The prescriptive dialectics of Li and Yi in the Lienu Zhuan
This essay examines the relationship between li [TEXT NOT REPRODUCIBLE IN ASCII] and yi [TEXT NOT REPRODUCIBLE IN ASCII] in Liu Xiang's [TEXT NOT REPRODUCIBLE IN ASCII] Categorized Biographies of Women or Lienu zhuan [TEXT NOT REPRODUCIBLE IN ASCII], the first Chinese monograph devoted to women...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Philosophy east & west 2017-07, Vol.67 (3), p.651 |
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description | This essay examines the relationship between li [TEXT NOT REPRODUCIBLE IN ASCII] and yi [TEXT NOT REPRODUCIBLE IN ASCII] in Liu Xiang's [TEXT NOT REPRODUCIBLE IN ASCII] Categorized Biographies of Women or Lienu zhuan [TEXT NOT REPRODUCIBLE IN ASCII], the first Chinese monograph devoted to women, focusing on the contents of books 4 and 5, where Liu Xiang introduces radical ideas like self-mutilation, suicide, and compulsory separation of the sexes. Although these moral devices are employed as an instrument of remonstrance, giving women a voice that had long been neglected, they are also the result of the deontic prescriptions of li-binding obligations, which keep the self in silence and subjection. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1353/pew.2017.0057 |
format | Article |
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subjects | Analysis Autonomy (Philosophy) Criticism and interpretation Dialectic Gender equality Liu Xiang (Chinese philosopher) Philosophers Women's rights Works |
title | The prescriptive dialectics of Li and Yi in the Lienu Zhuan |
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