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Chinese femininities, Chinese masculinities: a reader
Susan. Brownell and Jeffrey N. Wasserstrom
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Frontmatter
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LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS (page ix)
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FOREWORD (Thomas Laqueur, page xi)
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Introduction: Theorizing Femininities and Masculinities (Susan Brownell and Jeffrey N. Wasserstrom, page 1)
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PART I · GENDER AND THE LAW (QING DYNASTY) (page 43)
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1. Feminity in Flux: Gendered Virtue and Social Conflict in the Mid-Qing Courtroom (Janet M. Theiss, page 47)
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2. Dangerous Males, Vulnerable Males, and Polluted Males: The Regulation of Masculinity in Qing Dynasty Law (Matthew H. Sommer, page 67)
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PART II · IDEALS OF MARRIAGE AND FAMILY (MID-QING DYNASTY AND EARLY REPUBLICAN ERA) (page 89)
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3. Grooming a Daughter for Marriage: Brides and Wives in the Mid-Qing Period (Susan Mann, page 93)
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4. "The Truths I Have Learned": Nationalism, Family Reform, and Male Identity in China's New Culture Movement, 1915-1923 (Susan L. Glosser, page 120)
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PART III · GENDER IN LITERARY TRADITIONS (MAY FOURTH ERA TO REFORM ERA) (page 145)
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5. Invention and Intervention: The Making of a Female Tradition in Modern Chinese Literature (Lydia H. Liu, page 149)
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6. The Self Loving the Self: Men and Connoisseurship in Modern Chinese Literature (Wendy Larson, page 175)
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PART IV · DANGEROUS WOMEN AND DANGEROUS MEN (LATE MING DYNASTY TO EARLY COMMUNIST PERIOD) (page 195)
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7. Modernizing Sex, Sexing Modernity: Prostitution in Early-Twentieth-Century Shanghai (Gail Hershatter, page 199)
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8. Approximations of Chinese Bandits: Perverse Rebels, Romantic Heroes, or Frustrated Bachelors? (David Ownby, page 226)
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PART V · THE GENDER OF REBELS (CULTURAL REVOLUTION) (page 251)
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9. Maoist Mappings of Gender: Reassessing the Red Guards (Emily Honig, page 255)
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10. "Little Brothers" in the Cultural Revolution: The Worker Rebels of Shanghai (Elizabeth J. Perry and Nara Dillon, page 269)
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PART VI · BLOOD, QI, AND THE GENDERED BODY (QING DYNASTY AND REFORM ERA) (page 287)
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11. Blood, Body, and Gender: Medical Images of the Female Condition in China, 1600-1850 (Charlotte Furth, page 291)
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12. Embodying Qi and Masculinities in Post-Mao China (Nancy N. Chen, page 315)
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PART VII · SHIFTING CONTEXTS OF GENDER AND SEXUALITY (REFORM ERA) (page 331)
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13. Past, Perfect or Imperfect: Changing Images of the Ideal Wife (Harriet Evans, page 335)
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14. Proper Men and Proper Women: Parental Affection in the Chinese Family (William Jankowiak, page 361)
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PART VIII · GENDER, SEXUALITY, AND ETHNICITY (REFORM ERA) (page 381)
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15. Gender and Internal Orientalism in China (Louisa Schein, page 385)
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16. Tradition and the Gender of Civility (Ralph Litzinger, page 412)
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AFTERWORD: PUTTING GENDER AT THE CENTER (Jeffrey N. Wasserstrom and Susan Brownell, page 435)
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CONTRIBUTORS (page 447)
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INDEX (page 451)
Journal Abbreviation | Label | URL |
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CJ | 50 (Jul. 2003) 167-168 | http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=1324-9347%28200307%290%3A50%3C167%3ACFMAR%3E2.0.CO%3B2-5 |
Citable Link
Published: c2002
Publisher: University of California Press
- 9780520211032 (hardcover)
- 9780520221161 (paper)