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Curriculum VitaeHongshan Li, Ph. D.335 Cheshire Road Department of HistoryHudson, OH 44236 Kent State University(330)655-5913 (H) Tuscarawas Campus(330)308-7455 (O) 330 University Drive, N.E.E-Mail: hli@kent.edu New Philadelphia, OH 44663891540000EDUCATION:1992Ph. D. in History, University of Missouri-Columbia 1986 M.A. in History, University of Missouri-Kansas City 1984M.A. in History, Wuhan University, China1982B.A. in English Language and Literature, Wuhan University, ChinaACADEMIC POSITIONS:8/08-pres.Professor, History, Kent State University, Tuscarawas Campus8/99-8/08Associate Professor, History, Kent State University, Tuscarawas Campus 8/93-8/99Assistant Professor, History, Kent State University, Tuscarawas Campus 7/92-8/93Instructor, Inlingua School of Languages, Boston8/87-5/92Graduate Assistant, University of Missouri-Columbia8/86-7/87Research Assistant, UMC9/84-8/85Lecturer, Wuhan University, ChinaPUBLICATIONS:Books:Hongshan Li, U.S.-China Educational Exchange: State, Society, and Intercultural Relations, 1905-1950, New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 2008, 286pHongshan Li, ed., Taiwan in Historical Perspectives: Economy, Politics, Culture, Education, and External Relations since World War II. Hong Kong: Hong Kong Press for Science, 1999, 289p.Hongshan Li and Hong Zhaohui, ed., Image, Perception, and the Making of U.S.-ChinaRelations, Lanham, Maryland: University Press of America, 1998, 411p.Xiaobing Li and Hongshan Li, ed., China and the United States: A New Cold War History. Lanham, Maryland: University Press of America, 1997, 348p.Yang Kuisong, Sheng Zhihua, and Niu Jun, A Short History of Sino-Soviet Relations, 1917-1991, New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2020, 386p. Translated by Yafeng Xia, Hongshan Li, and Xiaoyuan Liu. My part includes the first 6 chapters, over 60,000 words, spanning 106 pages.Journal Articles and Book Chapters:Hongshan Li, “Making the First Generation of New Citizens: Returned Students and Student Movements in the Republican Era,” in Xiaobing Li and Qiang Fang ed., A Centenary of Student Movements in China: The Mountain Movers, Lanham, Maryland: Lexington Books, 2020, 65-94.Hongshan Li, “Building a Black Bridge: China’s Interactions with African-American Activists in the Cold War,” Journal of Cold War Studies, vol. 20, no. 3., Summer 2018, 114-152.Hongshan Li, “The Hidden Helping Hand: The U.S. Government’s Assistance to Chinese Returnees, 1949-1955,” The Frontier of History in China, vol. 11, no. 1, Spring 2016, 95-134.Hongshan Li, “A Cultural Gateway: Macao on the Map of Sino-American Relations,” Zhang Shuguang, ed., Sail to the Orient, Beijing: The Social Science Press of China, 2014, 201-227.Hongshan Li, “The Beginning of the End of the U-S-China Cultural Cold War: A Reappraisal of the ‘Ping Pong Diplomacy,’” Tribune of Social Sciences, June 2012, 21-34. (Reprint)Hongshan Li, “From State Function to Private Enterprise: Reversing the Historical Trend in U.S.-China Educational Exchange,” in Richard Garlitz and Lisa Jarvinen, eds., Teaching America to the World: Education and Foreign Relations since 1870, New York: Palgrave McMillan, 2012, 217-237. Hongshan Li, “The Beginning of the End of the U-S-China Cultural Cold War: A Reappraisal of the ‘Ping Pong Diplomacy,’” The Collection of Essays Celebrating the Hundredth Birthday of Liu Xuyi, Wuhan: Hubei Renmin Chubanshe, 2012, 586-601. Hongshan Li, “Entering a Multicultural Society: A Historian’s Experience and Reflections in the United States,” in Wang Xi and Yao Ping ed., The Quest Across the Pacific, Beijing: Peking University Press, 2010, 113-129. Hongshan Li, “The Privatization of China’s Study Abroad: A New Era for Chinese Students in the United States, 1978-2007,” in Li You-ning ed., History of Chinese Students in the United States: Learning and Achievements in the Past 160 Years, New York: Outsky Press, 2009, 210-237.Hongshan Li, “Turning Schools into the Safest Places,” Recommendation from Scientists and Technologists, China Association of Science and Technology, no. 14, 2008, 1-8.Hongshan Li, “Building a Harmonious Society: Lessons from the United States,” Selected Papers and Speeches, Symposium on Overseas