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  • Contributors

Jeremy Brown is professor of history at Simon Fraser University in British Columbia. He is the author of June Fourth: The Tiananmen Protests and Beijing Massacre of 1989 (2021).

Alexander F. Day is associate professor of history and chair of East Asian studies at Occidental College. He is the author of The Peasant in Postsocialist China: History, Politics, and Capitalism (2013).

Matthew D. Johnson is an associate professor of the University of Pittsburgh Asian Studies Center. He recently edited Redefining Propaganda in Modern China: The Mao Era and Its Legacies (2021).

Jan Kiely is professor and director of the Centre for China Studies at the Chinese University of Hong Kong and associate editor of Twentieth-Century China. He is the author of The Compelling Ideal: Thought Reform and the Prison in China, 1901–1956 (2014) and coeditor of Modern Chinese Religion II, 1850–2015 (2015), Recovering Buddhism in Modern China (2016), and Fieldwork in Modern Chinese History: A Research Guide (2019).

Fabio Lanza is professor of modern Chinese history at the University of Arizona. His recent publications include The End of Concern: Maoism, Activism, and Asian Studies (2017).

Covell F. Meyskens is assistant professor of history at the Naval Postgraduate School. He is the author of Mao's Third Front: The Militarization of Cold War China (2020).

Sigrid Schmalzer is professor of history at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. She is the author of Red Revolution, Green Revolution: Scientific Farming in Socialist China (2016).

Aminda Smith is associate professor of history at Michigan State University. She is the author of Thought Reform and China's Dangerous Classes: Reeducation, Resistance, and the People (2013).

Jake Werner is a postdoctoral research fellow at the Global Development Policy Center, Boston University. His research interests include labor, nationalism, everyday life, and the trajectory of global capitalism. He is currently completing a book manuscript, "Everyday Crisis and the Rise of the Masses: Life in Shanghai, 1925–1972."

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