is the leader of an
             underground brigade of communist guerillas.},
   Doi = {10.1080/27683524.2023.2205787},
   Key = {fds372998}
}

@article{fds376010,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Heart and body: Queer crossings in Go Princess
             Go},
   Journal = {Journal of Chinese Cinemas},
   Volume = {17},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {95-107},
   Year = {2023},
   Month = {January},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17508061.2024.2312728},
   Abstract = {Based on an internet novel first released in 2008, the
             Chinese web series Go Princess Go 太子妃升職記
             (2015–2016) takes a time-travel ‘crossover’ premise
             and uses it to explore a set of queer scenarios involving
             ‘crossovers’ of both gender and sexual orientation. This
             article examines how the series approaches issues of
             identity formation in relation to a plotline that has both
             homoerotic and transgender implications. The article then
             considers the series in relation to broader set of
             paratextual concerns, including the regulatory environment
             under which the series was initially produced as well as the
             Chinese work’s subsequent re-adaptation as a Korean web
             series—arguing that the issues of identity formation that
             the series explores with respect to individuals also pertain
             to the questions of cultural production and community
             structure raised by these paratextual concerns.},
   Doi = {10.1080/17508061.2024.2312728},
   Key = {fds376010}
}

@article{fds376274,
   Author = {Rojas, C},
   Title = {Yingjin Zhang: Worlds of Literature},
   Journal = {Chinese Literature and Thought Today},
   Volume = {54},
   Number = {3-4},
   Pages = {33-35},
   Year = {2023},
   Month = {January},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/27683524.2023.2264145},
   Abstract = {Through a consideration of the introductions that Yingjin
             Zhang wrote for the first and final solo-edited volumes of
             his career, China in a Polycentric World (1998) and A World
             History of Chinese Literature (2023), this essay examines
             some of the concerns with the relationship between Chinese
             and world literature that preoccupied Zhang throughout his
             career. In particular, he approached the category of Chinese
             literature and culture as being grounded in a concept of
             Chineseness understood not as a national but rather as a
             cultural category. Moreover, he stressed that Chinese and
             world literature are best understood not as discrete
             concepts or categories, but rather as dynamic practices,
             which has allowed them to consistently exceed and transcend
             political or institutional attempts to limit the literary
             field’s nominal scope or possibilities.},
   Doi = {10.1080/27683524.2023.2264145},
   Key = {fds376274}
}


%% Safi, Omid   
@article{fds339279,
   Author = {Safi, O},
   Title = {Bargaining with Baraka: Persian Sufism, "mysticism," and
             pre-modern politics},
   Journal = {Muslim World},
   Volume = {90},
   Number = {3-4},
   Pages = {259-288},
   Year = {2000},
   Month = {January},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1478-1913.2000.tb03691.x},
   Doi = {10.1111/j.1478-1913.2000.tb03691.x},
   Key = {fds339279}
}

@book{fds352475,
   Author = {Safi, O},
   Title = {The Politics of Knowledge in Premodern Islam Negotiating
             Ideology and Religious Inquiry},
   Pages = {292 pages},
   Publisher = {Univ of North Carolina Press},
   Year = {2006},
   Month = {January},
   ISBN = {0807856576},
   Abstract = {In a far-r Safi examines the rule of the Great Saljuqs, a
             Turkish-speaking people from central Asia, who, in the 11th
             century, established rule over the eastern half of the
             Islamic world that lasted for 150 years.},
   Key = {fds352475}
}

@article{fds339278,
   Author = {Safi, O},
   Title = {All that is between them},
   Journal = {Parabola},
   Volume = {31},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {72-76},
   Year = {2006},
   Month = {December},
   Key = {fds339278}
}

@book{fds339277,
   Author = {Hammer, J and Safi, O},
   Title = {The Cambridge companion to American Islam},
   Pages = {1-371},
   Publisher = {Cambridge University Press},
   Year = {2011},
   Month = {January},
   ISBN = {9781107002418},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/CCO9781139026161},
   Abstract = {The Cambridge Companion to American Islam offers a scholarly
             overview of the state of research on American Muslims and
             American Islam. The book presents the reader with a
             comprehensive discussion of the debates, challenges, and
             opportunities that American Muslims have faced through
             centuries of American history. This volume also covers the
             creative ways in which American Muslims have responded to
             the myriad serious challenges that they have faced and
             continue to face in constructing a religious praxis and
             complex identities that are grounded in both a universal
             tradition and the particularities of their local contexts.
             The book introduces the reader to some of the many facets of
             the lives of American Muslims that can only be understood in
             their interactions with Islam's entanglement in the American
             experiment.},
   Doi = {10.1017/CCO9781139026161},
   Key = {fds339277}
}

