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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第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 48 筆
... footbinding , calling the latter " inhuman , refined cruelty . " 24 The treaty port world of China was an all - male preserve until the nine- teenth century , when wives and unmarried women missionaries arrived . But even then ...
... footbinding as torture , but not gendered torture . For if west- ern women admitted bound feet as gender markers , rather than scars of bar- barity , they would have been admitting the existence of a kind of femininity quite different ...
... footbinding into the nationalist discourse . Anti - footbinding would now move from a focus , however indirect , on women's bodily pain to become , in the hands of male reformers , a fetish for the Chinese nation as crippled . As Pietz ...
內容
New Incarnations of | |
TheorizingFetishizing Footbinding | 21 |
The Fate of Male SameSex Prostitution | 42 |
著作權所有 | |
11 個其他區段未顯示