Beijing Bound: A Foreigner Discovers China, Glen Loveland (Sid Harta, January 2025)
Beijing Bound: A Foreigner Discovers China, Glen Loveland (Sid Harta, January 2025)

Beijing Bound captures a pivotal moment in China’s recent history through the lens of Glen Loveland, a young American who arrived in Beijing in 2007 with little more than ambition and a tourist visa. Once a congressional press secretary, Loveland chronicles his remarkable transformation from a bewildered expatriate to becoming the first foreign HR professional at China’s state broadcaster. His journey offers rare, firsthand insights into a China that was briefly—and tantalizingly—open to the world.

Women’s Transborder Cinema Authorship, Stardom, and Filmic Labor in South Asia, Esha Niyogi De (University of Illinois Press, December 2014)
Women’s Transborder Cinema: Authorship, Stardom, and Filmic Labor in South Asia, Esha Niyogi De (University of Illinois Press, December 2024)

Can we write women’s authorial roles into the history of industrial cinema in South Asia? How can we understand women’s creative authority and access to the film business infrastructure in this postcolonial region? Esha Niyogi De draws on rare archival and oral sources to explore these questions from a uniquely comparative perspective, delving into examples of women holding influential positions as stars, directors, and producers across the film industries in India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh.

Experimental Times: Startup Capitalism and Feminist Futures in India, Hemangini Gupta (University of California Press, December 2024)
Experimental Times: Startup Capitalism and Feminist Futures in India, Hemangini Gupta (University of California Press, December 2024)

Experimental Times is an in-depth ethnography of the transformation of Bengaluru/Bangalore from a site of “backend” IT work to an aspirational global city of enterprise and innovation. The book journeys alongside the migrant workers, technologists, and entrepreneurs who shape and survive the dreams of a “Startup India” knitted through office work, at networking meetings and urban festivals, and across sites of leisure in the city.

Misery beneath the Miracle in East Asia, Arvid J Lukauskas, Yumiko Shimabukuro (Cornell University Press, December 2024)
Misery beneath the Miracle in East Asia, Arvid J Lukauskas, Yumiko Shimabukuro (Cornell University Press, December 2024)

Misery Beneath the Miracle in East Asia challenges prevailing views of the East Asian economic miracle. Existing scholarship has overlooked the severity, persistence, and harmful consequences of the social-welfare crises affecting the region. Arvid J Lukauskas and Yumiko Shimabukuro fill this gap and put a major asterisk on East Asia’s economic record.

Indians on Indian Lands: Intersections of Race, Caste, and Indigeneity,  Nishant Upadhyay (University of Illinois Press, October 2024)
Indians on Indian Lands: Intersections of Race, Caste, and Indigeneity, Nishant Upadhyay (University of Illinois Press, October 2024)

Nishant Upadhyay unravels Indian diasporic complicity in its ongoing colonial relationship with Indigenous peoples, lands, and nations in Canada. Upadhyay examines the interwoven and simultaneous areas of dominant Indian caste complicity in processes of settler colonialism, antiblackness, capitalism, brahminical supremacy, Hindu nationalism, and heteropatriarchy.

Daughter of Dunhuang: A Memoir of a Mogao Grottoes Researcher, Fan Jinshi, Chunfang Gu, Bruce Humes (trans) (Long River Press, August 2024)
Daughter of Dunhuang: A Memoir of a Mogao Grottoes Researcher, Fan Jinshi, Chunfang Gu, Bruce Humes (trans) (Long River Press, August 2024)

Fan Jinshi, a distinguished archaeologist, has devoted her life to safeguarding and researching the Mogao Caves, an esteemed UNESCO Heritage site nestled in Dunhuang, Gansu Province, China, and considered one of the world’s greatest archaeological discoveries. Her significant contributions to the field of Dunhuang studies and her advocacy for the protection and promotion of the caves’ cultural legacy have earned global accolades.

Sinophone Studies Across Disciplines: A Reader, Howard Chiang, Shu-mei Shih (eds) (Columbia University Press, September 2024)
Sinophone Studies Across Disciplines: A Reader, Howard Chiang, Shu-mei Shih (eds) (Columbia University Press, September 2024)

Sinophone studies—the study of Sinitic-language cultures and communities around the world—has become increasingly interdisciplinary over the past decade. Today, it spans not only literary studies and cinema studies but also history, anthropology, musicology, linguistics, art history, and dance. More and more, it is in conversation with fields such as postcolonial studies, settler-colonial studies, migration studies, ethnic studies, queer studies, and area studies.

When Friends Come From Afar: The Remarkable Story of Bernie Wong and Chicago’s Chinese American Service League, Susan Blumberg-Kason (University of Illinois Press, September 2024)
When Friends Come From Afar: The Remarkable Story of Bernie Wong and Chicago’s Chinese American Service League, Susan Blumberg-Kason (University of Illinois Press, September 2024)

Born in Hong Kong, Bernie Wong moved to the United States in the early 1960s to attend college. A decade later, she cofounded the Chinese American Service League (CASL) to help meet the needs of the city’s isolated Chinese immigrants. Susan Blumberg-Kason draws on extensive interviews to profile the community and social justice organization. Weaving Wong’s intimate account of her own life story through the CASL’s larger history, Blumberg-Kason follows the group from its origins to its emergence as a robust social network that connects Chinatown residents to everything from daycare to immigration services to culinary education.

Cutting the Mass Line: Water, Politics, and Climate in Southwest China, Andrea E Pia (John Hopkins University Press, July 2024)
Cutting the Mass Line: Water, Politics, and Climate in Southwest China, Andrea E Pia (John Hopkins University Press, July 2024)

China is experiencing climate whiplash—extreme fluctuations between drought and flooding—that threatens the health and autonomy of millions of people. Set against mounting anxiety over the future of global water supplies, Cutting the Mass Line explores the enduring political, technical, and ethical project of making water available to human communities and ecosystems in a time of drought, infrastructural disrepair, and environmental breakdown.

The Unruly Dead: Spirits, Memory, and State Formation in Timor-Leste, Lia Kent (University of Wisconsin Press, August 2024)
The Unruly Dead: Spirits, Memory, and State Formation in Timor-Leste, Lia Kent (University of Wisconsin Press, August 2024)

“What might it mean to take the dead seriously as political actors?” asks Lia Kent. In Timor-Leste, a new nation-state that experienced centuries of European colonialism before a violent occupation by Indonesia from 1975 to 1999, the dead are active participants in social and political life who continue to operate within familial structures of obligation and commitment.