Font Size: a A A

Strong minds, creative lives: A study of the biographies of Eastern Han women as found in 'Hou Han shu lienu zhuan'

Posted on:2010-11-07Degree:M.AType:Thesis
University:McGill University (Canada)Candidate:Selles Gonzalez, Ana TeresaFull Text:PDF
GTID:2445390002478095Subject:Literature
Abstract/Summary:
This thesis addresses a chapter titled Lienu zhuan, or Arrayed Traditions of Women from Fan Ye's (398-446) Hou Han shu, or Book of Later Han as starting point to challenge the prevailing image of early Chinese women as helpless victims of an oppressive Confucian society. The women represented therein behave as purposeful, active participants in the creation of Eastern Han social mores. Most remarkably, they can be interpreted as agents defining their social roles as wives and daughters. Chapter One focuses on the historiography of the Hou Han shu, generally, and the Lienu zhuan, in particular, and formulates some hypotheses about the extent of Fan Ye's own creative input in the process of compiling his Lienu zhuan . Chapter Two investigates previous scholarship on the genre of biographies of women and proposes a theoretical model for reading the biographies of women found in Hou Han shu based on notions of ritual discussed by Catherine Bell and by the collaboration between Seligman, Weller, Puett, and Simon. In order to gain further insight into the women represented in the text, Chapter Three analyzes the social, economic, and literary background of the seventeen women included in the text. These findings on the commonalities and differences in marital status, economic situation, political influence, literacy, and education are put to use in Chapter Four, which applies the ideas on ritualization to the social roles the women in Fan Ye's text perform as wives and daughters. The thesis ends with a partial translation of the Hou Han shu lienu zhuan chapter into English.
Keywords/Search Tags:Hou han, Lienu zhuan, Women, Chapter, Fan ye's, Biographies
Related items