Embodied Modernities: Corporeality, Representation, and Chinese CulturesFran Martin, Ari Larissa Heinrich University of Hawaii Press, 2006年7月31日 - 300 頁 From feminist philosophy to genetic science, scholarship in recent years has succeeded in challenging many entrenched assumptions about the material and biological status of human bodies. Likewise in the study of Chinese cultures, accelerating globalization and the resultant hybridity have called into question previous assumptions about the boundaries of Chinese national and ethnic identity. The problem of identifying a single or definitive referent for the "Chinese body" is thornier than ever. |
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... positions were defined solely as kin-positions (mother, daughter, wife) within the patrilinear family. Similarly, the modern mainland Chinese term funü relates less to the premodern representations of femininity in China than to other ...
... positions its abolition as a symbolic threshold marking modernity's nether limit. As the section title implies, all these essays focus on body cultures in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, not only for the intrinsic ...
... positions the 1929 redaction of Yesou puyan as a kind of barometer of changing conceptualizations of sexed and gendered bodies in China in this period. Her observations are congruent with those made by other contributors to this section ...
... position (to act and speak in the role) of sexually mature women through the painful process of deforming their feet in binding cloths. Their embodied subjectification has been approached by numerous critics, whose theories for how it ...
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內容
Part II Contemporary Embodiments | 113 |
Contemporary Taiwan | 177 |
Transnational Incorporations in Hong Kong Cinema | 218 |
Bibliography | 253 |
Filmography | 277 |
Contributors | 279 |
Index | 283 |