@article{fds339275,
   Author = {Safi, O},
   Title = {Who Put Hate in my Sunday Paper?: Uncovering the
             Israeli-Republican-Evangelical Networks behind the
             "Obsession" DVD},
   Pages = {21-32},
   Booktitle = {Muslims and Jews in America: Commonalities, Contentions, and
             Complexities},
   Publisher = {Palgrave Macmillan US},
   Year = {2011},
   Month = {January},
   ISBN = {9780230119048},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230119048_3},
   Doi = {10.1057/9780230119048_3},
   Key = {fds339275}
}

@article{fds339276,
   Author = {Hammer, J and Safi, O},
   Title = {Introduction: American Islam, Muslim Americans, and the
             American experiment},
   Pages = {1-14},
   Booktitle = {The Cambridge Companion to American Islam},
   Publisher = {Cambridge University Press},
   Year = {2011},
   Month = {January},
   ISBN = {9781107002418},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/CCO9781139026161.003},
   Abstract = {The conversation about where American Muslims fit into the
             larger fabric of American society far predates the election
             of Barack Hussein Obama to the presidency in 2008. To
             critically assess the anxiety over American Muslims as part
             of a historical chronology and continuum, we should start
             with the ratification of the United States Constitution. The
             date was July 30, 1788. The site was North Carolina, and the
             occasion was the convention to ratify the proposed U.S.
             Constitution. The speaker on this occasion was a certain
             William Lancaster, who was a staunch Anti-Federalist.
             Lancaster spoke of what would happen not if, but when, a few
             centuries down the road a Muslim would be elected to the
             highest office in the land, the presidency of the United
             States of America. But let us remember that we form a
             government for millions not yet in existence. I have not the
             art of divination. In the course of four or five hundred
             years, I do not know how it will work. This is most certain,
             that Papists may occupy that chair, and Mahometans may take
             it. I see nothing against it. “Mahometan” was the common
             designation for Muslims back then, now considered
             derogatory, and was derived from the also obsolete and
             equally offensive “Muhammadan.” In 1788 there were no
             Muslim Americans running for the office of the president. As
             far as we know, there were not even any Muslim citizens of
             the newly formed American republic – though there were
             thousands of slaves from Africa in America who came from
             Muslim backgrounds. As legal scholars have noted, the
             putative conversation about a Muslim president was a fear
             tactic used by Anti-Federalists to put pressure on
             Federalists. In other words, the conversation about where
             Muslims fit into the fabric of the American politic was one
             that was concomitant with the passage of the U.S.
             Constitution.},
   Doi = {10.1017/CCO9781139026161.003},
   Key = {fds339276}
}


%% Vaishnava, Premlata   
@book{fds26661,
   Author = {P. Vaishnava},
   Title = {Shreshtha Hasya Kathaien},
   Year = {2001},
   Key = {fds26661}
}

@book{fds26660,
   Author = {P. Vaishnava},
   Title = {Sahityik Geet},
   Year = {2002},
   Key = {fds26660}
}

@book{fds26659,
   Author = {P. Vaishnava},
   Title = {Sahityik Premkathaien},
   Year = {2003},
   Key = {fds26659}
}

@article{fds26658,
   Author = {P. Vaishnava},
   Title = {Diaspora Rachnakaar},
   Journal = {Hindi Jagat: A Quarterly Publication of the World Hindi
             Foundation},
   Volume = {4.1},
   Year = {2003},
   Key = {fds26658}
}

@article{fds26647,
   Author = {P. Vaishnava (with Matthew A. Cook)},
   Title = {Book Review of Todd Scudiere's Hindi-English/English-Hindi
             Dictionary and Phrasebook},
   Journal = {In South Asian Review},
   Year = {2004},
   Key = {fds26647}
}

@misc{fds169515,
   Author = {P. Vaishnava},
   Title = {Amrika},
   Booktitle = {Pravasini Key Bol},
   Publisher = {Parshav Press, Ahemdabad (India)},
   Editor = {Anjana Sandhir},
   Year = {2006},
   Key = {fds169515}
}

