Women of the Middle Kingdom: Gender, Family, and Power in Chinese History
MTA
Lives of women across classes and eras and their influence on society and policy
*Women of the Middle Kingdom: Gender, Family, and Power in Chinese History* provides a comprehensive longitudinal study of women’s roles in shaping Chinese society from the Shang dynasty to the digital age. By analyzing diverse sources—including oracle bones, legal contracts, didactic texts, and digital archives—the book challenges the traditional narrative of Chinese history as an exclusively male domain. It argues that women were not passive subjects but active agents who strategically navigated patriarchy to manage household finances, lead religious communities, and influence imperial policy.
The narrative moves through early imperial law and the Confucianization of society, highlighting how women utilized dowry and inheritance rights to secure economic leverage and familial continuity. It examines the "New Woman" of the late Qing and Republican eras, illustrating how education and print culture allowed women to redefine citizenship and labor. The text further explores the revolutionary transformations of the Mao era, where radical shifts in marriage and land laws sought to mobilize women into the public workforce, often creating a "double burden" of domestic and industrial labor.
In its final sections, the book focuses on the complexities of the reform era, particularly the intimate state intervention of the one-child policy and the mass migration of "factory daughters." It concludes by examining the twenty-first-century digital economy, where women have harnessed e-commerce and social media to bypass traditional gatekeepers. Throughout these shifts, the book identifies a persistent pattern of "gendered strategies," where women utilize whatever tools are available—from ancestral rites to algorithmic trends—to negotiate power and ensure the resilience of their families and communities.
This book is ideal for undergraduate and graduate students in Chinese history, gender studies, or Asian studies seeking a comprehensive understanding of women's roles across Chinese history. It will also benefit researchers focusing on feminist history, family dynamics, or the intersection of gender with politics and economics in pre-modern and modern China. General readers interested in how women have shaped historical narratives beyond traditional male-centered accounts will find valuable insights into the persistent agency and adaptability of women throughout China's long history.
May 4, 2026
75,101 words
5 hours 16 minutes
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