Women and Confucian Cultures
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About this book
Representing an unprecedented collaboration among international scholars from Asia Europe and the United States this volume rewrites the history of East Asia by rethinking the contentious relationship between Confucianism and women. The authors discuss the absence of women in the Confucian canonical tradition and examine the presence of women in politics family education and art in premodern China Korea and Japan. What emerges is a concept of Confucianism that is dynamic instead of monolithic in shaping the cultures of East Asian societies. As teachers mothers writers and rulers women were active agents in this process. Neither rebels nor victims these women embraced aspects of official norms while resisting others. The essays present a powerful image of what it meant to be female and to live a womans life in a variety of social settings and historical circumstances. Challenging the conventional notion of Confucianism as an oppressive tradition that victimized women this provocative book reveals it as a modern construct that does not reflect the social and cultural histories of East Asia before the nineteenth century.
