The current issue of Isis has a focus on science and modern China (links are to the abstracts):
BENJAMIN A. ELMAN: New Directions in the History of Modern Science in China: Global Science and Comparative History
FA-TI FAN: Redrawing the Map: Science in Twentieth-Century China
DANIAN HU: The Reception of Relativity in China
ZUOYUE WANG: Science and the State in Modern China
SIGRID SCHMALZER: On the Appropriate Use of Rose-Colored Glasses: Reflections on Science in Socialist China
GRACE SHEN: Murky Waters: Thoughts on Desire, Utility, and the “Sea of Modern Science”
Also in this issue:
DARYN LEHOUX: Observers, Objects, and the Embedded Eye; or, Seeing and Knowing in Ptolemy and Galen
SHARON E. KINGSLAND: Maintaining Continuity through a Scientific Revolution: A Rereading of E. B. Wilson and T. H. Morgan on Sex Determination and Mendelism
JOHN V. PICKSTONE: Working Knowledges Before and After circa 1800: Practices and Disciplines in the History of Science, Technology, and Medicine