Marriage, law, and gender in revolutionary China, 1940-1960 /

"[The author] examines the social and cultural significance of Chinese revolutionary legal practice in the construction of marriage and gender relations. Her book is an empirically rich investigation of the ways in which a 1943 legal dispute over an arranged marriage in a Chinese village became...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Cong, Xiaoping (Author)
Published: Cambridge University Press,
Publisher Address: Cambridge, United Kingdom :
Publication Dates: 2016.
Literature type: Book
Language: English
Series: Cambridge studies in the history of the People's Republic of China.
Subjects:
Summary: "[The author] examines the social and cultural significance of Chinese revolutionary legal practice in the construction of marriage and gender relations. Her book is an empirically rich investigation of the ways in which a 1943 legal dispute over an arranged marriage in a Chinese village became a legal, political and cultural exemplar on the national stage. This...study revisits the Chinese Revolution and its impact on women and society by presenting a Chinese experience that cannot and should not be theorized in the framework of Western discourse. Taking a cultural historical perspective, Cong shows how the Chinese Revolution and its legal practices produced new discourses, neologisms and cultural symbols that contained China's experience in twentieth-century social movements, and how revolutionary practice was sublimated into the concept of 'self-determination', an idea that bridged local experiences with the tendency of the twentieth-century world, and that is a revolutionary legacy for China today."--
Carrier Form: xvi, 327 pages : illustrations, maps ; 24 cm.
Bibliography: Includes bibliographical references (pages 284-316) and index.
ISBN: 9781107148567 (hardback) :
1107148561 (hardback)
9781316602614 (paperback)
1316602613 (paperback)
Index Number: KNQ540
CLC: D923.9-09
Call Number: D923.9-09/C749
Contents: Part I. Locality, marriage practice, and women -- The case of Feng v. Zhang : marriage reform in a revolutionary region -- The appeal : women, love, marriage, and the revolutionary state -- Part II. Legal practice and new principle -- The new adjudication : judicial construction in marriage reform -- A new principle in the making : from "freedom" to "self-determination" of marriage through legal practice -- Part III. Politics and gender in construction -- Newspaper reports : casting a new democracy in village communities -- The Qin opera and the ballad : from rebellious daughters to social mothers -- The Ping opera and film : nationalizing the new marriage practice and politicizing the state-family, 1949-1960 -- Epilogue : " Liu Qiao'er," law, and zizhu : beyond 1960.