Subject: Christian colleges--China--History--Sino-Japanese Conflict, 1937-1945

Kang-Ri zhanzheng shiqi de Jidujiao daxue 抗日戰爭時期的基督教大學
AuthorLiu Tianlu 劉天路, Liu Jiafeng 劉家峰, b. 1970
Publish_locationFuzhou 福州
PublisherFujian jiaoyu chubanshe 福建教育出版社
CollectionRicci Institute Library
Edition第1版
LanguageChinese 中文[簡體]
Record_typeBook
SeriesJidujiao jiaoyu yu Zhongguo shehui congshu 基督敎敎育與中國社會叢書 ; 7
ShelfReading Room
Call NumberLC432.C5 L58 2003
Description2, 275 p. : ill. ; 21 cm.
NoteKang Ri zhanzheng shiqi de Jidujiao daxue 抗日戰爭時期的基督教大學 / Liu Jiafeng, Liu Tianlu zhu 劉家峰, 劉天路著.
Includes glossary of Chinese names for foreign educators.
Includes bibliographical references (p. 266-273).
ISBN7533436164
LCCN2005350635
Women at the frontlines of faith : Christian service and rural reconstruction in wartime Sichuan
AuthorYi Aixin
CollectionRicci Institute Library
LanguageEnglish
Record_typeArticle (in Periodical)
ShelfDigital Archives
Call NumberLC432.C5 Y5 2025
Description30 p.
Note

Women at the frontlines of faith : Christian service and rural reconstruction in wartime Sichuan / Yi Aixin

Published in the Journal of the Study on Religion and History No. 2

Abstract:

This paper investigates how Ginling Women’s College, one of China’s leading Christian institutions for women, engaged in rural reconstruction during the Second Sino-Japanese War. Focusing on its rural service stations in Renshou and Zhonghechang, Sichuan, this paperexamines how Christian women educators translated ideals of social service, citizenship, and domestic reform into local practice. Drawing on missionary archives, Guomindang (GMD) administrative documents, and local records, the paper reconstructs both the institutional design and the lived experience of these wartime experiments.Ginling’s initiatives reveal how Christian social work became intertwined with GMD programs of rural reconstruction and moral reform. Through literacy classes, nursery programs, and citizenship training courses, urban-educated women sought to improve ruralwomen’s lives while cultivating civic and moral order. Their efforts exposed tensions between their Christian, urban-informed visions of social improvement and the daily constraints of rural wartime life.By foregrounding everyday encounters between reformers and villagers, this study highlights the social, cultural, and spiritual dimensions of Christian women’s activism. It argues that Ginling’s wartime rural service redefined the relationships amongChristian social engagement, gender roles, and the GMD-led reconstruction initiatives, offering new insightsinto how Chinese Christianity adapted to and participated in the transformation of rural society during the war