Chinese Professionals and the Building of a Harmonious Society, China Association of Science and Technology, Changchun, Jilin Province, China, September 25-27, 2006, 9-18.Hongshan Li, “‘Anti-Americanism’ in Contemporary China: History, Cultural Origin, and Impact,” in Hao Yufan and Lin Su, eds., Chinese Foreign Policy Making: An Analysis of Societal Forces, Beijing: Social Science Academic Press, 2006, 57-85. (Reprint)Hongshan Li, “Recent ‘Anti-Americanism’ in China: Historical Roots and Impact,” China’s Foreign Policy Making: Social Forces and Chinese American Policy, Yufan Hao and Su Lin, ed., Hampshire, UK: Ashgate Publishing, 2005, 41-68.Hongshan Li, “Teaching Modern United States History at Wuhan University,” Perspectives, vol. 5, no. 3, September 30, 2004, 44-47.Hongshan Li, “Building the Bridge of Knowledge and Understanding: The New Chinese Immigrants and Their New Contributions,” Journal of Chinese American Studies, no. 6, Spring 2004, 1-35. (Reprint)Caizhen Hu and Hongshan Li, “On the American Policy toward the Demilitarization of Western-Occupation Zone in Germany in the Early Post-World-War-II Era,” Journal of the Central China Normal University, vol. 43, no. 5, 2004, 113-116.Hongshan Li, “Deepening and Widening Participation Through Education and Institutionalization: Key to the Advancement of China’s Political Civilization,” in Department of Political Science, Renmin University of China, Political Civilization and Modernization in China: The Political Context of China’s Transformation, Beijing: School of International Studies, Remin University of China, 2004, 427-440.Hongshan Li, “Tearing Down Barriers to Studying Abroad: 1905 as a Turning Point in Educational Exchange with the U.S.,” Niu Dayong, ed., Twentieth Century China in Retrospect: New Views and Sources, Nanchang: Jiangxi Renmin Chubanshe, 2003, 529-556.Hongshan Li, “Building the Bridge of Knowledge and Understanding: The New Chinese Immigrants and Their New Contributions,” Chinese Studies in History, vol. 34, no. 1, Spring 2001, 21-43.Hongshan Li, “American Perceptions of China: National Image and U.S.-China Relations,” Enlightening Humanity Essays from Chinese Universities, Wuhan, China: Central China University of Science and Technology Press, 2001, 147-161.Hongshan Li, “Managing Diplomatic Crisis with Educational Exchange: Government and U.S.-China Cultural Relations, 1905-1950,” International Congress of Historical Sciences,oslo2000.uio.no/program/papers/s16/s16-hongshanli.pdfHongshan Li, "Forward". In Hongshan Li, ed., Taiwan in Historical Perspective: Economy, Politics, Culture, Education, and External Relations since World War II. Hong Kong: Hong Kong Press for Science, 1999, 1-3.Hongshan Li, "Cultural Relations Between Taiwan and the United States in the Post-War Years". In Hongshan Li, ed., Taiwan in Historical Perspective: Economy, Politics, Culture, Education, and External Relations since World War II. Hong Kong: Hong Kong Press for Science, 1999, 46-68.Hongshan Li, “Focusing on National Image: A New Trend in Studying China-U.S. Relations inthe United States,” The Pacific Journal, No. 4, 1998, 17-27. Hongshan Li, "Introduction: Image and Perception in U.S.-China Relations," in Hongshan Li and Hong Zhaohui, ed., Image, Perception, and the Making of U.S.-China Relations, Lanham, Maryland: University Press of America, 1998, 1-14.Hongshan Li, "The Unofficial Envoys: Chinese Students in the United States, 1906-1938," in Hongshan Li and Hong Zhaohui, ed., Image, Perception, and the Making of U.S.-China Relations, Lanham, Maryland: University Press of America, 1998, 145-168.Hongshan Li, “An Irrelevant Success: Educational Exchange in U.S.-China Relations,” Interpreting Taiwan in the Cold War, in Xiaobo Hu, ed., Lanham, Maryland: University Press of America, 1998, 95-125.Hongshan Li, "An Administrative Success and a Political Failure: The Nationalist Policy TowardStudying Abroad", Twentieth-Century China (Formerly Republican China), Vol. XXIII, No. 1(November 1997), 63-99.Hongshan Li, "China Talks Back: Anti-Americanism or Nationalism?" The Journal ofContemporary China, Vol. 6, No. 14 (Spring 1997), 153-160.Hongshan Li, "The Visible Hand: Washington's Role in U.S.