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Book Cover
E-book
Author Gates, Hill, author.

Title Footbinding and women's labor in Sichuan / Hill Gates
Published London : Routledge, 2015

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Description 1 online resource
Series Routledge contemporary China series ; 123
Routledge contemporary China series ; 123.
Contents 1. Footbinding in Sichuan, 1854-1954 -- 2. Patchworking Sichuan women's history across 100 years -- 3. Erotic attraction vs. mothers-in-law, state mandates, and early unbinding -- 4. Structure, hypergamy, and footbinding -- 5. The life course -- 6. Girls and hidden work -- 7. Light labor : textiles and footbinding -- 8. Hypergendering
Summary "When Chinese women bound their daughters' feet, many consequences ensued, some beyond the imagination of the binders and the bound. The most obvious of these consequences was to impress upon a small child's body and mind that girls differed from boys, thus reproducing gender hierarchy. What is not obvious is why Chinese society should have evolved such a radical method of gender-marking. Gendering is not simply preparation for reproduction, rather its primary significance lies in preparing children for their places in the division of labor of a particular political economy. Drawing on extensive fieldwork and interviews with almost 5,000 women, this book examines footbinding as Sichuan women remember it from the final years of the empire and the troubled times before the 1949 revolution. It focuses on two key questions: what motivated parents to maintain this custom, and how significant was girls' work in China's final pre-industrial century? In answering these questions, Hill Gates shows how footbinding was a form of labor discipline in the first half of the twentieth century in China, when it was a key institution in a now much-altered political economy. Countering the widely held views surrounding the sexual attractiveness of bound feet to Chinese men, footbinding as an ethnic boundary marker, its role in female hypergamy, and its connection to state imperatives, this book instead presents a compelling argument that footbinding was in fact a crucial means of disciplining of little girls to lives of early and unremitting labor. This vivid and fascinating study will be of huge interest to students and scholars working across a wide range of fields including Chinese history, oral history, anthropology and gender studies"-- Provided by publisher
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Subject Footbinding -- China -- Sichuan Sheng
Girls -- China -- Sichuan Sheng -- Social life and customs
Women -- China -- Sichuan Sheng -- Social life and customs
Women -- Employment -- China -- Sichuan Sheng
HEALTH & FITNESS -- Beauty & Grooming.
Economic history
Footbinding
Girls -- Social life and customs
Social conditions
Women -- Employment
Women -- Social life and customs
SUBJECT Sichuan Sheng (China) -- Economic conditions
Sichuan Sheng (China) -- Social conditions
Subject China -- Sichuan Sheng
Form Electronic book
ISBN 9781135042295
1135042292
9780203491836
0203491831
9781135042271
1135042276
9781135042288
1135042284
0415525926
9780415525923
9781138104211
1138104213