The Missionary Enterprise in China and America
Title | The Missionary Enterprise in China and America PDF eBook |
Author | John King Fairbank |
Publisher | |
Pages | 464 |
Release | 1974 |
Genre | History |
ISBN |
The Origins of the Anglo-American Missionary Enterprise in China, 1807-1840
Title | The Origins of the Anglo-American Missionary Enterprise in China, 1807-1840 PDF eBook |
Author | Murray A. Rubinstein |
Publisher | |
Pages | 424 |
Release | 1996 |
Genre | Religion |
ISBN |
Examines how representatives of evangelical mission societies in Britain and the US sought to introduce Protestant Christianity to Canton, Guadngdong Province, and the Qing-dominated Chinese empire in the decades before the Opium War. Reviews the cultural and political background of the efforts, and focuses on Robert Morrison of the London Missionary and his work in Canton. Adds insight not only into missionary work in China but also the Anglo-American cooperation that led to closer theological and institutional ties. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR
The Conversion of Missionaries
Title | The Conversion of Missionaries PDF eBook |
Author | Xi Lian |
Publisher | Penn State University Press |
Pages | 0 |
Release | 1997 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 9780271064383 |
Like many of her fellow missionaries to China, Pearl Buck found that she was not immune to the influence of her adopted home. Some missionaries even found themselves "convert[ed] ... by the Far East." In this book Lian Xi tells the story of Buck and two other American missionaries to China in the early twentieth century who gradually came to question, and eventually reject, the evangelical basis of Protestant missions as they developed an appreciation for Chinese religions and culture. Lian Xi uses these stories as windows to understanding the development of a broad theological and cultural liberalism within American Protestant missions, which he examines in the second half of the book.
An American Missionary in China
Title | An American Missionary in China PDF eBook |
Author | Yu-ming Shaw |
Publisher | BRILL |
Pages | 400 |
Release | 2020-03-23 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 1684172985 |
This work traced the career of a seminal figure in twentieth-century Chinese-American relations. John Leighton Stuart began his work in China as a missionary in 1904. He moved on to head Yenching University, the leading Christian institution of higher leaning in China. During the Pacific War, Stuart was imprisoned by the Japanese. When General George C. Marshall was sent to China by President Truman in 1945 to mediate peace between the Chinese Nationalists and the Chinese Communists, Marshall chose Stuart as Ambassador to help with that mediation and to look after American interests in China. Stuart was the last to hold that post before the Chiang Kai-shek government's move to Taiwan. Shaw's research among materials in English, Chinese, and Japanese has produced a richly detailed examination of each phase of Stuart's life. Shaw presents Stuart as a Wilsonian idealist whose combination of liberal, situational values and nationalistic vision put him square in the middle, unable fully to support a Nationalist-led China and positing instead a Nationalist-Communist coalition that would favor the Nationalists and open the door to American influence.
The Foreign Missionary Enterprise at Home
Title | The Foreign Missionary Enterprise at Home PDF eBook |
Author | Daniel H Bays |
Publisher | University of Alabama Press |
Pages | 346 |
Release | 2010-03-14 |
Genre | Biography & Autobiography |
ISBN | 0817356401 |
This collection of 15 essays provides a fully developed account of the domestic significance of foreign missions from the 19th century through the Vietnam War. U.S. and Canadian missions to China, South America, Africa, and the Middle East have, it shows, transformed the identity and purposes of their mother countries in important ways.
Developing Mission
Title | Developing Mission PDF eBook |
Author | Joseph W. Ho |
Publisher | Cornell University Press |
Pages | 271 |
Release | 2022-01-15 |
Genre | Photography |
ISBN | 1501760963 |
In Developing Mission, Joseph W. Ho offers a transnational cultural history of US and Chinese communities framed by missionary lenses through time and space—tracing the lives and afterlives of images, cameras, and visual imaginations from before the Second Sino-Japanese War through the first years of the People's Republic of China. When American Protestant and Catholic missionaries entered interwar China, they did so with cameras in hand. Missions principally aimed at the conversion of souls and the modernization of East Asia, became, by virtue of the still and moving images recorded, quasi-anthropological ventures that shaped popular understandings of and formal foreign policy toward China. Portable photographic technologies changed the very nature of missionary experience, while images that missionaries circulated between China and the United States affected cross-cultural encounters in times of peace and war. Ho illuminates the centrality of visual practices in the American missionary enterprise in modern China, even as intersecting modernities and changing Sino-US relations radically transformed lives behind and in front of those lenses. In doing so, Developing Mission reconstructs the almost-lost histories of transnational image makers, subjects, and viewers across twentieth-century China and the United States.
Encounters between Jesuits and Protestants in Asia and the Americas
Title | Encounters between Jesuits and Protestants in Asia and the Americas PDF eBook |
Author | Jorge Cañizares-Esguerra |
Publisher | BRILL |
Pages | 375 |
Release | 2018-08-13 |
Genre | Religion |
ISBN | 9004373829 |
The present volume is a result of an international symposium on the encounters between Jesuits and Protestants in Asia and the Americas, which was organized by Boston College’s Institute for Advanced Jesuit Studies at Boston College in June 2017. In Asia, Protestants encountered a mixed Jesuit legacy: in South Asia, they benefited from pioneering Jesuit ethnographers while contesting their conversions; in Japan, all Christian missionaries who returned after 1853 faced the equation of Japanese nationalism with anti-Jesuit persecution; and in China, Protestants scrambled to catch up to the cultural legacy bequeathed by the earlier Jesuit mission. In the Americas, Protestants presented Jesuits as enemies of liberal modernity, supporters of medieval absolutism yet master manipulators of modern self-fashioning and the printing press. The evidence suggests a far more complicated relationship of both Protestants and Jesuits as co-creators of the bright and dark sides of modernity, including the public sphere, public education, plantation slavery, and colonialism.