@misc{fds169516,
   Author = {P. Vaishnava},
   Title = {Shabd},
   Booktitle = {Pravasini Key Bol},
   Publisher = {Parshav Press, Ahemdabad (India)},
   Editor = {Anjana Sandhir},
   Year = {2006},
   Key = {fds169516}
}

@misc{fds169517,
   Author = {P. Vaishnava},
   Title = {Rishtey},
   Booktitle = {Pravasini Key Bol},
   Editor = {Anjana Sandhir},
   Year = {2006},
   Key = {fds169517}
}

@misc{fds169518,
   Author = {P. Vaishnava},
   Title = {Qitaabien},
   Booktitle = {Pravasini Key Bol},
   Publisher = {Parshav Press, Ahemdabad (India)},
   Editor = {Anjana Sandhir},
   Year = {2006},
   Key = {fds169518}
}

@misc{fds169514,
   Author = {P. Vaishnava},
   Title = {Laghu Kathaien},
   Year = {2007},
   Key = {fds169514}
}


%% Wang, Yidan   
@article{fds367212,
   Author = {Peng, H-Y},
   Title = {Wong Kar-wai's Mood Trilogy: Robot, Tears and the Affective
             Aura},
   Journal = {Historical Materials and Interpretation 史料与阐释},
   Volume = {2018 Autumn},
   Publisher = {Fudan University Press},
   Editor = {Chen, S and Wang, D},
   Year = {2018},
   Key = {fds367212}
}

@article{fds367211,
   Author = {Wang, Y},
   Title = {Re-Imagining China: The Image of China in Hu Shih’s
             Overseas Narratives},
   Volume = {II},
   Pages = {285-303},
   Booktitle = {Young Phoenix Collection 雏凤文存},
   Publisher = {Shanghai People's Publishing House},
   Year = {2019},
   Key = {fds367211}
}

@article{fds367210,
   Author = {Wang, Y},
   Title = {Translingual, Transcultural, and Transboundary Sceneries:
             Aesthetic Ideas and Discursive Practice in Yu Dafu’s
             Landscape Writing},
   Journal = {Rupkatha Journal on Interdisciplinary Studies in
             Humanities},
   Volume = {14},
   Number = {1},
   Year = {2022},
   Month = {January},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.21659/RUPKATHA.V14N1.05},
   Abstract = {The ways in which nature is watched and represented have
             changed rapidly alongside modernization in 20th-century
             China. This can be regarded as the product of an
             epistemological transformation led by the encounter of
             Chinese and Western cultures. One of the representatives in
             this transformation and fusion of seeing is Yu Dafu, who,
             although generally known for his fiction, penned many travel
             writings and descriptions of nature in the 1930s. Regarding
             Yu’s travelogue as an embodiment of his translingual and
             transcultural reflections, this paper reviews previous
             studies on Yu’s travelogue and investigates its latent
             creativity and antinomy. This article delves into the
             stylistic and aesthetic features of Yu’s travelogue to
             uncover the conservatism and misogyny obscured beneath the
             seemingly value-neutral landscapes, arguing that Yu’s
             travelogue is a twofold amalgamation of genres and
             aesthetics. On the one hand, his travel writing is an
             adaption and combination of the German Baedeker guidebooks
             and traditional Chinese travel notes (Youji 遊記). On the
             other hand, Yu’s texts incorporate aesthetic criteria
             influenced by different natural concepts, demonstrating both
             his broad vision ahead of time and his conservatism. Yu’s
             writing on nature and landscapes, as a discursive practice
             motivated by the emergence of tourism in his era, is a
             transboundary dialogue between literature and commerce, and
             the elite and the general public, while also implicitly
             denying the common people access to the scenery space.
             Through a close reading of Yu’s frequently employed
             tropes—picturesque and feminized scenes—I establish an
             isomorphic relationship between his views on nature, art,
             and female. Finally, the antinomy inherent in Yu’s
             landscape imaginary constructed by creativity and
             conservatism points to the ambiguity of the New
             Culture.},
   Doi = {10.21659/RUPKATHA.V14N1.05},
   Key = {fds367210}
}


%% Yoda, Tomiko   
@article{fds41976,
   Author = {T. Yoda},
   Title = {Translation of Komashaku Kimi, "Murasaki Shikibu's Message:
             A Reinterpretation of The Tale of Genji"},
   Journal = {U.S.-Japan Women's Journal},
   Number = {5},
   Year = {1993},
   Key = {fds41976}
}

