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Gender and Reproductive Technologies in East Asia: A Partial Bibliography of Works in English Chia-Ling Wu & Yu-Ling Huang & Young-Gyung Park & Azumi Tsuge & Adele E. Clarke Received: 1 December 2008 /Accepted: 1 December 2008 / Published online: 21 January 2009 # National Science Council, Taiwan 2009 1 Birth Control and Population Policy Anagnost, A. (1995). A surfeit of bodies: Population and the rationality of the state in postMao China. In F. Ginsberg, & R. Rapp (Eds.), Conceiving the new world order: the global politics of reproduction (pp. 22–41). Berkeley: University of California Press. Chung, Y. J. (2002). Struggle for national survival: Chinese eugenics in a transnational Context. New York: Routledge. Coleman, S. (1983). Family planning in Japanese society: traditional birth control in a modern urban culture. Princeton: Princeton University Press. Connelly, M. (2008). Fatal misconception: the struggle to control world population. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. Freedman, R., Chang, M. C., & Sun, T. H. (1994). Taiwan’s transition from high fertility to below-replacement levels. Studies in Family Planning, 25(6), 317– 331. East Asia Science, Technology and Society: an International Journal (2008) 2:327–334 DOI 10.1007/s12280-008-9062-5 C.-L. Wu (*) National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan e-mail: clwu@ntu.edu.tw Y.-L. Huang State University of New York at Binghamton, Binghamton, New York, USA e-mail: yuling13905@gmail.com Y.-G. Park John Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland, USA e-mail: yp.paik@gmail.com A. Tsuge Meijigakuin University, Tokyo, Japan e-mail: tsuge@soc.meijigakuin.ac.jp A. E. Clarke University of California at San Francisco, San Francisco, California, USA e-mail: Adele.Clarke@ucsf.edu Frühstück, S. (2003). Colonizing sex: sexology and social control in modern Japan. Berkeley: University of California Press. Greenhalgh, S. (1994). Controlling births and bodies in village China. American Ethnologist, 21(1), 3–30. Greenhalgh, S. (2001). Fresh winds in Beijing: Chinese feminists speak out on the one-child policy and women’s lives. Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society, 26(3), 847–886. Greenhalgh, S. (2003). Science, modernity, and the making of China’s one-child policy. Population and Development Review, 29(2), 163–196. Greenhalgh, S. (2005). Globalization and population governance in China. In A. Ong, & S. J. Collier (Eds.), Global assemblages: technology, politics, and ethics as anthropological problems (pp. 354–372). Collier. Malden: Blackwell. Greenhalgh, S. (2005). Missile science, population science: the origins of China’s one-child policy. China Quarterly, 182, 253–276. Greenhalgh, S. (2008). Just one child: science and policy in Deng’s China. Berkeley: University of California Press. Greenhalgh, S., & Jiali, L. (1995). Engendering reproductive policy and practice in peasant China: for a feminist demography of reproduction. Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society, 20(3), 601–641. Greenhalgh, S., & Edwin W. (2005). Governing China’s population. Stanford: Stanford University Press. Hartmann, B. (1995). Reproductive rights and wrongs: the global politics of population control. Rev. ed. Boston: South End. Jeong, Y. (2006). Representation of Korean women's bodies in biomedical technologies: from birth control to stem cell research. Paper presented at Society for Social Studies of Science Annual Meeting, Vancouver. Johnson, M. S. (1987). Margaret Sanger and the birth control movement in Japan, 1921–1955. Ph.D. dissertation, University of Hawaii. Kim, E. S. (1993). The making of the modern female gender: the politics of gender in reproductive practices in Korea. Ph.D. dissertation., University of California, San Francisco. Kim, T. I. & Ross, J. A. (2007). The Korean breakthrough. In W. Robinson & J. A. Ross.(Eds.), The global family planning revolution (pp. 177–192). Washington, D.C.: The World Bank. Kuo, W. H. (2002). When state and policies reproduce each other: making Taiwan a population control policy; making a population control policy for Taiwan. In A. K.L. Chan, G. K. Clancey, & H. C. Loy, Historical Perspectives on East Asian Science, Technology and Medicine (pp. 121–137). Singapore: Singapore University Press. Lan, P. C. (2008). Migrant women’s bodies as boundary markers: reproductive crisis and sexual control in the ethnic frontiers of Taiwan. Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society, 33(4), 833–861. Lee, C. K. (2004). Dangerous devices, mysterious times: men, women, and birth control in early twentieth century Japan. Ph.D. dissertation., University of California, Berkeley. Lee, J...

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