ABSTRACT

This book explores changing concepts of marriage and gender relationships and attitudes toward sex in a rural Chinese community over the past five decades. The book is based on a study of an industrialized peasant village in Guangdong Province from 1994 to 1996 and subsequent visits from 2000 to 2002. According to the authors, the rural economic reforms of the 1980s in southern China have challenged and reinforced the deep structure of Chinese familism and this has lead to tensions between tradition and modernity. The first section of the book explores how attitudes toward marriage and courtship have changed over the past fifty years through personal accounts of three different marriages from different generations. In Part II, the transition from a traditional to a modern society is discussed from the perspective of several women from different generations. The third section focuses on sexual relationships and the growing sex trade in the village. Part IV includes updates to the original survey and takes a look at village politics.

chapter |22 pages

Theoretical Framework

Familism, Women's Liberation, and Autonomy

chapter |10 pages

Baixiu Village

Past and Present

part |51 pages

Finding a Partner, Love, and Marriage

chapter |16 pages

The Story of Uncle Qiu

The Dictates of the Parents, the Words of the Matchmaker

chapter |16 pages

The Story of Zhichao

The Transition from Tradition to Modernity

chapter |13 pages

The Story of Wang Qiming

A Marriage in the 1990s

part |52 pages

Tradition, Women, and the Interpretation of the Self

chapter |6 pages

Women in Chinese Villages

A Review of the Research

chapter |19 pages

Wang Guizhen

Growing Up Under the Reform and Opening-Up Policy

part |60 pages

Epilogue: Baixiu Village at the Turn of the Century

chapter |33 pages

Rural Political Reform

The Baixiu Village Committee Election