Behind the Silence: Chinese Voices on AbortionRowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2005 - 294 頁 Behind the Silence is the first in-depth work in any language to explore the diverse perspectives of mainland Chinese regarding induced abortion and fetal life in the context of the world's most ambitious and intrusive family planning program. Bringing to light the range of Chinese views and experiences, Nie Jing-Bao draws on extensive primary sources and intensive fieldwork, including surveys by and interviews with hundreds of rural, urban, and overseas Chinese. Nie's exploration of the multi-layered meanings of public silence, official pronouncements, forgotten controversies from the Imperial era, public and private consensus and disagreement, women's personal stories, and doctors' narratives provides compelling evidence on the remarkably varied, sometimes critical, and often tormented voices of the Chinese people. Revealing a surprising range of beliefs and feelings concerning the morality of abortion and fetal life, the book nevertheless finds widespread acceptance of national population policies. It also examines the personal anguish and complex socio-cultural and ethical issues entwined with coerced abortion essential to enforce birth-control policies. In addition, the author argues, the abortion issue illustrates the importance of taking seriously China's internal plurality if Westerners and Chinese are to develop a fruitful cross-cultural dialogue. |
搜尋書籍內容
第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 33 筆
第 25 頁
... example , Chinese contains phrases like “ de- serving death " ; it's considered OK to save good people but kill the bad guys . The medical scientist in the group , who supported coercive measures in implementing the national birth ...
... example , Chinese contains phrases like “ de- serving death " ; it's considered OK to save good people but kill the bad guys . The medical scientist in the group , who supported coercive measures in implementing the national birth ...
第 79 頁
... example of the Confucian physician " not only because Zhang , against the mainstream Confucianism that devalued medicine as “ a petty technique , ” practiced medicine himself , but also because he took a po- sition with the civil ...
... example of the Confucian physician " not only because Zhang , against the mainstream Confucianism that devalued medicine as “ a petty technique , ” practiced medicine himself , but also because he took a po- sition with the civil ...
第 220 頁
... example in which the state can employ any means for pursuing good causes . This way of thinking about moral issues- justifying the means by the ends can seriously undermine the moral foun- dation of the whole society and thus become ...
... example in which the state can employ any means for pursuing good causes . This way of thinking about moral issues- justifying the means by the ends can seriously undermine the moral foun- dation of the whole society and thus become ...
內容
Foreword by Arthur Kleinman | 1 |
Public Debate and Its Meaning | 13 |
Official Positions | 39 |
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abor aborted fetus abortifacients abortion debate abortion in China accept agreed American baby believed biomedical students birth control policy birth control program Buddhists cadres Catholics chapter child China's birth control Chinese culture Chinese society Chinese women city North city South coerced abortion coercion coercive concept Confucianism contemporary China contraception Daoism especially experience family planning policy family planning program feel female fetuses forced human rights husband ical individual infanticide informants interviewed issue killing late abortion majority medical ethics medical humanities scholars medicine moral mother national birth control nese OB/GYN official discourse one-child one-child policy overseas Chinese pain patient Peng performing abortions perspectives physicians pilot study political population control population policy practice pregnancy problem question questionnaire reasons religious reproduction respondents result rural sample groups silence social Sun Simiao survey tion traditional Chinese traditional Chinese medicine urban Village Western woman Zhang