
New Books in History 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 California State Polytechnic University, dives into her research on the education of Han Taiwanese girls during Japanese rule. She discusses how the 'Good Wife, Wise Mother' program aimed to shape modern female citizenship and the complexities of Taiwanese responses to this initiative. The podcast explores the impact of schooling on women's roles, marriage, and the nostalgia for the colonial period. Hu reveals surprising themes from her interviews and hints at her next project about Taiwanese migrants.
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Gendered Model Of Modern Citizenship
- The Japanese 'Good Wife, Wise Mother' ideal framed female citizenship around domestic roles rather than intellectual emancipation.
- Fang Yu Hu argues assimilation through education was explicitly gendered to produce obedient household managers and mothers.
Modernization Without Escaping Hierarchy
- Taiwanese elites embraced girls' education to modernize while trying to resist Japanization, but acceptance still reinforced colonial hierarchies.
- Fang Yu Hu shows modernization and colonial subordination were hard to disentangle in practice.
Turn Classroom Skills Into Wartime Service
- Mobilize students through curricula that combine symbolic rituals and practical work to support wartime needs.
- Use lessons like sewing and agriculture to convert classroom skills into tangible wartime contributions.

