Cinderella's Sisters: A Revisionist History of Footbinding

Couverture
University of California Press, 12 déc. 2005 - 351 pages
The history of footbinding is full of contradictions and unexpected turns. The practice originated in the dance culture of China's medieval court and spread to gentry families, brothels, maid's quarters, and peasant households. Conventional views of footbinding as patriarchal oppression often neglect its complex history and the incentives of the women involved. This revisionist history, elegantly written and meticulously researched, presents a fascinating new picture of the practice from its beginnings in the tenth century to its demise in the twentieth century. Neither condemning nor defending foot-binding, Dorothy Ko debunks many myths and misconceptions about its origins, development, and eventual end, exploring in the process the entanglements of male power and female desires during the practice's thousand-year history.

Cinderella's Sisters argues that rather than stemming from sexual perversion, men's desire for bound feet was connected to larger concerns such as cultural nostalgia, regional rivalries, and claims of male privilege. Nor were women hapless victims, the author contends. Ko describes how women—those who could afford it—bound their own and their daughters' feet to signal their high status and self-respect. Femininity, like the binding of feet, was associated with bodily labor and domestic work, and properly bound feet and beautifully made shoes both required exquisite skills and technical knowledge passed from generation to generation. Throughout her narrative, Ko deftly wields methods of social history, literary criticism, material culture studies, and the history of the body and fashion to illustrate how a practice that began as embodied lyricism—as a way to live as the poets imagined—ended up being an exercise in excess and folly.
 

Table des matières

INTRODUCTION
BODY EXPOSED
5
GIGANTIC HISTORIES OF THE NATION IN THE GLOBE The Rhetoric of Tianzu 1880s1910s
7
THE BODY INSIDE OUT The Practice of Fangzu 1900s1930s
36
THE BOUND FOOT AS ANTIQUE Connoisseurship in an Age of Disavowal 1930s1941
67
BODY CONCEALED
105
FROM ANCIENT TEXTS TO CURRENT CUSTOMS In Search of Footbindings Origins
107
THE EROTICS OF PLACE Male Desires and the Imaginary Geography of the Northwest
143
CINDERELLAS DREAMS The Burden and Uses of the Female Body
185
EPILOGUE
225
NOTES
229
GLOSSARY
291
WORKS CITED
299
INDEX
319
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Page 1 - ... see them on the inner and under side of the foot. They had come up around. Two fingers could be inserted in the cleft between the front of the foot and the heel. My feet were very small indeed. A girl's beauty and desirability were counted more by the size of her feet than by the beauty of her face. Matchmakers were not asked "Is she beautiful?
Page 13 - ... the capture of the town would bring upon them. On our arrival in China my wife and I were greatly distressed at the continual evidence that we had of the grievous wrong that footbinding had inflicted upon the women of the Empire. In one very striking particular it had laid its impress upon them all. It had completely, destroyed the grace and symmetry with which Nature had endowed the women. We are apt to forget that within the feet lies the secret of the exquisite poise and beautiful carriage...

À propos de l'auteur (2005)

Dorothy Ko is Professor of History at Barnard College, Columbia University. She is the author of Every Step a Lotus: Shoes for Bound Feet (California, 2001) and Teachers of the Inner Chambers: Women and Culture in Seventeenth-Century China (1994). She is coeditor of Women and Confucian Cultures in Premodern China, Korea, and Japan (California, 2003).

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