In this Book

Bodies in China: Philosophy, Aesthetics, and Politics

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Eva Man
2016
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This book seeks to engage Chinese philosophy to reframe existing Western scholarship in the fields of gender, body, and aesthetics. The assembled essays cover traditional and current global issues related to Chinese female bodies by addressing the following questions: Does Confucianism rule out the capacity of women as moral subjects, and hence, as aesthetic subjects? Do forms of Chinese philosophy in some ways contribute or correspond to the patriarchal Confucian culture? In what ways can Chinese philosophy provide alternative perspectives sought by Western feminist scholars? Professor Man uses an interdisciplinary approach to explore feminist philosophy through the issues of the body, aesthetical representation and gender politics, which are simultaneously historical and contextual. The first section of the book, “Body Discourses in Chinese Philosophy,” brings in theoretical and philosophical discussions of Western traditions such as those of Plato, Descartes, and Kant, to examine their views on body and mind and how the Chinese philosophical ideas offered by Confucians and Daoists provide alternative body ontologies for critical feminist practices. The second section, “Chinese Bodies, Aesthetics and Art,” reviews female aesthetical representations in classical traditional Chinese works ranging from The Books of Songs, women’s embroidery, sexuality and suggested ways of kissing, and the contemporary body art represented by the controversial body artist He Chengyao. These chapters demonstrate the intertwining relationship among body, sexuality, aesthetics and the ascribed gendered roles in social environments. The third section, “Chinese Bodies and Gender Matters,” aims to unfold the changing perceptions of femininity from imperial China to contemporary China. Case studies touch on female body ideals in the literary fantasies in late Ming, in the iron girls in Communist China, and in the Olympics Hoopla at the 2008 Beijing Olympics. This section also discusses Hong Kong women’s fashion in the 1960s and how their bodies were shaped by colonial politics. Finally, the subject of sex and emotion in the development of ethical discourse of Chinese female sex workers from late Qing to contemporary society is discussed alongside the impact of the global economy on female beauty today. Overall, this book discusses new conceptual models that feminist scholars are using to displace dualism and emancipate notions of the body from Cartesian mechanistic models and metaphors. The different chapters review traditional and contemporary alternatives to understanding female bodies in Chinese society.

Table of Contents

Title, Copyright

pp. i-iv

Contents

pp. v-vi

Acknowledgements

pp. vii-viii

Introduction

pp. ix-xxvi

Section I Body Discourses in Chinese Philosophy

1 Contemporary Feminist Body Theories And Mencius' Ideas Of Body And Mind

pp. 1-16

2 Chinese Philosophy And The Suggestion of A Matriarchal Aesthetics

pp. 17-26

3 Reclaiming The Body: Francis Bacon's fugitive Bodies And Confucian Aesthetics on Bodily Expression

pp. 27-42

Section II Body Aesthetics And Art

4 Discourses On Female Bodily Aesthetics And Their Early Revelations In The Book Of Songs

pp. 45-60

5 Reflections On Traditional Chinese Women's Embroidery: The Subject Of Bodily Expression, Gender Identity, And Fashion

pp. 61-72

6 Kissing In Chinese Culture

pp. 73-84

7 Extreme Expression And History Trauma In Women's Body Art In China: the Case Of He Chengyao

pp. 85-100

8 Notes On A Chinese Garden: Comparative Responses To Arnold Berleant 's environmental Aesthetics

pp. 101-110

Section III Body And Gender Matters

9 Female Bodily Aesthetics, Politics, And Feminine Ideals Of Beauty In Chinese Traditions

pp. 113-138

10 Beauty And The State: Literati Fantasy, Iron Girls, And The Olympics Hoopla

pp. 139-152

11 Psychoanalysis And Women's Physiology and Psychopathology In Feudal China:a Case Study By Pan Guangdan

pp. 153-174

12 Fashioning Body: Hong Kong Chinese Women, Fashion, And Identity Issues Of The Sixties

pp. 175-184

13 Sex And Emotion : The Representation Of Chinese Female Sex Workers In Recent Discourses And The Cosmopolitan Context

pp. 185-199

Appendix Images

pp. 200-212

List Of Permissions

pp. 213-214

Notes

pp. 215-236

Bibliography

pp. 237-248

Index

pp. 249-260
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