-Taiwan Cultural Relations". China and the United States: A New Cold War History, Lanham, Maryland: University Press of America, 1997, 153-180.Hongshan Li, "A Brief Analysis on Sino-Japanese Dispute over Diaoyu Islands and Its Shelving", Modern China Studies, No. 3 (October, 1996), 9-17.Hongshan Li, "Oral History and U.S. History Survey." Proceedings of the Workshop on TeachingHistory at America's Colleges and Universities." Chinese Historians in the United States, Inc.,Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, 1995, 40-60. Hongshan Li, "Modernization of the Chinese People". The Chinese Intellectual, Hartsdale, NewYork: China Perspective, Vol. 9, No. 1 (Fall 1993), 60-65.Encyclopedia Essays:Hongshan Li, “Study Abroad,” in David Pong, ed., Encyclopedia of Modern China, Detroit, MI: Charles Scribner's Sons, 2009, vol. 3, 506-509.Hongshan Li, “Taiwan,” in Ruud van Dijk, ed., Encyclopedia of Cold War, New York: Routledge, 2008, 875-878.Hongshan Li, “China Lobby,” in Ruud van Dijk, ed., Encyclopedia of Cold War, New York: Routledge, 2008, 150-151.Hongshan Li, “Clarence E. Gauss,” in Yuwu Song, ed., Encyclopedia of Chinese-American Relations, Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers, 2006, 113-114.Hongshan Li, “Rong Hong,” in Yuwu Song, ed., Encyclopedia of Chinese-American Relations, Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers, 2006, 242-243.Hongshan Li, “Tang Shaoyi,” in Yuwu Song, ed., Encyclopedia of Chinese-American Relations, Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers, 2006, 278.Hongshan Li, “Tao Xingzhi,” in Yuwu Song, ed., Encyclopedia of Chinese-American Relations, Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers, 2006, 279.Hongshan Li, “Wu Tingfang,” in Yuwu Song, ed., Encyclopedia of Chinese-American Relations, Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers, 2006, 319-310. Hongshan Li, "Anson Burlingame," East Asia and the United States: An Encyclopedia of Relations since 1784, James Matray, ed., Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Publishing Group, Inc., 2002, vol. 1, 61-62. Hongshan Li, "Fulbright Act," East Asia and the United States: An Encyclopedia of Relations Since 1784, James Matray, ed., Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Publishing Group, Inc., 2002, vol. 1, 179-180.Hongshan Li, "Jiang Tingfu," East Asia and the United States: An Encyclopedia of Relations Since 1784, James Matray, ed., Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Publishing Group, Inc., 2002, vol. 1, 276-277. Hongshan Li, "Kung Xiangxi," East Asia and the United States: An Encyclopedia of Relations Since 1784, James Matray, ed., Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Publishing Group, Inc., 2002, vol.1, 330-331.Book and Journal Article Reviews:Hongshan Li, The End of Concern: Maoist China, Activism, and Asian Studies (Fabio Lanza, Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2017), The Journal of American-East Asian Relations, vol. 25, no. 3, 2018, 331-333.Hongshan Li, Between Mao and McCarthy: Chinese American Politics in the Cold War Years (Charlotte Brooks, University of Chicago Press, 2015), The Journal of American History, vol. 102, no. 3, December 2015, 936.Hongshan Li, America’s First Adventure in China: Trade, Treaties, Opium, and Salvation (John R. Haddad, Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 2013), History: Reviews of New Books, 42:2, February 2014, 64-65.Hongshan Li, A Cold War Turning Point: Nixon and China, 1969-1972 (Chris Tudda, Louisiana State University Press, 2012), The Journal of American History, vol. 100, no. 1, 2013, 279. Hongshan Li, Chinese Circulations: Capital, Commodities, and Networks in Southeast Asia (Eric Tagaliacozzo and Wen-Chin Chang, ed., Duke University Press, 2011), The Historian, vol. 74, no. 4, winter 2012, 866-867.Hongshan Li, The Oil Prince’s Legacy: Rockefeller Philanthropy in China (Mary Brown Bullock, Stanford University Press, 2011), The American Historical Review, vol. 117, no. 2, April 2012, 500-501. Hongshan Li, Strangers on the Western Front: Chinese Workers in the Great War, (Guoqi Xu: Harvard University Press, 2011), The Chinese Historical Review, vol. 18, no. 2, Fall 2011, 213-216.Hongshan Li, Shaping and Reshaping Chinese American Identity: New York's Chinese during the Depression and World War II (New York: Lexington Books, 2010), the American Review of China Studies, vol. 11,?no. 1, Spring 2010, 75-77.Hongshan Li, “Reactions of Chinese Citizens to the Death of Stalin, International Communist Party Reports,” (Hua-yu Li, Journal of Cold War Studies 11:2, Spring 2009, 70-88), H-Diplo, October 16, 2009, Li, Chinese America: Stereotype and Reality, History, Present, and Future of the Chinese Americans (Birgit Zinzius, New York: Pete Lang Inc., 2005) The Chinese Historical Review, vol. 13, No. 2 (Fall 2006), 409-412.Hongshan Li, Bridging Minds Across the Pacific: U.S.