Abstract
AbstractModern Chinese diplomatic histories rarely discuss the marriages of diplomats, leaving the impression that women made little impact on their husbands' careers. The extraordinary performance of Oei Hui-lan (1889–1992), wife of celebrated diplomat Wellington Koo (1888–1985), challenges this view. Hui-lan's contributions to diplomacy call our attention to the role played by Chinese diplomatic wives: as reception hostesses and embassy managers, they cultivated social relationships to facilitate diplomatic exchange. Hui-lan's story reminds us that to study modern diplomatic history solely through the lens of professionalization and institutionalization – while forgoing perspectives of gender and family – is insufficient to explain China's success in this period. Hui-lan's Peranakan family background in the Dutch East Indies (now Indonesia) equipped her with the financial assets and cosmopolitan upbringing to shine as a diplomatic wife. And yet, though she benefited from her overseas origins, Hui-lan had an uneasy relationship to her Chinese identity. Concealing the tension in her two autobiographies, Hui-lan later reconstructed her past, emphasizing her patriotism and ethnic Chineseness to befit her established position. Thus, her case also shows how the complicated process of identity rebuilding and selective adaptation played out for elite overseas Chinese women through their engagement with modern China.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
General Social Sciences,General Arts and Humanities
Reference43 articles.
1. The Case for Diaspora: A Temporal Approach to the Chinese Experience
2. Beiyang huabao (1931) Gu Weijun furen xiang 顧維鈞夫人像 [A portrait of Madame Wellington Koo], no. 12, p. 579.
3. Lien, L.-L. (2001) Searching for the ‘New Womanhood’: Career Women in Shanghai, 1912–1945 (PhD Diss.). University of California, Irvine.
4. The gendered politics of socializing and the emergence of the “Public Wife” in late Qing diplomacy;Shi;Research on Women in Modern Chinese History,2021