Huping Ling Had Her Doctorate Degree from Miami University in 1991

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Huping Ling Had Her Doctorate Degree from Miami University in 1991 Huping Ling, Ph.D., Professor of History, Truman State University Executive Editor, Journal of Asian American Studies Adjunct Professor, Institute of Overseas Chinese Studies at Jinan University, Wuhan Theoretical Research Center of Overseas Chinese Affairs Office of the State Council in China Mailing Address: Department of History Truman State University Kirksville, MO 63501 Tel: 660-785-4654 (Voice); Fax: 660-785-4337 (Dept.) Email: [email protected]; website: http://www2.truman.edu/~hling/ An internationally renowned historian and prolific award-winning writer, Huping Ling (令狐萍) is Professor of History, the founder of the Asian Studies Program, and the past Convener (Department Chair) at Truman State University. She is the Executive Editor for the Journal of Asian American Studies (JAAS), an Adjunct Professor, Wuhan Theoretical Research Center of Overseas Chinese Affairs Office of the State Council, China, and a Visiting Professor of the Institute of Overseas Chinese Studies at Jinan University. She also serves as a consultant to the Overseas Chinese Affairs Office of Guangdong Provincial Government and on the Board of Directors of Women Writers Association in Shanxi Province of the Chinese National Writers Association. A Ford Foundation Prize-winning author, she has published eleven books and over hundred articles on Asian American studies, including immigration and ethnicity, assimilation and adaptation, transnationalism, family and marriage, employment patterns, and community structures. She has been featured in The World Journal (Jan. 15, 2006, Feb. 2, 2012), Chicago Daily Herald, Dallas Morning News,West End Word (Feb. 4, 2005), St. Louis Post-Dispatch (Feb. 2, 2005), St. Louis Chinese American News, St. Louis Chinese Journal, the Overseas Chinese World, River Front Times, among others, and appeared at “Charles Brennan Show” KMOX 1120, “Voice of St. Louis” (Feb. 4, 2005), KWMU 90.7 (NPR in St. Louis) “St. Louis on the Air” (July 5, 2005), among others. She has also been included in many books/encyclopedias on famous Chinese Americans and authors. She is frequently invited to lecture on Asian cultures and Asian American experiences at conferences, universities, schools, libraries, government and private agencies, and community organizations, nationally and internationally. Her recent books include Surviving on the Gold Mountain: A History of Chinese American Women and Their Lives (Albany: The State University of New York, 1998), Jinshan Yao: A History of Chinese American Women (Chinese Social Science Publishing House, 1999, Ford Foundation Award for publication in the American Studies Series by the Chinese Academy of Social Science, and a classic in American studies in China), Ping Piao Mei Guo: New Immigrants in America (Beiyue Literature and Arts Publishing House, China, 2003), Chinese St. Louis: From Enclave to Cultural Community (Temple U.P., 2004, featured in St. Louis Post-Dispatch, West End Word, KMOX, and KWMU), Chinese in St. Louis, 1857-2007 (Arcadia Publishing, 2007), Voices of the Heart: Asian American Women on Immigration, Work, and Family (Truman State U.P., 2007), Emerging Voices: the Experiences of Underrepresented Asian Americans (Rutgers U.P., 2008), Asian America: Forming New Communities, Expanding Boundaries (Rutgers U.P., 2009), Asian American History and Culture: An Encyclopedia (2 volumes, M.E. Sharpe, 2010, with Allan Austin, Booklist/Reference Books Bulletin Editors' Choice 2010 Award), and Chinese Chicago: Race, Transnational Migration, and Community (Stanford U.P, 2012). She has contributed over hundred articles to major professional journals, anthologies, textbooks, and encyclopedias such as The Journal of American Ethnic History, The Journal of Urban History, Missouri Historical Review, The History Teacher, The American Studies (by the Chinese Social Science Academy), The Review of Modern History of Chinese Women (by the Academia Sinica of Taiwan), Asian American Children (Greenwood Press, 2004), Imperial China, 617-1644 (Manly, Inc., 2002), Great Events of the Twenties Century (Salem Press, 2001), Modernity and Cultural Identity in Taiwan (Global Publishing Co. Inc., 2001), New Studies on Chinese Overseas and China (Leiden, Holland, 2000), Intercultural Relations, Cultural Transformation, and Identity (Manila, 2000), Ethnic Chinese at Turn of Centuries (Fujian: 1998), Asian American Encyclopedia (Marshall Cavendish Corp., 1995), and Origins and Destinations (UCLA, 1994). She was invited as a columnist by the St. Louis Chinese American News to write the history column Chinese St. Louisans consisting of 30 articles. She also contributes essays for the World Journal and St. Louis Post-Dispatch. She is a recipient of numerous awards and honors including the Ford Foundation Book Award, Booklist/Reference Books Bulletin Editors' Choice 2010 Award, American Fellow of AAUW, Allen Fellowship for Faculty Excellence 2005-2006 with $10,000 prize, Best Article Award at 2006 Missouri Conference on History, the Distinguished 76th Boya Lecturer at China Central Normal University, and Rosenberg Institute Visiting Scholar at Suffolk University in Boston, among others. She is on the Truman State University Press board and editorial board for the Journal of Asian American Studies, and is a reviewer for the Journal of Urban History, International Migration Review, the Journal of American Ethnic History, the Journal of American History, Choice, and the Journal of the History and Sexuality. She is the past board director and the Midwest/ Mountain/Canada representative of the Association for Asian American Studies. .
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