-China Educational Exchanges, 1978-2003 (Cheng Li, New York: Lexington Books, 2005), China Review International, vol. 12, no. 2, Fall 2005, 148-155.Conference Proceedings:Marcia Zeng, Yin Zhang, Hongshan Li, Serhiy Polyakov, “Exploring Smart Data Approaches to the History of Innovation and Invention at Liquid Crystal Institute at Kent State University,” in Robert B. Allen, Jane Hunter, and Marcia L Zeng, eds., Digital Libraries: Providing Quality Information. 17th International Conference on Asia-Pacific Digital Libraries, ICADL 2015, Seoul, Korea, December 9-12, 2015. Proceedings: 346-347. Berlin, Germany: Springer, 2015, ISBN 978-3-319-27974-9. PRESENTED:Hongshan Li, “Vicki Garvin: A Transnational Educator,” Department of History Roundtable, Kent State University, Kent, Ohio, February 7, 2020.Hongshan Li, “From a Union Organizer to a Transnational Educator: Vicki Garvin in China and the United States, 1964-1979,” American Historical Association Annual Conference, New York City., January 4, 2020.Hongshan Li, “Robert Williams in China: From a Promoter for Armed Revolution to a Non-Violence Activist, 1963-1969,” American Historical Association Annual Conference, Washington, D.C., January 4-7, 2018.Hongshan Li, Marcia Lei Zeng, Yin Zhang, Xinyue Ye, and Taotu, “Tackling Innovation Networks with Smart Data: A Case Study of the Liquid Crystal Institute at Kent State University,” accepted by the Digital Humanity Conference 2017, Montreal, Canada, August 8-11, 2017. Hongshan Li, “The Black Rights in Reds’ Eyes: China’s Response to the U.S. Civil Rights Movement in the Cold War.” American historical Association Annual Conference, Denver, January 6, 2017.Marcia Zeng, Yin Zhang, Hongshan Li, Serhiy Polyakov, “Exploring Smart Data Approaches to the History of Innovation and Invention at Liquid Crystal Institute at Kent State University,” the 17th International Conference on Asia-Pacific Digital Libraries, Seoul, Korea, December 9-12, 2015.Hongshan Li, “Targets and Targeteers: Chinese Students and Scholars in the United States in the Late 1940s and Early 1950s,” the American Historical Association annual conference, Atlanta, January 4, 2016. Hongshan Li, “Readjusting the Visible Hand: Government Role in Chinese Students’ Migration to the United States in the 1950s,” the American Historical Association Annual Conference, New York, January 3, 2015 Hongshan Li, “Building a Black Bridge: China’s Interactions with Afro-American Activists in the Cold War,” Symposium on China in Global History, East China Normal University, Shanghai, China, June 8, 2014.Hongshan Li, “A Cultural Gateway: Macao on the Map of Sino-American Relations,” Symposium on Macao on the World Map, Macao University of Science and Technology, Macao, China, May 14, 2014.Hongshan Li, “Bridging the Cultures in the Cold War: African-American Activists and U.S.-China Cultural Relations,” the American Historical Association Annual Conference, New Orleans, January 3, 2014.Hongshan Li, “Competing for Chinese Students in the United States: A Key Battle in a Different Cultural Cold War,” the American Historical Association Annual Conference, New Orleans, January 4, 2013.Hongshan Li, “Intersecting the Internationalization of Higher Education: Chinese Students in the United States, 1905-1950,” the Annual Conference of the American Historical Association, Chicago, January 5, 2012.Hongshan Li, “The Beginning of the End of the Sino-American Cultural Cold War: A Reappraisal of the Ping Pong Diplomacy,” the Joint Conference for the Association of Asian Studies and the International Convention for Asian Scholars, Honolulu, Hawaii, April 3, 2011. Hongshan Li, “The Privatization of Student Migration: A Reappraisal of the Visible Hand in U.S.