This book is an accomplishment deserving scholarly attention. It is well researched with a plethora of sources in both English and Chinese and does a marvelous job in helping us understand the centrality of image-making in missionary experiences.
(Church History) Ho's examinations of missionary photographs offer a compelling perspective on noncombatant photography during times of war. [ He] succeeds in making missionaries and their photographs visible once more and showing how they continue to connect some of their members across the communities they imaged.
(Los Angeles Review of Books) Developing Mission is a nuanced study of a deserving topic. Ho's prose is well crafted and his analysis reflects depth and engagement with a number of fields. The book should attract interest from scholars of modern Chinese history, global Christianity and missions, and historians of technology.
(Fides et Historia) Developing Mission is a groundbreaking contribution to the historiography of Chinese Christianity. Joseph Ho not only offers us a new and exciting methodology to incorporate photographic evidence into the study of mission history but also preserves the ever-receding memory of China's missionary era.
(International Bulletin of Mission Research) Developing Mission is an extremely well-written, lyrical book that speaks to multiple disciplines. Ho draws upon film theory in meaningful and clear terms and without recourse to much jargon. He frames his story within a historical context that is accessible, and he has a penchant for including anecdotes that are moving and meaningful. This book should be extremely popular among a wide range of audiences inside and outside the academy.
(Review of Religion and Chinese Society) The book's distinguishing characteristics include its ingenious, informative title[ .] It is of great value to graduate students and historians of Chinese Christianity, Sino-US cultural interactions, and photography and film.
(Christian Study Centre on Chinese Religion and Culture) Ho's multi-faceted analysis effectively underscores the seminal historic relationship of missionaries as photographers. This is accomplished with rich prose alongside well-researched biographical narratives that enliven the many Protestant, Catholic, and Chinese actors; pertinent references that combine Chinese and American religious and secular history; and finally, preciseyet invitingtechnical writing about cameras. All aspects engage the reader to be both positively surprised and challenged as to unpack the interdisciplinary components, stories and theoretical content, in each chapter.
(American Catholic Studies) Ho offers a rich, layered, and inspiring history of missionary visual practices. With a diverse range of subjects and a wealth of detail, the vernacular photographs and films offer a provocative alternative to modern visualizations of China.
(Journal of Asian Studies) Joseph W. Ho provides a cross-cultural history of American missionary visual practices. Focusing on the American missionaries' images and image making in China from the 1920s to the early 1950s, the book explores how missionaries employed the camera as an agent that facilitated the translations of missionary experiences and the shaping of cross-cultural identities.
(Journal of Asian Studies) The book is recommended to readers and scholars interested in the history of Christianity in China, modern Chinese history, visual development, and Sino-Western cultural exchanges.
(Religious Studies Review)