
Footbinding as Fashion: Ethnicity, Labor, and Status in Traditional China
By
John Robert Shepherd (Author)
Hardback
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Description
Previous studies of the practice of footbinding in imperial China have theorized that it expressed ethnic identity or that it served an economic function. By analyzing the popularity of footbinding in different places and times, Footbinding as Fashion investigates the claim that early Qing (1644-1911) attempts by Manchu rulers to ban footbinding made it a symbol of anti-Manchu sentiment and Han identity and led to the spread of the practice throughout all levels of society. Detailed case studies of Taiwan, Hebei, and Liaoning provinces exploit rich bodies of previously neglected ethnographic reports, economic surveys, and rare censuses of footbinding to challenge the significance of sedentary female labor and ethnic rivalries as factors leading to the hegemony of the footbinding fashion. The study concludes that, independently of identity politics and economic factors, variations in local status hierarchies and elite culture coupled with status competition and fear of ridicule for not binding girls' feet best explain how a culturally arbitrary fashion such as footbinding could attain hegemonic status. 7 b&w illus., 6 maps, 18 tables, 9 charts
About the Author
John Robert Shepherd is associate professor of anthropology at the University of Virginia. He is the author of Marriage and Mandatory Abortion among the 17th-Century Siraya and Statecraft and Political Economy on the Taiwan Frontier, 1600-1800.
More Details
- Contributor: John Robert Shepherd
- Imprint: University of Washington Press
- ISBN13: 9780295744414
- Number of Pages: 272
- Packaged Dimensions: 152x229mm
- Packaged Weight: 499
- Format: Hardback
- Publisher: University of Washington Press
- Release Date: 2018-12-18
- Binding: Hardback
- Biography: John Robert Shepherd is associate professor of anthropology at the University of Virginia. He is the author of Marriage and Mandatory Abortion among the 17th-Century Siraya and Statecraft and Political Economy on the Taiwan Frontier, 1600-1800.
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