These are the sources and citations used to research PROPOSAL. This bibliography was generated on Cite This For Me on
In-text: (Cheng, 2014)
Your Bibliography: Cheng, A., 2014. Modernism. In: R. Lee, ed., The Routledge Companion to Asian American and Pacific Islander Literature. New York: Routledge, pp.315-328.
In-text: (Choi, 1998)
Your Bibliography: Choi, C., 1998. Nationalism and Construction of Gender in Korea. In: E. Kim and C. Choi, ed., Dangerous Women: Gender and Korean Nationalism.. New York: Routledge.
In-text: (Choi, 2009)
Your Bibliography: Choi, J., 2009. A Cinema of Girlhood: Sonyeo Sensibility and the Decorative Impulse in the Korean Horror Cinema. In: J. Choi and W. Mitsuyo, ed., Horror to the Extreme: Changing Boundaries in Asian Cinema. Hong Kong University Press, pp.40-56.
In-text: (Choi, 2010)
Your Bibliography: Choi, J., 2010. I’m Not a Girl, Yet Not a Woman Contemporary Korean Romance Films. In: J. Choi, ed., The South Korean Film Renaissance: Local Hitmakers, Global Provocateurs. Wesleyan University Press, pp.85-115.
In-text: (Choi, 2016)
Your Bibliography: Choi, J., 2016. shōjo sensibility and the transnational imaginary. In: K. Iwabuchi, C. Berry and E. Tsai, ed., Critical Approaches to East Asian Popular Culture. Routledge, pp.178-190.
In-text: (Copeland, 2000)
Your Bibliography: Copeland, R., 2000. Lost Leaves: Women Writers of Meiji Japan. Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press.
In-text: (Driscoll, 2002)
Your Bibliography: Driscoll, C., 2002. Girls: Feminine Adolescence in Popular Culture and Cultural. New York: Columbia University Press, p.53.
In-text: (Fredericks, 2000)
Your Bibliography: Fredericks, S., 2000. Housewives, Modem Girls, Feminists: Women's Magazines and Modernity in Japan.. The University of Chicago.
In-text: (Kawamura, 1993)
Your Bibliography: Kawamura, K., 1993. Otome no inori: Kindaijosei imeiji no tanjo [The Girl's Prayer: The Birth of the Image of Modem Women]. Tōkyō: Kinokuniya Shoten.
In-text: (Kearney, 2009)
Your Bibliography: Kearney, M., 2009. Coalescing: The Development of Girls’ Studies. NWSA Journal 21, 1, pp.1-28.
In-text: (Lemaster, 2012)
Your Bibliography: Lemaster, T., 2012. "Girl with a pen": Girls' Studies and Third-Wave Feminism in "A Room of One's Own" and "Professions for Women. Feminist formations, 24(2), pp.77-99.
In-text: (Mitchell, 1995)
Your Bibliography: Mitchell, S., 1995. The New Girl: Girls' Culture in England. New York: Columbia University Press.
In-text: (Namba, 2018)
Your Bibliography: Namba, T., 2018. School Uniform Reforms in Modern Japan. Fashion, Identity, and Power in Modern Asia, pp.91-113.
In-text: (Ōtsuka, 1989)
Your Bibliography: Ōtsuka, E., 1989. Shōjo minzokugaku. Tōkyō: Kōbunsha.
In-text: (Park, 2008)
Your Bibliography: Park, J., 2008. SEEING STARS: FEMALE FILM STARS AND FEMALE AUDIENCES IN POST-COLONIAL KOREA. Ph.D. University of Kansas.
In-text: (Robertson, 1998)
Your Bibliography: Robertson, J., 1998. Takarazuka: Sexual Politics and Popular Culture in Modern Japan. Berkeley, Calif.: University of California Press, pp.158-290.
In-text: (Said, 1979)
Your Bibliography: Said, E., 1979. Orientalism. New York: Vintage Books.
In-text: (Shamoon, 2005)
Your Bibliography: Shamoon, D., 2005. Seductive Innocents, Beautiful Friends: Representations of Teenage Girls in Modem Japanese Fiction and Film. Ph.D. UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, BERKELEY.
In-text: (Treat, 1996)
Your Bibliography: Treat, J., 1996. Yoshimoto Banana Writes Home: The Shojo in Japanese Popular Culture. In: J. Treat, ed., Contemporary Japan and Popular Culture. Richmond: Curzon, pp.275-308.
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