Genre
- Journal Article
Contributors
Author: Larkin, Thomas M.
Date Issued
2023
Date Published Online
2023-10-24
Abstract
In 1861, twenty-year-old Ruth Bradford accompanied her father to the Chinese treaty port of Amoy where he was to serve as American consul. Bradford recorded this trip in a diary kept from her departure from New York until her 1863 return. Drawing upon her diary, this paper explores how Bradford, as the only American woman in Amoy, refined her sense-of-self through interracial and cross-cultural encounters with the settlement's Chinese and British inhabitants. The paper argues that through critical comparison with these communities, Bradford, like other nineteenth-century American women in China, consolidated and articulated her gendered, racial and burgeoning patriotic national identity.
Language
- English
Rights
CC-BY
Page range
954-972
Host Title
Gender & History
Host Abbreviated Title
Gender & History
Volume
35
Issue
3
ISSN
0953-5233
1468-0424
Department
Rights
- CC BY