-China Educational Exchange, “ the Annual Conference of the Society of Historians in American Foreign Relations, University Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin, June 24, 2010.Hongshan Li, “Bridging the Two Cultures: The Chinese Schools and the Making of Chinese American Identities,” the Annual Conference of the American Historical Association, San Diego, January 9, 2010.Hongshan Li, “The Beginning of Cultural Cold War in China: From Thought Reform to College Realignment, 1949-1953,” International Convention of Asian Scholars 6, Daejeon, South Korea, August 9, 2009.Hongshan Li, “Reversing the Trend: The Privatization of China’s Study Abroad and Its Impact, 1978-2007,” The International Symposium on Chinese Students in the United States: Education and Achievements in the Past 160 Years, Asian Studies Center, St. John’s University, Flushing, New York, October 25, 2008.Hongshan Li, “Turning Schools into the Safest Place: Lessons from California,” Symposium on Overseas Chinese Professionals and the Reconstruction of China, China Association of Science and Technology, Fuzhou, Fujian Province, China, September 24-25, 2008.Hongshan Li, “Cultural Cold War in East Asia: Overlooked Battles Between the U.S., China, and Taiwan, 1949-1979,” International Conference of Asia Scholars, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, August 2-5, 2007Hongshan Li, “Building a Harmonious Society: Lessons from the United States,” Symposium on Overseas Chinese Professionals and the Building of a Harmonious Society, Organized by China Association of Science and Technology, Changchun, Jilin Province, China, September 25-27, 2006.Hongshan Li, “From a State Function to a Private Enterprise: Studying Abroad in the Reform Era and the Rise of China,” the 19th Annual Conference of the Association of Chinese Political Studies, the University of Louisville, Louisville, Kentucky, March 31-April 2, 2006.Hongshan Li, “From Quantitative to Qualitative Changes: China’s Studying Abroad in Reform Era,” International Convention of Asia Scholars 4, Shanghai, China, August 22, 2005.Hongshan Li, “The Historical and Cultural Origins of China’s Anti-Americanism,” Symposium on Social Pressure on the Making of China’s Policy toward the United States, Renmin University of China, Beijing, China, June 13, 2004.Hongshan Li, “Deepening and Widening Participation Through Education and Institutionalization: Key to the Advancement of China’s Political Civilization,” International Symposium on Political Civilization and Modernization in China, Renmin University of China, Beijing, China, June 12, 2004.Hongshan Li, “Improving Education: The Key to the Success in the War on Poverty in Western China,” Conference on the Utilization of Overseas Human Resources, China Council for Applied Technology Exchange with Foreign Countries, Beijing, China, December 4, 2003. Hongshan Li, “Haigui (The Overseas Returnees) in a Historical Perspective: A New Term for New Reality in China’s Studying Abroad Movement,” Thirty-Second Annual Meeting of Southwest Conference on Asian Studies, University of Houston, Houston, Texas, October 11, 2003. Hongshan Li, “Chinese Historians and Chinese Studies in the Untied States,” Leadership Conference on Overseas Chinese Professional Organizations, Western Returned Scholars Association, Beijing, China, September 30, 2002. Hongshan Li, “Talents and Migration, Market and Government: Trends and Strategies for Studying Abroad and International Competition for Talents,” Symposium on “Twenty-First Century and International Competition in the Human Capital Market,” Tianjin Economic and Technological Development Area, Tianjin, China, December 22, 2001.Hongshan Li, “Tearing Down Barriers to Studying Abroad: 1905 as a Turning Point in Educational Exchange with the U.S.,” International Conference on “Twentieth Century China in Retrospect: New Views and Sources,” Beijing University, Beijing, China, June 17, 2001.Hongshan Li, “Democracy and One China: The Greatest Challenge in the Cross-Taiwan-Strait Relations,” Annual Conference of the Ohio Chinese-American Professionals Association, Kent State University, Kent, Ohio, June 2, 2001.Hongshan Li, “The Cold War and the United States Cultural Policy toward China,” the Conference on the Past and Present of U.S.