In this study, Mou traces the tradition of biographies of women in China from the first collection compiled by Liu Xiang through the first 19 standard histories (covering the first millennium from the Han dynasty through 960 C.E.). Through a close reading of the text of these biographies, she examines how Confucian male scholars attempted to prescribe social roles for women. Mou teaches Chinese at DePauw University. The text is based upon her dissertation (1994, Ohio State U.). Annotation (c) Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)
As far back as the first century BCE, Chinese dynastic historians - all men - began recording the achievements of Chinese women and creating a structure of understanding that would be used to limit and control them. To men, these women became role models for their daughters and wives; to the few literate women readers, they became paradigms for their own behavior. Thus, although these biographies are descriptive by nature, they actually became prescriptive. Gentlemen's Prescriptions for Women's Lives is an enlightening source for studying Chinese women of the Imperial era as well as for understanding Chinese womanhood in general. By contextualizing these biographies, the author shows us these women not just as the complaisant, calm-eyed, delicate figures that adorn Confucian texts, but also as the products of the Confucian tradition's appropriation of women.