In her new book, Shellen Wu traces the global history of the frontier in the twentieth century, with an emphasis on China. The global history approach provides a new perspective on the continuities and evolution of the construction of Chinese territoriality from the late nineteenth century to the People’s Republic of China after 1949, as well as the intellectual influence of geographical and geopolitical discourse from around the world. To trace the network of connections between individuals whose ideas on frontiers and development crossed from academic debates to policy changes, she adapted insights from network and mushroom science to a historical approach to break away from a purely chronological narrative of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
In a separate project, Wu is collaborating with geographers to evaluate the impact of changes in increased physical and virtual mobility for women in the sciences by combining traditional historical methodologies using archival records with new innovations from Geographic Information Science (GIScience) to study the human dynamics of knowledge creation in a space-time context.