-Chinese Relations, Shanghai International Studies University, Shanghai, China, January 10-12, 2001.Hongshan Li, “Democracy as a Precondition for the Reunification of China: Tying a Gordian Knot in the Cross-Straits Relations?” the Annual Conference of American Historical Association, Boston, January 5-8, 2001.Hongshan Li, “Seeing Is Believing: Bringing Historical Europe into the Classroom,” Annual Teaching Conference, Kent State University, Kent, Ohio, October 27, 2000. Hongshan Li, “Building a Bridge of Knowledge and Understanding: The New Chinese Immigrants and Their New Contributions,” the International Conference on Chinese Contribution to America, Flushing, New York, October 19-22, 2000.Hongshan Li, "Managing Diplomatic Crisis with Educational Exchange: Government and U.S.-China Cultural Relations, 1905-1950," the 19th International Congress of Historical Sciences, Oslo, Norway, August 10, 2000.Hongshan Li, “The Election of 2000 in Taiwan and Democracy in China,” multimedia presentation, Celebration of Scholarship 2000, Kent State University, Kent, Ohio, May 11, 2000.Hongshan Li, "From Students to Immigrants: An Overlooked Addition to Overseas Chinese Community", International Conference of Institutes and Libraries for Overseas Chinese Studies, Athens, Ohio, March 24, 2000Hongshan Li, "From Preconditions to Common Goal: The Issue of Democracy and Reunification of China in the Election of 2000 in Taiwan", The Conference on the Presidential Election of 2000, the National Chengchi University, Taipei, March 18, 2000.Hongshan Li, "Image of Chinese and Human Resource Exchange: An U.S.-China Relation Perspective,” International Symposium on 21st Century China and the Challenge of Sustainable Development, Washington, D.C., September 4, 1999.Hongshan Li, "Perception and Migration: Chinese Students in the United States", Annual Conference of American Historical Association, Washington, D.C., January 9, 1999.Hongshan Li, "Eyes for China: Chinese Students and China’s Perception of the United States", International Conference on China's Open-Door Policy and Studying Abroad, 1978-1998, University of Maryland, College Park, October 24, 1998. Hongshan Li, "Focusing on National Image: A New Trend in Studying U.S.-China Relations", Conference on the Development of China's Social Science Studies held by Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, Beijing, June 3-7, 1998.Hongshan Li, "Riding the Wave of Computing Technology: Teaching History with Computerized Images", Workshop on Teaching, Technology, and Career Development, held by CHUS-ACPSS at Indiana University of Pennsylvania, Indiana, Pennsylvania, April 10-12, 1998.Hongshan Li, “National Image and U.S.-China Relations,” International Conference on the Fifteenth Communist Party Congress and China’s Development, New York, November 7-9, 1997.Hongshan Li, "The Unofficial Envoys: Chinese Students in the United States, 1906-1938", Annual Conference of Southwestern Social Science Association, New Orleans, Louisiana, March 24, 1997.Hongshan Li, "Discovering the Visible Hand: Washington's Role in U.S.-Taiwan Cultural Relations during the Cold War", Annual Conference of the American Historical Association, New York City, January 4, 1997.Hongshan Li, "Success or Failure?--Educational Exchange and U.S.-China Relations in the Twentieth Century", International Symposium on U.S.-China Relations: Interdisciplinary Perspectives, University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland, October 25-27, 1996."Chinese Students and U.S.-China Relations", International Conference on Chinese Student Overseas, China Association of Science and Technology, Beijing, China, July 24-28, 1996.Hongshan Li, "Teaching History in a Multimedia Environment", Workshop on Teaching and Career Development, University of Central Oklahoma, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, May 18-20, 1996.Hongshan Li, "Studying Abroad and Modernization: The Nationalist Approach, 1928-1949", the Annual Conference of the American Historical Association, Atlanta, Georgia, January 4-7, 1996.Hongshan Li, "On the Cultural Front: U.S.