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Fang Yu Hu, "Good Wife, Wise Mother: Educating Han Taiwanese Girls Under Japanese Rule" (U Washington Press, 2024)

Nov 6, 2025
Fang Yu Hu, an Assistant Professor of History at Cal Poly Pomona, explores the intricate interplay of gender and education in Taiwan during Japanese rule. She reveals how the 'Good Wife, Wise Mother' program sought to reshape Han Taiwanese girls into modern citizens, while also examining the effects of this education on class structures and gender roles. Hu discusses local elite responses to this initiative and unpacks the nostalgic views of Japanese-educated Taiwanese post-colonization, all while hinting at her next research on Taiwanese migrants.
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INSIGHT

Gendered Model Of Modern Citizenship

  • Japanese 'Good Wife, Wise Mother' framed female citizenship around domestic roles and family management.
  • Fang Yu Hu shows assimilation via gendered schooling made modernization explicitly gendered and hierarchical.
INSIGHT

Elite Support Reinforced Colonial Hierarchy

  • Taiwanese elites embraced girls' schooling for modernization but tried to separate it from Japanization.
  • Hu argues this acceptance nonetheless reinforced colonial hierarchy and patriarchy through curriculum and imagery.
ANECDOTE

Girls' Wartime Mobilization And Memories

  • Schoolgirls performed wartime duties like letter-writing, sewing care packages, and collecting metal for weapons.
  • Interviewees later recalled fear from air raids but also pride and fond memories of those mobilized activities.
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