Ling Ma

Assistant Professor
Doty Hall 242
585-245-5373
mal@geneseo.edu

Dr. Ling Ma is a social and cultural historian of late imperial and modern China. She received her B.A. and M.A. in history from Peking University and her PhD from the University at Buffalo. Her research focuses on reproductive health, clinical practice, everyday life, as well as gender, law, and petty crimes in late nineteenth- and early 20th-century China.

She is completing a book manuscript tentatively titled Mortal Labor: Abortion, Childbirth, and Everyday Crisis in Early Twentieth-Century China. Her book focuses on a diverse set of rank-and-file players of varying nationalities, upbringings, occupations, and genders, who found themselves in the eclectic medical, legal, and cultural environment of late Qing and Republican China. It examines the ways in which these historical actors interacted with each other, negotiated their public/professional and personal lives, and addressed their reproductive needs, aspirations, crises through actions, words, and emotions.

Office Hours, Spring 2023

T/TH 12:30-1:30, and by appointment.

Curriculum Vitae

Education

  • PhD, University at Buffalo

  • MA, Peking University

  • BA, Peking University

Scholarly Activities

  • Monograph in Preparation

    Mortal Labor: Abortion, Childbirth, and Everyday Crisis in Early Twentieth-Century China.

    Select Research Publications

    • “,” Women’s History Review, 30, no. 6 (2021), 990-1008.
    • “” Nursing Clio, August 30, 2018.

    Select Book Reviews

    • Review of The Suicide of Miss Xi: Democracy and Disenchantment in the Chinese Republic, by Bryna Goodman, Twentieth-Century China, 47, no. 2 (May 2022)
    • Review of Reinventing Licentiousness: Pornography and Modern China, by Y. Yvon Wang, Choice, 59, no. 3 (November 2021)

    Recent Conference Presentations and Invited Talks

    • Panelist for “Standing Together: Patterns of Resistance in China and Iran: Celebrating March 8th—International Women’s Day,” RIT Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies Program Speaker Series, Rochester Institute of Technology, March 2023.
    • “Mortal Feelings: Fetal and Infantile Deaths as Experience and Memory in Republican China,” paper presented at the Association for Asian Studies 2023 Annual Conference, February, 2023.
    • “Men, Masculinity, and Childbirth in Late Qing and Republican China,” lecture for the Cornell Contemporary China Initiative “Engendering China” Lecture Series, Ithaca, New York, February, 2023.
    • “Rediscovering Abortion by Turning Away from It: Researching Abortion in Early Twentieth-Century China,” lecture for the “Globalizing Roe” Speaker Series, organized by the Willson Center, the Gender & History Workshop in the History Department, and the Institute for Women’s Studies at the University of Georgia, November 2022.

Signature Courses

  • History Matters: Women and Gender in East Asian History (HIST 112)
    History of Modern East Asia (HIST 282)
    The Art of Saying No: Dissent in Chinese History and Culture (HIST 284)
    Interpretations in History: Treaty-Port Shanghai (HIST 301)
    Modern China (HIST 476)
    Race, Class, and Gender (WGST 310)
    History of Unpopular Ideas (INTD 105)

Research Interests

    • Modern China
    • Women, Gender, and Reproduction
    • Law, Medicine, and Crime
    • Material Culture and Everyday Life
    • Death and Dying
    • Masculinity and the History of Emotions

Classes

  • HIST 112: Top:Gender&Sexuality East Asia

    This course will introduce students to the field of global history through focus on historians' approaches to broad themes, problems, or questions. Specific topics will be selected by the instructor, but generally engage with historians' approaches to "real world" problems and issues with particular attention to regional and global interconnections, cross-cultural encounters, and/or comparative perspectives. All courses will include seminar style discussion, a mix of primary and secondary source readings, short analytical papers, and essay exams.

  • HIST 480: Top: Science & Tech East Asia

    This course focuses on an in-depth advanced study of a particular topic in Latin America/Caribbean/Asia/Africa/Native American history. Topics could be defined either by time, theme, or space: the Vietnam War, the history of gender and sexuality in Latin America, Empire and Environment in Africa, the history of Cuba, global histories, Latin American Revolutions, the Mexican Revolution, advanced topics in African, Middle Eastern, Native American, or Asian History, among others.

  • HIST 520: Readings in Asian History

    This historiography and methodology course is designed to reinforce graduate students' command of the field of East Asian history and familiarize them with the theories and methodologies central to understanding and developing advanced conversations about Asia. Class readings introduce key theoretical frameworks, issues, historical grounding, and methodological approaches broadly relevant to the study of Asia across disciplines. The course emphasizes the development of theoretical literacy together with the close reading and analysis of scholarly texts. It also facilitates familiarity with-and critical inquiry into-disciplinary and place-based knowledge in the context of an increasingly global, transnational, and interdisciplinary field.