-Taiwan Relations in the Cold War", Annual Conference of the Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations, Annapolis, Maryland, June 22-24, 1995.Hongshan Li, "Chinese Students in the United States: A Review of History", Conference on "Overseas Chinese Students and China at the Turn of the Century", Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio, May 28-30, 1995.Hongshan Li, "From May Fourth to June Fourth: An International and Historical Review", The Panel on the Twenty-Fifth Anniversary of the May Fourth Incident, Kent State University, Tuscarawas Campus, May 4, 1995.Hongshan Li, “Oral History and U.S. History Survey,” Workshop on “Teaching History at America’s Universities and Colleges,” Canton, Ohio, 12, 1994.Hongshan Li, "Chinese Students and Washington's First Cultural Experiments in China", Workshop on "China's Intellectuals and the Changing World", University of Chicago, May 1, 1993Hongshan Li, "The Boxer Indemnity Remission and the Beginning of American Cultural Policy", The Eighteenth Annual Conference of the Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations, Poughkeepsie, New York, June 21, 1992.Hongshan Li, "From an Onlooker to a Protector: The American Government and American Cultural Expansion in China in the Nineteenth Century", The Fifth Annual Conference of Chinese Historians in the United States, Clark University, Worcester, Massachusetts, August 4, 1991.Hongshan Li, "The Exclusion Policy and Chinese Students", International Conference on Overseas Chinese, University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland, March 24, 1991.Hongshan Li, "State Capitalism and Federalism in the Twentieth Century United States", The Third National Conference on American History, Chengdu, China, May 18, 1984.LECTURES, SPEECHES, AND DISPLAYS:6/4/2014“The Hidden Helping Hand: The U.S. State Department’s Assistance to Students Returning to China, 1949-1955,” East China Normal University, Shanghai, China.5/11/11“China: Past and Present,” New Dawn Retirement Community, Dover, Ohio. 4/20/10“International Education and International Understanding: Lessons from U.S.-China Educational Exchange,” Keynote Speech at the Annual Award Ceremony of Phi Beta Delta Honor Society, Kent State University chapter. 11/18/09“Chinese Names: History, Meaning, and Usages,” International Education Week, Kent State University, Kent, Ohio.10/7/09“China’s Road to the Cultural Cold War: Thought Reform and College Restructuring, 1949-1953,” Honors Symposium, Kent State University at Tuscarawas.10/10/08“Sino-American Educational Exchange: Historical Patterns and Current Trends,” School of International Relations, Shanghai International Studies University, Shanghai, China7/15/08“U.S.-China Educational Exchange and Chinese Students in the United States, 1847-2007,” Summer Institute for Chinese Educators, Kent State University 4/15/08“Building the Bridges: Chinese Students in the United States,” Special Lecture for the Heritage Week, Kent State University-Tuscarawas Campus3/5/04“The Cultural Revolution in China: From a Historical Perspective,” Hudson High School, Hudson, Ohio10/24/03“Images of China: Past and Present,” PowerPoint presentation, Celebrate College Teaching, University Teaching Council, Kent State University, Kent, Ohio4/10/02“Education in China: The Past and the Present,” Institutional Diversity Committee, Kent State University, Tuscarawas Campus 11/5/01“The Changing China: Education and Economy,” Rotary Club, Ohio.10/26/01“Seeing is Believing: Brining Changing China into Classrooms at Kent State University,” PowerPoint slides show, University Teaching Conference, Kent State University, Kent, Ohio9/11/01“Literacy in China,” Rotary Club, Dover, Ohio6/10/01“Focusing on National Image: A New Trend in the Study of U.S.-China Relations in the United States,” Guest Lecture Series, Institute of World History, Wuhan University, Wuhan, China6/8/01“Managing Diplomatic Crises with Educational Exchange: U.S.-China Cultural Relations, 1905-1950,” Guest Lecture Series, Institute of World History, Wuhan University, Wuhan, China6/8/01“The Presidential Election of 2000 in Historical Perspectives,” Guest Lecture Series, Institute of World History, Wuhan University, Wuhan, China2/2/01“Educational Exchange under the Visible Hands: China and the United States, 1905-1950,” “Chinese Studies @ OSU Lecture Series, 2000-2001,” East Asian Studies Center, Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio10/16/00“Seeing Is Believing: Bringing Historical Europe into the Classroom,” University Teaching Conference, Kent State University, Kent, Ohio4/12/00“The Presidential Election in Taiwan and the U.S.