Misers, Shrews, and Polygamists: Sexuality and Male-female Relations in Eighteenth-century Chinese Fiction

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Duke University Press, 1995 - Family & Relationships - 378 pages
Having multiple wives was one of the mainstays of male privilege during the Ming and Qing dynasties of late imperial China. Based on a comprehensive reading of eighteenth-century Chinese novels and a theoretical approach grounded in poststructuralist, psychoanalytic, and feminist criticism, Misers, Shrews, and Polygamists examines how such privilege functions in these novels and provides the first full account of literary representations of sexuality and gender in pre-modern China.
In many examples of rare erotic fiction, and in other works as well-known as Dream of the Red Chamber, Keith McMahon identifies a sexual economy defined by the figures of the "miser" and the "shrew"--caricatures of the retentive, self-containing man and the overflowing, male-enervating woman. Among these and other characters, the author explores the issues surrounding the practice of polygamy, the logic of its overvaluation of masculinity, and the nature of sexuality generally in Chinese society. How does the man with many wives manage and justify his sexual authority? Why and how might he escape or limit this presumed authority, sometimes to the point of portraying himself as abject before the shrewish woman? How do women accommodate or coddle the man, or else oppose, undermine, or remold him? And in what sense does the man place himself lower than the spiritually and morally superior woman?
The most extensive English-language study of Chinese literature from the eighteenth century, this examination of polygamy will interest not only students of Chinese history, culture, and literature but also all those concerned with histories of gender and sexuality.
 

Contents

Sexuality and MaleFemale Subjectivity in Qing Fiction1 The Various
17
Polygamy According to Fiction and Prescriptive Models
28
Shrews and Jealousy in Seventeenth and EighteenthCentury
55
The Miser and the Ascetic
82
The Chaste BeautyScholar Romance and the Superiority of
99
The Erotic ScholarBeauty Romance
126
Chaste Polygamy
150
Polygyny Crossing of Gender and the Superiority of Women
176
The Spoiled Son and the Doting Mother in Qilu Deng
221
The Wastrel and the Prostitute
234
The Benevolent Polygamist and the Domestication of Sexual
251
Ernü Yingxiong Zhuan as Antidote to Honglou Meng
265
Promiscuous Polygyny and Male SelfCritique
283
Notes
293
Bibliography
327
Glossary of Chinese Characters
341

The Overly Virtuous Wife and the Wastrel Polygamist in Lin
205
Womens Sacrifice and Formation of Alliances208 Five Types of Women
219

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About the author (1995)

Keith McMahon is Associate Professor of Chinese Language and Literature at the University of Kansas. He is the author of Causality and Containment in Seventeenth-Century Chinese Fiction.