TY - JOUR
T1 - Revisioning "new women". Feminist readings of representative modern Chinese fiction
AU - Chien, Ying Ying
N1 - Funding Information:
Thanks are due to Caroline Eckhardt, Lynne Goodstein, Stanley Weintraub, Margaret Higonnet, Carol Kessler, Robert Edwards, David Wible, editors, and anonymous reviewers for their insightful comments and suggestions. This research was supported by a grant from the National Endowment of Humanities. the Institute of the Arts and Humanistic Studies at Penn State, and Helena Rubinstein Faculty Fellowship.
PY - 1994
Y1 - 1994
N2 - The changing roles of women in early 20th-century China were influenced deeply by prominent images of "New Women" characters in the popular fiction of the May Fourth Cultural Movement. The Movement, with its aggressive departure from traditional Confucian ideology and its assimilation of Western feminist thinking, provided a context for these New Women characters, who stood in clear contrast to the submissive "ideal" woman. Two representative works that present New Woman protagonists, Lu Xun's "Regret for the Past" and Ding Ling's "Ms. Sophie's Diary," are reexamined in order to answer the question: To what extent does each work depart from a Confucian patriarchal view of women? It is shown that while Lu Xun's work has been judged as more mature and revolutionary in its social criticism, his heroine is essentially a silenced, marginalized object without female consciousness, smothered and enclosed in the phallogocentric text. Ding Ling's "Sophie," which has been viewed as sentimental on the other hand, represents a radical departure not only through the subversive character of Sophie, who constantly eludes categorical definition, but also through the writer's innovative use of diary form, language, and narrative devices of her own.
AB - The changing roles of women in early 20th-century China were influenced deeply by prominent images of "New Women" characters in the popular fiction of the May Fourth Cultural Movement. The Movement, with its aggressive departure from traditional Confucian ideology and its assimilation of Western feminist thinking, provided a context for these New Women characters, who stood in clear contrast to the submissive "ideal" woman. Two representative works that present New Woman protagonists, Lu Xun's "Regret for the Past" and Ding Ling's "Ms. Sophie's Diary," are reexamined in order to answer the question: To what extent does each work depart from a Confucian patriarchal view of women? It is shown that while Lu Xun's work has been judged as more mature and revolutionary in its social criticism, his heroine is essentially a silenced, marginalized object without female consciousness, smothered and enclosed in the phallogocentric text. Ding Ling's "Sophie," which has been viewed as sentimental on the other hand, represents a radical departure not only through the subversive character of Sophie, who constantly eludes categorical definition, but also through the writer's innovative use of diary form, language, and narrative devices of her own.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=34247715204&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=34247715204&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/0277-5395(94)90005-1
DO - 10.1016/0277-5395(94)90005-1
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:34247715204
SN - 0277-5395
VL - 17
SP - 33
EP - 45
JO - Women's Studies International Forum
JF - Women's Studies International Forum
IS - 1
ER -