Stanford University Press
Revolution Postponed
About this book
The Communist revolution promised Chinese women an end to thousands of years of subjugation, an equality with men in all matters legal, political, social, and economic. This book examines the extent to which this promise has been kept. Based on nearly a year of field research and interviews with over 300 women in six widely separated rural and urban areas, it gives us a vivid picture of Chinese women today - their day-to-day lives, their views of the present, and their hopes for the future. To date nothing approximating equality has been achieved: in working conditions, in pay, in educational opportunity. In the cities, and to a lesser extent in the countryside, women are better off than in pre-revolutionary China. But nowhere except in the rhetoric of the regime are they equal to men. Nor does the immediate future look much brighter, given the continuing social constraints, the government's controversial family limitation program, and the nature of the new economic policies introduced in 1980. So far as possible, the women interviewed are allowed to speak for themselves. Some take refuge behind government slogans, some are shy or wary, but a surprising number are quick to give their own opinions despite an ever-present government cadre. These opinions, combined with the author's astute observations on their local and national context, add up to a wholly new perspective on an all too familiar problem.
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Frontmatter
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Contents
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ONE Eating Bitterness: The Past and the Pattern
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TWO Speaking Bitterness: Doing Research in the People's Republic of China
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THREE Women Workers in the Cities
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FOUR Women Workers in the Countryside
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FIVE Being and Becoming a Proper Chinese Woman
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SIX Cooked Rice: Marriage in New China
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SEVEN The Setting of Chinese Women's Lives: Family Organization
182 -
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EIGHT Sharing a Stove: Urban Domestic Relations
203 -
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NINE Sharing a Stove: Rural Domestic Relations
221 -
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TEN The Birth Limitation Program: Family vs. State
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ELEVEN The Other Revolution
260 -
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Notes
277 -
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Index
283