@article{fds41975,
   Author = {T. Yoda},
   Title = {Translation of Niwa Akiko, "The Formation of the Myth of
             Motherhood in Japan"},
   Journal = {U.S.-Japan Women's Journal},
   Number = {4},
   Year = {1993},
   Key = {fds41975}
}

@article{fds18195,
   Author = {T. Yoda},
   Title = {Fractured Dialogues: Mono no Aware and Poetic Communications
             in the Tale of Genji},
   Journal = {Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies},
   Volume = {59},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {523-557},
   Year = {1999},
   Month = {December},
   Key = {fds18195}
}

@book{fds18192,
   Author = {T. Yoda and T. Yoda and H. D. Harootunian},
   Title = {Millennial Japan},
   Journal = {South Atlantic Quarterly},
   Volume = {99},
   Number = {4},
   Publisher = {Duke University Press},
   Year = {2000},
   Abstract = {Special issue of the journal on Japan in the
             1990s.},
   Key = {fds18192}
}

@article{fds18194,
   Author = {T. Yoda},
   Title = {Seisa, moji, kooka: feminizumu hijyo to heian bungaku
             kenkyu},
   Pages = {135-168},
   Booktitle = {Tekisuto no seiai jutsu: monogatari o kataru koto no
             pasupekutibu},
   Publisher = {Shinwasha},
   Editor = {Takagi makoto and Ando Toru},
   Year = {2000},
   Key = {fds18194}
}

@article{fds18189,
   Author = {T. Yoda},
   Title = {The Rise and Fall of Maternal Society: Gender, Labor and
             Contemporary Japan},
   Journal = {South Atlantic Quarterly},
   Volume = {99},
   Number = {44},
   Pages = {865-902},
   Year = {2000},
   Month = {Fall},
   Key = {fds18189}
}

@article{fds18190,
   Author = {T. Yoda},
   Title = {A Road Map to Millennial Japan},
   Journal = {South Atlantic Quarterly},
   Volume = {99},
   Number = {44},
   Pages = {629-668},
   Year = {2000},
   Month = {Fall},
   Key = {fds18190}
}

@article{fds18247,
   Author = {T. Yoda},
   Title = {Reading Literary Hisory Against the National Frame, or
             Gender and the Emergence of Heian Kana Writing},
   Journal = {positions},
   Volume = {8},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {629-668},
   Year = {2000},
   Month = {Fall},
   Key = {fds18247}
}

@article{fds18180,
   Author = {T. Yoda},
   Title = {Kogyaru and the Political Economy of Feminized Consuer
             Culture},
   Booktitle = {Zappa: the Social Space and Movements of Contemporary
             Japan},
   Publisher = {Autonomedia},
   Editor = {Sabu Kohso and Yutaka Nagahara},
   Year = {2004},
   Abstract = {The essay analyzes the "feminization" of Japanese consumer
             society since the 1970s by studying the changing
             construction of young women and female youth
             culture.},
   Key = {fds18180}
}

@book{fds18184,
   Author = {T. Yoda},
   Title = {Gender And National Literature: Heian Texts and
             Constructions of Japanese Modernity},
   Publisher = {Duke University Press},
   Year = {2004},
   Month = {May},
   Key = {fds18184}
}

@article{fds41974,
   Author = {T. Yoda},
   Title = {Heian bungaku no joseika to juhasseiki kagaku no kindaisei
             [Feminization of Heian Literature and the Modernity of
             Eighteenth-Century Poetics]},
   Journal = {Genji kenkyû},
   Number = {10},
   Year = {2005},
   Key = {fds41974}
}

@article{fds53333,
   Author = {T. Yoda},
   Title = {First-Person Voice and Citizen-Subject: The Modernity of
             Ogai's Maihime},
   Journal = {Journal of Asian Studies},
   Volume = {65},
   Number = {25},
   Year = {2006},
   Month = {May},
   Key = {fds53333}
}

@book{fds44071,
   Author = {T. Yoda (co-edit)},
   Title = {Japan After Japan: Social and Cultural Life From the
             Recessionary 90s to the Present},
   Publisher = {Duke University Press},
   Year = {2006},
   Month = {Summer},
   Key = {fds44071}
}