Her Feet Hurt: Female Body and Pain in Chen Duansheng's Zaisheng yuan (Destiny of Rebirth)

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2023-07-01

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Abstract

This paper investigates the female writer Chen Duansheng’s tanci fiction Zaisheng yuan, a story centered on a cross-dressed female protagonist. Evoking story-telling and stage performance, tanci fiction is a lengthy, rhymed narrative genre favored by female writers in the early modern Jiangnan region. This paper approaches Zaisheng yuan from the perspectives of gender and the senses to exam-ine its representations of the female foot and pain. Zaisheng yuan repeatedly asso-ciates pain with the female practice of footbinding and spotlights the bound foot to address the female characters’ distress and identity crisis. While the haptic-oriented descriptions of female feet speak to the gender stereotypes, through depicting both passive and active revealing of female feet, Zaisheng yuan demonstrates the emerging possibilities of female agency. In contrast to the male literary tradition, which treats the female body as a static spectacle, Zaisheng yuan endeavors to por-tray bound feet as an ongoing experience that causes pain from daily movements and calls for sympathetic audiences and mutual support from the female commu-nity. However, there are also times when the experience of pain, physical and especially psychological, cannot be shared, not only between genders but also between mothers and daughters, and this may indeed create obstacles to female companionship. To sum up, pain caused by bound feet provides a framework to shape the way women experienced the world, identified themselves, and inter-preted the possibilities and limitations of their ways of living in early modern Chinese society.

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10.1353/cop.2023.a898380

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Ji, W (2023). Her Feet Hurt: Female Body and Pain in Chen Duansheng's Zaisheng yuan (Destiny of Rebirth). CHINOPERL: Journal of Chinese Oral and Performing Literature, 42(1). pp. 28–65. 10.1353/cop.2023.a898380 Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/28320.

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Scholars@Duke

Ji

Wenting Ji

Assistant Professor of Chinese Language at Duke Kunshan University

Wenting Ji is an assistant professor in Chinese language at Duke Kunshan University. She received her Ph.D. in Chinese Literature from the University of Wisconsin-Madison and her M.A. in Chinese Literature from National Taiwan University. Her area of expertise is late imperial/early modern (16th–19th century) Chinese literature, with a focus on how literati and gentry women reconciled the relationship between self and the world and constructed their identities through writings of sensory experiences. She is especially interested in the representation of senses in genres such as tanci (plucking rhymes), xiaopin (vignette), and yiyu (reminiscent words). Her teaching interests at Duke Kunshan include advanced-level Chinese language, classical Chinese, early modern Chinese literature, and Jiangnan culture.


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