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Late Ming Courtesan Culture And China’s Gender System

Huang, Aubury A.

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Authors

Aubury A. Huang



Abstract

This article argues against existing scholarship that sees courtesans as a transcending force that blurred social and gender boundaries in the late Ming gender system. The gendered position of courtesans is examined from two perspectives, the market economy and the kinship system, to analyse how the booming courtesan culture stemmed from and reinforced the male-dominated gender hierarchy. Firstly, in the market economy, courtesans emerged as a product of the patriarchal practice of objectifying and commodifying women, whereby the ownership of women lay with men. Under such a commercialised environment, the literary and artistic skills of courtesans were highly gendered, sexualised and essentially cultivated to increase their market value and the attraction they held for their male patrons. Secondly, in the kinship system, a clear boundary was constructed between courtesans and respectable women in the domestic sphere. The existence of courtesans prevented such women from entering the public realm. Meanwhile, the de facto freedom enjoyed by courtesans prevented themselves from entering orthodox household units, as they were constructed outside of the kinship system, and were marginalised by both men and women of the gentry class, by Ming legal regulations and by popular literary work, to ensure the continuance of the existing patriarchal family structure and the husband-wife hierarchy.

Citation

Huang, A. A. (2021). Late Ming Courtesan Culture And China’s Gender System. SOAS journal of postgraduate research, 13(2019/2020), 105-123. https://doi.org/10.25501/SOAS.00035319

Journal Article Type Article
Publication Date Jul 1, 2021
Deposit Date Jul 16, 2021
Publicly Available Date Jul 16, 2021
Journal SOAS journal of postgraduate research
Print ISSN 2631-3812
Electronic ISSN 2517-6226
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 13
Issue 2019/2020
Pages 105-123
DOI https://doi.org/10.25501/SOAS.00035319
Keywords Chinese courtesans, Late Ming, gender history, prostitution, literati, family structure
Publisher URL https://www.soas.ac.uk/research/soas-journals-and-books/soas-journal-postgraduate-research

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