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The Question of Women in Chinese Feminism
Tani Barlow
出版
Duke University Press
, 2004-03-25
主題
History / Asia / China
Social Science / Anthropology / Cultural & Social
Social Science / Feminism & Feminist Theory
Social Science / Regional Studies
ISBN
9780822332701
0822332701
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=LW8KvELVxxEC&hl=&source=gbs_api
EBook
SAMPLE
註釋
Annotation "The Question of Women in Chinese Feminism is a history of thinking about the subject of women in twentieth-century China. Tani E. Barlow illustrates the theories and conceptual categories that Enlightenment Chinese intellectuals have developed to describe the collectivity of women. Demonstrating how generations of these theorists have engaged with international debates over eugenics, gender, sexuality, and the psyche. Barlow argues that as an Enlightenment project, feminist debate in China is at once Chinese and international. Noting the eugenicist roots of much twentieth-century feminist thought, she describes how the emergence of the social sciences in the 19205, in China and elsewhere, lent the liberation of women a particular urgency by suggesting that the health of nations and races rested in part on the biological mechanisms of natural selection and therefore on women's responsibility to select sexual partners. Barlow reads social theory, psychoanalytic thought, literary criticism, ethics,and revolutionary political ideologies to illustrate Chinese feminist theory's preoccupation with the problem of gender inequality. She reveals how, throughout the cataclysms of colonial modernity, revolutionary modernization, and market socialism, prominent Chinese feminists have gathered up the remainders of the past and formed them into social and ethical arguments, categories, and political positions, ceaselessly reshaping progressive Enlightenment sexual liberation theory. She focuses on major figures in this ongoing project, including the fiction writer Ding Ling, a leading proponent of women's revolutionary liberation for half a century; contemporary literary scholar and feministpowerhouse Li Xiaojiang, a major advocate of women's studies; and the internationally significant film and cultural critic Dai Jinhua. Barlow's study provides an in-depth examination of one of the world's most compelling and signifi