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Biography & Autobiography Women

The Lady Named Thunder

A Biography of Dr. Ethel Margaret Phillips (1876–1951)

by (author) Clifford H. Phillips

Publisher
The University of Alberta Press
Initial publish date
Oct 2003
Category
Women, Historical
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9780888644176
    Publish Date
    Oct 2003
    List Price
    $38.99
  • Hardback

    ISBN
    9780888644084
    Publish Date
    Oct 2003
    List Price
    $49.95

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Description

Dr. Margaret Phillips was a pioneering missionary who served in China at a time when women were usually dutiful wives, and certainly not unmarried "suffragist" medical doctors. Educated at Manchester University, she spent 43 years in China with a special mission to improve the health and circumstances of women, fight tuberculosis, and heal sick children. Overlapping the era in which the Imperial system collapsed, China was invaded and occupied by Japan, and the Communist revolution began, the life story of Margaret Phillips reflects the great events that transformed China in the first half of the 20th century. Foreword by Brian L. Evans.

About the author

Clifford H. Phillips, also known by his Chinese name, Lei Houtian, was raised from infancy in Beijing. He spent over 20 years in the Far East and lived in Edmonton, Alberta until his death in 2004.

Clifford H. Phillips' profile page

Awards

  • Word Guild Writing Awards - Life Stories
  • Asia Pacific Accord of Canada - Asia Biennial Award

Editorial Reviews

".the book.provides a wealth of detail on Victorian society, women in mission service, and expatriate life in Beijing. As a testimony to one woman's personal legacy, Phillips's book is well worth reading and joins the growing body of literature on women's achievements during the first half of the twentieth century." Linda Benson, International Bulletin of Missionary Research, Vol. 28, No. 4

"The Maoist regime in China immortalized the memory of Dr. Norman Bethune for his devotion, sacrifice, and properly leftist ideology, which was free of any religious context. Dr. Phillips worked just as devotedly with the Chinese people, as they struggled through decades of revolution, famine, and war. Her life's work and her own account of these years, recorded in her diaries and letters, and captured in this excellent biography, form a valuable record of a tumultuous half-century in the recent history of China." Merrill Distad (U of A), Bulletin of the Pacific Circle, October issue, No. 13, ISSN 1520-3581

"Warlords, famine, opium scandals, girl child abandonment, collapse of the old Empire, the cruelties of the Japanese occupation, she was there for it all, and raised her child Clifford (her biographer) in Peking. Unlike Canadian Dr. Bethune she did not stay for the communist takeover but her story covers the more interesting time in the history of that troubled mass of people. A bit of a gem for history buffs." Ron McIsaac, Island News

"This remarkable book celebrates the life achievements of a heretofore largely unknown heroine. Her life offers a window on conditions in China during the 20th century prior to the establishment of the People's Republic. She bested personal illness and major surgery, and somehow found the time and commitment to adopt a young boy when she was 45 years old. Readers should be grateful she did, for he has now told her extraordinary story to the world. This is an outstanding book. Summing Up: Recommended. General readers; undergraduates through faculty; professionals." D. R. Shanklin, University of Chicago

"The author provides lively vignettes of many of Margaret's cases and her dealing with both the local population and the mission community, as well as her own bouts of serious illness. Later Margaret practised medicine in Beijing; it was during this time that she adopted a baby (the author) from the United States. She survived the Second World War in a Japanese internment camp but died a few years later in England. Margaret Phillips's life spanned a time of considerable political and social upheaval in China, and her daily involvement with patients provides a valuable window into the lives of poor and ordinary Chinese during these changes." University of Toronto Quarterly, Vol. 74, No. 1, Winter 2004/5