-China Relations,” Cultural Development Seminar, Tuscarawas Campus11/24/99"China Revisited", Rotary Club, Perry Township, Ohio11/22/99"Re-experiencing China: Summer Teaching at Wuhan University", Rotary Club, New Philadelphia, Ohio6/1/99"American Perception of China: From Historical Perspective", Huazhong University of Science and Technology, Wuhan, China.5/28/99"Chinese Students' Literature and China's Perception of the United States"Wuhan University, Wuhan, China, May 28, 1999.6/12/98"American Perception of China: From an Historical Perspective", Jianghan University, Wuhan, China6/11/98"Travel in American Culture and Society", Wuhan University, Wuhan, China6/2/98"Computing Technology and History Research and Teaching", PekingUniversity, Beijing, China6/1/98"Teaching History with Multimedia", Peking University, Beijing, China6/12/97"Hong Kong: History and Transition", Kiwanis Club, New Philadelphia, Ohio4/9/97"Family Life in China", New Horizon Program, Ohio State University Extension10/8/96"Anti-Americanism or Nationalism?--Changing Public Opinions in China and Japan", Chestnut Society, Kent State University, Tuscarawas Campus2/28/95"Taiwan, Hongkong, and Mainland China: Changing Societies", Cultural Development Seminar, Kent State University, Tuscarawas Campus6/15/94"History Teaching and Career in the United States", Wuhan University, China6/13/94"American Society and Social History", Wuhan University, ChinaT.V./RADIO PANELIST, SPECIAL INTERVIEW REPORTS:“Undue Influence?” Elizabeth Redden, Inside Higher Ed, June 18, 2013, . I gave a long interview to the reporter on June 17 and my statement was partially quoted at the end of the report. “Chinese Media Net Special Interview: The Solution to the Problems between Both Sides of the Taiwan Strait Depends on the Younger Generation with Better Mutual Understanding,” Chinese Media Net, July 24, 2009, . “Confucianism and U.S-China Educational Exchange,” special guest for Asian Hour, WERE 1490 AM, Cleveland, Ohio, December 21, 2008.“The Review of U.S.-China Relations in the Last 25 Years,” a special panel discussion broadcasted by the Radio Free Asia, Washington, D.C., January 1, 2004.“Falungong in China,” a special panel on a Chinese cult for Insight, TV-2, Kent State University, Kent, Ohio, November 20, 2003.“Some Moral Issues in China,” a special discussion broadcasted by the Radio Free Asia, Washington, D.C., November 12, 2003.“China’s Response to “One Nation on Each Side of the Taiwan Strait,” a special topic broadcasted by the Radio Free Asia, Washington, D.C., August 6, 2002.“The Thirtieth Anniversary of U.S.-China Ping-Pong Diplomacy,” an hour-long special program broadcasted by the Radio Free Asia, Washington, D.C., March 21, 2001.“On China’s Anti-Corruption Effort,” a special topic broadcasted by the Radio Free Asia, Washington, D.C., October 7, 2000.“Turning the Old Pavement Blocks of Tiananmen Square into Historical Memorabilia,” a special topic broadcasted by the Radio Free Asia, Washington, D.C., September 11, 1999"The Twentieth Anniversary of the Reestablishment of Diplomatic Relations between UnitedStates and China: The Past, the Present, and the Future", The Focus, an hour-long radio programbroadcasted by the Voice of America, the United States Information Services, Washington D.C.,February 7, 1999.“Overseas Chinese Scholars’ View on Japan’s Refusal to Make a Written Apology for the Crimes Committed by the Japanese during World War II,” a special topic broadcasted by the Radio Free Asia, Washington, D.C., November 26, 1998."Housing Reform in China", China Forum, an hour-long T.V. program broadcast by theVoice of America, the United States Information Services, Washington D.C., July 20, 1998."Sino-Japanese Dispute over the Diaoyu Islands", China Forum, the Voice of America, the United States Information Services, Washington D.C., September 16, 1996. ................
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