In this feminist history of eight centuries of private life in China, Francesca Bray inserts women into the history of technology and adds technology to the history of women. Bray takes issue with the Orientalist image that traditional Chinese women were imprisoned in the inner quarters, deprived of freedom and dignity, and so physically and morally deformed by footbinding and the tyrannies of patriarchy that they were incapable of productive work. She proposes a concept of gynotechnics, a set of everyday technologies that define women's roles, as a creative new way to explore how societies translate moral and social principles into a web of material forms and bodily practices.
Bray examines three different aspects of domestic life in China, tracing their developments from 1000 to 1800 A.D. She begins with the shell of domesticity, the house, focusing on how domestic space embodied hierarchies of gender. She follows the shift in the textile industry from domestic production to commercial production. Despite increasing emphasis on women's reproductive roles, she argues, this cannot be reduced to childbearing. Female hierarchies within the family reinforced the power of wives, whose responsibilities included ritual activities and financial management as well as the education of children.
History As People Lived It, Not Just A Stage For The Elite
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 24 years ago
Bray makes a great point in her introduction to this book that I believe sums up her work. She discusses the frustration of museum goers in seeing ancient tools and furniture but not being allowed to touch them. Contacting these domestic objects would connect us to ancient ways of life if only we could actually grab and hold them for a moment.This hits on the sort of history Bray is writing: she shows us what it was like to live in the period she discusses (1000-1800) by examining the then-current technology. This technology, really the techniques for ordering and creating existence, is broadly defined. She shows the techniques and rules in building a home and the spaces therein defined for women and men. She shows the advice, tools and explicit values put on the everyday chores of weaving, farming, childrearing that actually claimed the lives of people in those days (and today... with less farming and weaving and more office work). Her third section, which is filled with rich details but points to no obvious conclusion, focuses on gynotechnics, the process of making a woman. The medical, moral and economic thought of the day create an interesting complement and contrast to the drudgerous facts that she has made come alive earlier in the book in an oddly fascinating way.This is not an economic history like Wong or Pomeranz have recently produced. It is a Sinological micro-history while the latter two were comparative macro-histories. It is, however, wonderful. The details she finds in construction manuals, tools, even instructional pictures of looms give students like myself a way to tie the 'big picture' facts down to the human level details that we often don't even realize we've been missing until a book like this comes along.
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