Dr Marjorie Dryburgh
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BA, PhD (Durham) |
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Email: m.e.dryburgh@sheffield.ac.uk |
Current Research ProjectsMy research interests focus on Sino-Japanese relations, regional and urban histories in north China and the negotiation of political identities. My current work falls into two areas. First, I am building on my earlier work on Japanese expansion in pre-war north China to consider what lay behind that military and political process, in a study of the patterns of conflict, cohabitation and collaboration between China and Japan. This draws in questions such as the development of Japanese civilian communities in north China, the impact of Japanese presences and activities outside major urban centres such as Beijing and Tianjin, and the contentious question of collaboration between Chinese groups and the Japanese authorities. Second, I have a growing interest in life writing in its various forms – biographies, autobiographies and memoirs, diaries, hagiographies... – both in the use of this work as historical evidence by interested parties and in its role in identity formation. I am currently working on memories of empire and occupation in Manchuria, the relation between individual life histories and official or national histories, and the transmission and translation of narratives between different national audiences. |
Research SupervisionI welcome applications to undertake postgraduate research on political and social questions in modern China. I am currently sole or joint supervisor for PhD research projects on religious affairs and state-society relations in contemporary China; civil society in the aftermath of the 2008 earthquake; the history and historiography of China’s foreign relations in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. TeachingMy teaching focuses primarily on two areas – China’s modern history and contemporary society – in which our understanding of developments is changing rapidly, with advances in scholarship and with the pace of social change. In both of these areas, there is a mass of source material available, and a central question in the modules that I teach is how we approach that material: how we locate, evaluate and analyse the sources most appropriate to a specific enquiry, how we understand the limitations of our sources, and what we can and can’t reasonably draw from sources that are in some way compromised or partial. |
List of Major PublicationsDryburgh, M. (2009) ‘Rewriting Collaboration: China, Japan and the self in the diaries of Bai Jianwu’, Journal of Asian Studies, 68(3), 689-714.Dryburgh, M. (2007) ‘Japan in Tianjin: settlers, state and the tensions of empire before 1937.’ Japanese Studies, 27(1), 19-34. Dryburgh, M. (2005) ‘National city, human city: the reimagining and revitalisation of Beiping, 1928-1937’ Urban History, 32(3), 500-524. Dryburgh, M. (2003) ‘The Problem of Identity and Japanese Engagement in North China’ in Li Narangoa and Robert Cribb eds., Imperial Japan and National Identities in Asia, 1895-1945, 1895-1945, London: RoutledgeCurzon. Dryburgh, M. (2001) ‘Regional Office and the National Interest: Song Zheyuan in north China, 1933-1937’ 38-55 in David P Barrett and Larry N Shyu eds., Chinese Collaboration with Japan, 1932-1945: the limits of accommodation, Stanford: Stanford University Press. Dryburgh, M (2000) North China and Japanese encroachment, 1933-37: regional power and the national interest, Richmond: Curzon. |

